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path between the two, a practical crosswalk between them?

      Like many other disciplines of scholarship and study that have historically placed a higher value on the ideas and voices of a select few, the field of emotional intelligence is no exception. It isn't that there aren't subject matter experts of diverse perspectives and backgrounds doing important and interesting work in this space; it's just that their voices are still comparatively muted and their presence largely overlooked. It's really important we change that. Part of what this entails is looking at how the models we're using now were derived and evaluating whether they adequately reflect what we understand both from a neuroscience standpoint as well as what we ideally want leadership to look like, not to mention EI itself. Are there EI competencies, for example, that when practiced and developed explicitly articulate a vision of inclusive leadership and result in leadership that doesn't destroy the planet and acts in service of world benefit? Equally important, we need to ask ourselves what EI looks like outside of the business domain from which its most popular iteration and framework emerged. What would a model based on what we understand about the brain and its bidirectional relationship to the body look like, for instance?

      Because the most popular of the current models of EI evolved from and within the realm of leadership and business, we also need to decide whether we care enough about EI as a paradigm to see what it might look like in other contexts and whether it holds enough weight outside of the one it was derived from and largely created for. If the answer is yes, which is what my guess would be, then we need to be explicit about which of its elements can be backed up by science and defined in a way that we can apply it and not just talk and write about it. We explore in the last chapter of the book what EI might look like with these objectives in mind and in practical terms.

      I asked myself what I thought was the next logical question: “Which, if any, of the domains and competencies are prerequisites to perform the others?” Put another way, “Which, if any, of the domains and competencies when applied result in the demonstration or skillful application of the others?” From there I set out to find whether there were any necessary and sufficient causes to perform the various EI domains and competencies. While I started my inquiry intending to pinpoint the prerequisites of EI, I quickly found myself asking a bigger question: “What makes developing anything in ourselves possible?” This is a question I've been asking in slightly different ways since as early as I can remember, and one that is perfectly logical to ask given the task at hand—to create a methodology that bridges our conceptual knowledge of EI with our ability to develop, apply, and embody it. Asking and attempting to find answers to questions, like what enables us each to be able to shift, change, and grow, and what are the causes and conditions that allow us to be the most authentic versions of ourselves as much of the time as possible, led me to where I am at now, writing a book on a topic that is much broader than that of EI. I realized then, as I do now, that the methods and frameworks we use for this or any other purpose need to serve us and not the other way around.

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