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\nAbout the\xa0author
\nMarc Brackett, Ph.D., is the Founder and Director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and a Professor in the Child Study Center of Yale University.
\nAs a researcher for over 20 years, Brackett has focused on the role of emotions and emotional intelligence in learning, decision making, creativity, relationships, health, and performance. He has published 125 scholarly articles and received numerous awards and accolades for his work in this area. He also consults regularly with corporations, such as Facebook, Microsoft, and Google on integrating the principles of emotional intelligence into employee training and product design. Most recently, he co-founded Oji Life Lab, a corporate learning firm that develops innovative digital learning systems on emotional intelligence.
\nBrackett\u2019s mission is to educate the world about the value of emotions and the skills associated with using them wisely. \u201cI want everyone to become an emotion scientist\u201d, he says. \u201cWe need to be curious explorers of our own and others\u2019 emotions so they can help us achieve our goals and improve our lives.\u201d
\nSource: https://www.marcbrackett.com/about/about-marc-brackett-ph-d/
\nAbout the\xa0book
\nThe mental wellbeing of children and adults is shockingly poor. Marc Brackett, author of PERMISSION TO FEEL, knows why. And he knows what we can do.
\nThis book combines rigour, science, passion and inspiration in equal parts. Too many children and adults are suffering; they are ashamed of their feelings and emotionally unskilled, but they don\u2019t have to be. Marc Brackett\u2019s life mission is to reverse this course, and this book can show you how.
\nSource: amazon.com\xa0
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\nBig idea #1\u200a\u2014\u200aBe an emotion scientist
\nThere is a science to understanding emotion. Yes, some of us may have previously (or may still) think it\u2019s all just the fluffy stuff or it\u2019s nonsense. But with the right skills we can uncover that we can learn to understand and appropriately respond to our own, and other people\u2019s, emotions and see emotions as information. That information when taken with a scientific mindset, gives us something to consider or to analyse, especially noticing when certain emotions arise more than others.
\nChronic stress impacts learning, processing memory and overall health. So knowing how we feel, and maybe helping others understand how they feel, has bigger implications in life too.
\nAnd yes, these skills are best learned young, but it\u2019s better late than never. Marc and his late Uncle Marvin tried to bring these skills to schools in the late 90s, but failed. Not because the kids couldn\u2019t handle it or couldn\u2019t have those conversations, but because the teachers (the adults in the room) couldn\u2019t, and wouldn\u2019t see the importance of it. They weren\u2019t equipped to handle their own emotions, and therefore were deeply uncomfortable with having any conversation about emotions with the kids in their classes.
\nWhich goes to show that unless the adults in the room, or in society, are equipped with these skills, there\u2019s no hope for the younger generations coming up.
\nBig idea #2\u200a\u2014\u200aThe five skills of emotional intelligence
\nAnd these skills sit under the acronym of R U L E R.
\nR\u200a\u2014\u200aRecognise: recognising in ourselves and others, through verbal and nonverbal cues, what emotion is being felt.
\nU\u200a\u2014\u200aUnderstand: understanding those feelings and more importantly, the source of them.
\nL\u200a\u2014\u200aLabel: this requires us to have a better vocabulary in terms of our emotional awareness and being able to label emotions.
\nE\u200a\u2014\u200aExpress: learning to express our emotions in a healthy way that informs others of how we\u2019re feeling and maybe what action/support we need.
\nR\u200a\u2014\u200aRegulate: regulating your emotions rather than letting them regulate you.
\nBy practicing these regularly, you get better at them and may find situations people (and maybe just your general days) easier to deal with. Especially if you practice them in conjunction with in your partner, family unit, or work team.
\nUnderstanding is probably one of the hardest ones to master, as we need to be able to ask why in the heat of the moment; why is that person, or why am I reacting like this or feeling this way? Which when you\u2019re in the heat of the moment, maybe in a high emotion situation might be hard to do.
\nLabeling might be a good skill to start building, because that we can do it in isolation with a list of emotions and improving our emotional vocabulary from the limited \u2018mad, sad, glad\u2019 and recognise more subtle, nuanced emotions.
\nBig idea #3\u200a\u2014\u200abring emotional intelligence home or to\xa0work
\nIt\u2019s so incredible how much people deeply want, and need, to share their feelings, but yet how much we\u2019re hiding from each other, for fear of ridicule or some kind of repercussion for sharing how we feel.
\nThere\u2019s so many examples in the book, particularly teachers and groups of parents, that Marc has run workshops with. Given a chance, they release an outpouring of stress, shame, guilt, and all these other deep emotional states that people just don\u2019t have the opportunity, or feel safe to share in other situations.
\nSo along with being an emotion scientist, and using the RULER skills, we can bring emotional intelligence into our homes or workplaces by doing four things.
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\nFurther listening: Marc Brackett on Bren\xe9 Brown\u2019s Unlocking Us podcast.
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