Emotional Intelligence
Emotional intelligence is the ability to recognize, understand, and manage emotions — both your own and others’ — in the process of making decisions. It is not about suppressing emotions. It is about interpreting them correctly.
Emotions are signals. They reflect your internal state, your expectations, and how you perceive a situation. When understood accurately, they improve decisions. When misread, they distort them.
How emotional intelligence works
Emotional intelligence allows you to notice emotional signals without immediately reacting to them. It creates a gap between feeling and action, where clearer decisions become possible.
- Somatic signals — how emotions appear in the body
- Nervous system — how state influences emotional intensity
- Pattern recognition — how past experience shapes emotional responses
When emotions distort decisions
- Cognitive bias — emotional influence on perception
- Intuition vs anxiety — confusing fear with reliable signals
- Decision fatigue — reduced control under mental exhaustion
Emotional intelligence in decisions
Emotional intelligence does not remove emotion from decision-making. It helps you understand which emotions are relevant signals and which are reactions to noise or stress.
This makes it possible to act with clarity even in complex or emotionally charged situations.
Emotional intelligence in relationships and leadership
When applied to interaction with others, emotional intelligence improves communication, trust, and alignment. It allows you to understand not only what is said, but what is felt and implied.
- Empathy — sensing and understanding others
- Leadership — influencing decisions in groups
Below are articles that explore how emotional intelligence shapes decisions, how to interpret emotional signals accurately, and how to use them as part of a more reliable decision-making process.









