Behaving With Your Heart in the Right Place
Have you ever noticed that some people are naturally able to garner the respect of there peers, while others simply just have a hard time getting someone to be interested in them? Have you ever wondered what separates leaders from everyone else? Or how someone can say the meanest and most blunt thing to a person, and still get a good response out of them?
These observations of the human condition, the moments where people really connect lies what is probably the most valued secret to every relationship. This key can be quite effective even in the business world.
Psychologists refer to it as emotional intelligence, an uncanny ability to be in tune with the emotions of other individuals. To know what they are feeling at any given moment, understand their character and behavior, and then respond in the appropriate way necessary to push them into the right direction.
Amazingly enough, none of this ability is based on technique or strategy. With human emotions, it's incredibly difficult to anticipate, and manipulate behavior based on a formula. So what does this mean for the individual who wants to better his relationships with the people around him?
The answer to this question is a function of the heart. Where is his heart and what is it doing? Every single action in the world is done in to ways: with a heart at peace or with a heart at war. Peace and war in this particular case does not refer to stress and non-stress. These concepts are actually much deeper than that and deal with precisely how we view people in our minds.
If we view people as obstacles, things that simply get in the way of trying to reach a goal, then we shall never be at peace with them. They will always annoy us and be something that we should have to fight against. But if we view them like we view ourselves; as people, with wants, needs, expectations and desires, we begin to connect with them in a much more profound way that extends beyond mere friendly interaction, unleashing the best parts of a relationship, like mutual respect and care.
As individuals we each have a choice in how we would like to conduct our relationships with others. We can choose to view them as obstacles or we can choose to view them as people. It is ultimately up to you.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Joseph_Devine
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