What does it mean to “Grow” as people who are committed to supporting others to grow? How is our emotional intelligence, globally, supporting and inhibiting growth? New research findings suggest that our global levels of EQ may fuel challenges, we also seem to be set up (on average) for growth. Which begs an essential question: In what conditions do we grow best?

Welcome to Growth!

Findings from the Latest EQ Research on Growing Our Capacity to Grow

by Joshua Freedman

Growing on the Inside: Who Do You Want to Be Next?

When our children were small, my wife and I would ceremoniously mark their ascending altitude on the wall. I’d often comment about how growth is both external and internal. When we’d talk about how much they’d grown in height, I’d comment how they’ve also “grown on the inside.” Sometimes I’d observe ways they’d become competent, from riding bikes to making pancakes. Perhaps more importantly, I liked to call attention to their growth of character: “I notice that recently you’ve become more ____.”

For many people, as that process of physical “growth on the outside” slows, so does “growth on the inside.” Yet one of our greatest gifts is the capacity to nourish the possibilities within, overcome inertia, and develop ourselves. For yourself, today, what is one quality you’d like to be able to write in that ___? Caring, self-compassionate? Responsible, patient? Wise, hardworking, relaxed, focused? Energized, calm? Self-disciplined, playful?

How will you know this growth is occurring?

What’s fueling that desire – is it because you’re suffering without it, or is it sprouting from your own flourishing? Is it something you want, or something you “should” do, or perhaps both?

And, from were will it arise? Are those qualities already inside you – or must they come from the outside?

 

This calendar quarter, October through December 2018, we’ll explore these questions and the science and practice of growing “on the inside” as individuals — and also as teams and organizations.

Growing EQ Changemakers for the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals

As a United Nations Action Partner, last week we honored the Global Day of Action for the Sustainable Development Goals. How will humanity rise to meet these audacious, urgent needs (such as eliminating hunger and ending violence against children)? Is it enough for politicians to pass a law?

The Convention on the Rights of the Child was passed 29 years ago; among other rights, it outlawed violence against children, and all world nations but two signed on. Yet three decades later, according to a 2016 study on violence against children, published in Pediatrics, over half of the world’s children (1 billion children, ages 2-17) suffer from violence.

At least in this tragic case, laws are not enough. Laws are a kind of “growing on the outside.” What do we need to “grow on the inside” to change this story?

One answer is emotional intelligence: The capacity to align our feelings, thoughts and actions for mutual good. When people develop greater EQ skills, they’re able to solve problems proactively and effectively, communicate about differences, and make better decisions.

The power of EQ for harnessing human power for positive change is why we’re holding the POP-UP Festival, the largest EQ event in history supporting UNICEF’s mission for safety and wellbeing for every child.

This quarter’s EQ Café (a free event for practicing EQ, held by our volunteer leaders in 200+ cities around the world each quarter) will also follow these themes. Watch this schedule of EQ Cafés to see if one is coming to a city near you.

Calling Changemakers: Teaching EQ by Practicing EQ

Six Seconds is now 21 years old. Somewhere near the start, Anabel Jensen, Six Seconds’ Founding President, and I were talking about what’s needed to address the world’s challenges and her simple answer: We need more changemakers.

Another “Anabel-ism” is: “We teach what we are, and we are what we teach.” So, to become changemakers for a more emotionally intelligent world, we need to grow our own emotional intelligence.

We started Six Seconds in order to answer the question: “How do you teach EQ?” Through decades of research and practice, we’ve developed a range of tools and a systemic methodology for this, but, at the core, the answer is: By practicing it ourselves. This is, at its center, Six Seconds’ strategy and our purpose: We engage and support people to practice emotional intelligence in a way that supports and engages people to practice emotional intelligence.

Next month, we meet for our seventh EQ Master Class, our occasional gathering of Six Seconds’ EQ changemakers who’ve built their businesses and lives around this mission. Like all our learning programs, Master Class isn’t really a class… it’s a six month program for growing capacity: Growing the capabilities we can see on the outside, and growing the strength on the inside to support and sustain this work.

The Newest Research on EQ: Growing Challenges, Growing Competencies

Over the course of the year we’ve been sharing findings from the world’s largest study on emotional intelligence (EQ), The State of the Heart. The study is based on a random sampling from a database that now includes over 200,000 people in 160 countries. We’ve mentioned that since 2011, overall EQ has declined – but recently, the trend has changed, and overall EQ is no longer declining.

Now, for the first time, we’re sharing a more detailed view of the changes in the global EQ dataset. If we graph the eight competencies in the Six Seconds Model of Emotional Intelligence in 2011 and 2017, we can see that only one has increased overall — and some have declined much more than others. Key:

To interpret this graph, we could consider the world as a person: In this time, they’ve become slightly less self-aware (blue), considerably less able to self-manage (red), and showing far less self-direction (green).

One of the competencies with the largest declines is Navigate Emotions, which means they’ve become more volatile and emotionally reactive. Another decline is in Increase Empathy, which means they’ve become less emotionally connected — more isolated.

We can infer this “global citizen” is making analytical decisions, and perhaps leaving out emotions (since, in 2017, the analytical skills of Recognize Patterns and Apply Consequential Thinking are higher than the emotion-related skills of Enhance Emotional Literacy and Increase Empathy).

Their decisions may be tied to a growing perception of risk/threat (indicated by declining optimism). Together with the increased perception of threat or risk, the increase in Apply Consequential Thinking suggests this “average person” is more able to pause and assess the risks before moving forward.

The fact that emotional literacy and empathy are higher than Navigate Emotions could mean that while the emotional data is visible, it’s overwhelming. 

This “person” has a lot of energy (Engage Intrinsic Motivation and Exercise Optimism) and is not sure where to apply that for the long-term (lower Pursue Noble Goals). So in addition to the reduced emotional connection, they’re less able to connect with their own sense of purpose.

That’s all fairly alarming. However, it’s not all bad news.

This graph shows that we seem to have reached a rather dramatic “inflection point” where some EQ competencies are continuing to decline, while others are on the rise:

EEL = Enhance Emotional Literacy
RP = Recognize Patterns

ACT = Apply Consequential Thinking
NE = Navigate Emotions
EIM = Engage Intrinsic Motivation
EO = Exercise Optimism

IE = Increase Empathy
PNG = Pursue Noble Goals

We can see that while some EQ skills have continued to decline, others are more stable — and some are now increasing. From 2016 to 2017, half the competencies actually increased (EEL, RP, ACT, EIM). This reflects a growing awareness (emotional + rational), a growing ability to pause and assess, and an increasing energy for change.

What if we all could be more aware, take those all-important pauses to assess — and we had more energy to step forward, fueled from the inside? That sounds like a recipe for growth!

The Energy for Growth: Sunlight vs Rock

Continuing on this theme of Engage Intrinsic Motivation: Where is the source of energy for growth?

Sometimes we grow from adversity. We feel miserable, and that pain catalyzes us to change. It’s like roots breaking through rock to reach water. As the Hungarian poet Lajos Kassák wrote: “The father of every good work is discontent, and its mother is diligence.”

On the other hand, sometimes we grow because it’s our nature to do so. Seeking sunlight, the acorn turns into an oak. It may be that striving actually blocks change, and compassionate acceptance is the soil in which deep change takes root.

As the Chinese philosopher-poet Lao Tzu wrote:

“Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don’t resist them; that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally forward in whatever way they like.”

In my own story of childhood struggles and growth, I realized sometimes growth is less about “achieving,” and more akin to “unfolding.” What’s your experience of the conditions for growth? Is suffering enough? Or must that suffering be set in a context where it’s catalyzed into something new?

Finally, three more quotes about growth — which one speaks to you about your own growth? Share your comments below.

To join us in this quarter of exploring growth, subscribe to Six Seconds’ newsletter:

Joshua Freedman
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