The Impact of Social-Emotional Intelligence on Adult Relationships
Relationships are not easy. As people, we learn how to navigate relationships using skills we gathered from our own lived experiences and childhood examples. Which can be part of the problem.
Making and keeping friends, being in healthy romantic relationships and being able to work well with a wide range of people are all skills that we need in adulthood. However many adults have never been actively taught any of these skills.
Luckily there are options for helping adults improve the quality of their interpersonal skills. This is where social-emotional learning (SEL) comes in.
SEL is a powerful skill set that can help us be more confident and competent in relationships with others and can be developed at any stage of life.
They are the tools that can help people with things like having difficult conversations, showing empathy while maintaining boundaries and building meaningful connections.
Social and Relationship Skills
People in many ways are just like plants. And relationships are like gardens. Both flourish when they are nurtured, cared for and maintained.
Plants not only need sunshine, water and soil packed with nutrients to thrive, but they also need expertly skilled gardeners. To use their skills and knowledge to keep pests and diseases away, checking in regularly, removing weeds, cutting back branches to let the light in and knowing which beneficial plants will bring the pollinators in.
Good relationships with others are built in similar ways but in the form of skilled communication, reflective listening, conflict resolution and empathy. All of which are elements of a social-emotional learning toolkit.
Emotional intelligence in adulthood
The ability to recognise, regulate and manage our own emotions, as well as the emotions of others is a critical element of every relationship - personal or professional.
Whether you are trying to get buy-in from a stakeholder, sell a retail product, get the boss to sign off on a project, support your partner in leaving a toxic job or just get your teenager to unpack the dishwasher, developing a strong set of relationship skills will help you understand what others are going through, while driving a win-win outcome for everyone involved.
At the heart of it all, in every relationship, people just want to be seen, acknowledged and understood.
Characteristics of Emotionally Intelligent People
So what characteristics make someone emotionally intelligent?
In a nutshell, they are good communicators and excellent listeners with a strong sense of self-awareness who are good at motivating themselves to set and achieve goals.
They effectively self-regulate their emotions with the ability to set and assertively apply boundaries while showing empathy. They embrace change, are curious about life, learning and people and are open to receiving feedback.
Social-emotional intelligence empowers people to build, nurture and maintain strong, positive relationships in all aspects of their lives - at work, in friendships, with family and in romantic relationships.
Embracing Social-Emotional Learning
Nobody is born knowing how to confidently have and navigate the complexities of relationships. It is a long-term learning journey that we develop along the way.
Here is how applying social-emotional learning (SEL) skills can help in real-life relationship scenarios.
Setting a boundary with a team member who always submits work late and incomplete, putting the rest of the team under pressure
Communicating your feelings to a defensive friend who repeatedly takes advantage of your kindness
Showing kindness and empathy without letting others walk all over you
Responding to an action or event without personalising someone else's behaviour
Creating a space where you welcome your team to challenge you and share their ideas.
The relationships we are part of and the quality of them underpin the quality of our lives. Understanding how to use social intelligence to improve relationships is a set of skills that can be learned by anyone.
Want to know more about accessing this toolkit for yourself or someone else? Get in touch with us. We would love to hear from you.
"No significant learning occurs without a significant relationship." James Comer
Work with Us
Momentum Learning has been supporting Leaders, Teams, Teachers, Rangatahi and their Whānau to develop their social and emotional intelligence since 2020. Talk to us about exploring this for your organisation.
Let’s work together.