Internal Self-Awareness-External Self-Awareness
Are you a cookie or a brownie?
Find out which one is the goal:
The biggest driver of your emotional
intelligence is self-awareness.
Self-awareness is accurately recognizing & understanding your own emotions, thoughts, perceptions, strengths, limitations, & identity.
Cultivating self-awareness can look like:
→ Journaling
→ Practicing meditation
→ Attending talk therapy
→ Recognizing & naming your emotions
The part of self-awareness we don’t often
discuss is external self-awareness.
External self-awareness is how others
recognize & understand (or perceive) you.
Maybe you’re thinking…” Ok, cool.
And why should I care?” 🤔
Knowing how others perceive you makes social awareness & relationship management (2 of the 4 components of EQ) possible.
If you don’t know how others see you, it’s difficult to understand how you fit into the dynamics of a group & how your actions, words, etc. might affect others.
It’s also one of the ways you maintain your authenticity. Think of external self-awareness like an authenticity gauge. 🌡️
We see ourselves as all of the parts,
or ingredients, that make us.
Others often see the finished product, like
a warm chocolate chip cookie. 🍪
If we discover that others actually see
us as a brownie, we know we’re off base.
While our ingredients can technically make both cookies & brownies, only one is true to us.
To keep our internal & external self-awareness
in alignment, we need to present ourselves to
others as we actually are; or be authentic.
Seem like a tall order? 😅
Here’s what to do:
1️⃣ Be open, curious about, & receptive to feedback from others.
2️⃣ Observe others’ reactions to you (hesitation / coldness could be a sign of their uncertainty about you).
3️⃣ Consult a few trusted friends/mentors about how they see you.
4️⃣ Reflect on your actions, words, & decisions, confirming they match your true values, feelings, thoughts, etc.
5️⃣ Use all of your learnings as opportunities to be more visibly you.
“The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.”
– Joseph Campbell