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Hi Reader, It's Tuesday! This week's post unpacks emotional intelligence in family systems terms. Also, if you are using The Non-Anxious Life Family System Coach, it would be great to get your feedback using this evaluation. Thanks for your help! 6 Things You Need to Do to Be a Non-Anxious LeaderNote: This post is based on Episode 192 of The Non-Anxious Leader Podcast. Daniel Goleman’s model of emotional intelligence names four components: self‑awareness, self‑management, social awareness, and relationship management.
When leaders operate this way, it invites others to become more self‑aware and intentional. The idea for this post came an article by Marcel Schwantes, 6 Super Effective Ways to Show Your Emotional Intelligence at Work. Here’s my family systems take. 1. Acknowledge your thoughts and feelings This is self‑awareness, and it begins with paying attention to two things: your feelings and your thoughts. I’m reversing the order here, because feelings almost always show up first. They rise automatically and signal that something is happening in your internal emotional process. Pausing, then naming what you’re feeling—and noticing where it’s coming from—gives you a clearer grip on yourself. Your thoughts come next. This is where you engage your thinking brain and choose to be intentional. Thoughtfulness is the first step toward self‑definition: clarifying your goals, your values, and the way you want to live them out. 2. Test your optimism People with high emotional intelligence tend to have realistic optimism. Schwantes offers three questions that help you test whether you’re staying in that healthy space:
These questions help you distinguish between a challenge and a problem. Life is full of challenges; they become problems when anxiety takes over and you lose the ability to respond in a healthy, intentional way. 3. Focus on what you can control As noted, the only thing you can truly control is your response. Leadership through self‑differentiation is the ability to express your goals and values in healthy ways while staying emotionally connected to the people around you. That’s the part of the process that belongs to you. The starting point is self‑definition, clarifying what you believe. Then you can respond with intention rather than reactivity. 4. Take a six-second pause I emphasize self‑regulation often. The ability to pause is what moves you from the primitive part of your brain to the thinking part, where you can choose your response instead of reacting automatically. If there’s one practice that will make you a more non‑anxious (or at least less anxious) leader, this is it. Without self‑regulation, you end up spending your energy cleaning up the fallout from your automatic reactions. With it, you create the space to respond with clarity, steadiness, and intention. 5. Tap into kindness wherever you go This is about emotional connection, and the research is encouraging. Even brief interactions with strangers improve your wellbeing. They meet a basic human need for connection, and they’re often easier than engaging with the anxious or reactive people in your own relationship systems. These small moments of connection don’t just lift your mood — they widen your perspective and help you see your own situation with more clarity and less anxiety. 6. Ask for feedback If connecting with strangers improves wellbeing, this step is practicing emotional connection with the people you interact with every day in your family of origin, your congregation, or your organization. I read that in Erie, Pennsylvania, a local company put up signs around town that read “Be curious, not judgmental.” It’s reminder that curiosity is one of the most effective ways to stay connected without getting pulled into the anxiety of the system. Curiosity lets you engage even the most reactive people without slipping into a power struggle. Ask a question. Ask for feedback. Be genuinely curious about their experience. A wise pastor once told me that people don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care. Curiosity keeps the connection open, and it helps you maintain a non‑anxious presence. To me, whether you call it emotional intelligence or self-differentiation, it looks the same. It’s leading with your thinking brain, instead reacting automatically. It’s what non-anxious leaders do. These six actions can help. RecommendationsBoth of these articles landed in my inbox on the same day. Providence. If you want to make more impact and have more control of your life, they are both must reads. The Two Freedoms Nobody Talks About by Laura Nguyen. This one makes the distinction between "freedom from" and "freedom to." Ironically, the sweet spot is between the two, where focus and constraints increase impact. Do Your Goals Need More Constraints? by Kathleen Smith. Think big, act small. Simple to understand, and not that hard to do. PodcastEpisode 384 of The Non-Anxious Leader Podcast, Understanding Symmetry Can Help You Lead as a Non-Anxious Presence (Part 1 of 2), is now available. That's it for this week. Thanks for reading. Peace, Jack P.S. If you are new to Two for Tuesday, you can read previous editions HERE. P.P.S. If this was forwarded to you by a friend, you can subscribe here. |
I show faith-based and nonprofit leaders how to be a non-anxious presence, personally and professionally.
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Hi Reader, This week I have a special bonus: A 3-Step Guide for Effective, Healthy Ministry Leadership from Keith Burnett. This free guide will help you reflect on what you can do to increase your impact as a leader. It will help you, as well as those you lead. This week's post focuses on belief and what to do when others believe differently than you do. Thanks for reading. Get Your FREE Family Systems Coach Learn more Belief, Anxiety, and the Work of Leading Without Reactivity Photo:...
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