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response: “Hold up! If it's not too late, I'd like to amend my order. I'll take a tall, two-shot pity, half-pump empathy, slightly forced smile, please.” Okay, so maybe an instance of emotion isn't quite like ordering your beverage of choice, but hopefully you get the idea. The brain isn't purely reacting to its external environment; it's predicting and adjusting, calibrating its perceptions as it goes, based on its prior experiences and what it perceives by way of sensory inputs in the moment.

      Within the classical view, emotions have been carefully classified and categorized much like a dried-flower or bug collection. Each person—irrespective of culture, geography, upbringing, language, or context—comes prepackaged with a repertoire, an arsenal as it were, of emotions that are consistently experienced and unilaterally identifiable, bearing telltale physiological markers and facial expressions. In the classical understanding, emotions are triggered by external events, and we respond reactively based on a model of the brain as having specific regions that separately oversee our emotions, our higher-level executive center governing rational thought, and our fight-or-flight response mechanism, a throwback to our reptilian predecessors—each distinct area of the brain forever locked in a head-over-heart, stimulus-response tug-of-war. There is also the belief that through cognitive control alone we can bring our emotions under our obeisance, like spirits we summon at a séance, if we just try hard enough.

      Our emotions are more elaborate than they are simple. Irrespective of the mechanisms by which they arrive or what names we give them when they do, the bottom line is, emotions are a pervasive hallmark of our experience. Their presence acts as a kind of invisible yet palpable navigation system guiding our response. But because we can't see them nor are we fully versed in their detection or intervention, they often elude our conscious awareness and therefore our inclination to recategorize or reframe them. That is where the 12 Self-Discoveries come into play. They provide us with quick methods to spot when our interpretation of them is or isn't helpful, pointing out common mental pitfalls we may be succumbing to and remedies for when we do. Our mental outlook and what unfolds within our mind's ecosystem have a profound impact on us, not just physically but psychologically. What's more, our emotions impact how we make decisions and predispose the course of action we're likely to take as a result of how we interpret them. Thus, our real-time investigation of our emotions and ability to reinterpret or change our perceptual stance relative to them matters as much as our conceptual and scientific understanding of them. How we experience our emotions, the ways in which they color our outlook, shape our outcomes, and impact our relationships for better or worse mirror back to us the working state of our own emotional intelligence.

      1 1. The 12 competencies are grouped under the four specific domains as follows: Within Self-Awareness is the competency emotional self-awareness. Within the domain of Self-Management are the competencies emotional balance, adaptability, achievement orientation, and positive outlook. Within the domain of Social Awareness are the competencies empathy and organizational awareness. Finally, within the domain of Relationship Management are the competencies influence, coach and mentor, teamwork, conflict management, and inspirational leadership.

      2 2. Dr. Richard Davidson goes by the name Richie.

      3 3. Richie Davidson is quoted in an article in Mindful regarding the measurable impact of contemplative practice on the brain, “We've shown in the laboratory that meditating for a half hour a day for two weeks is enough to produce changes in the brain” (Delehanty, 2017).

      4 4. Lisa Feldman Barrett speaks to the origin of the triune model of the brain, what she terms “one of the most successful misconceptions in human biology,” which she explains begins with a model of the human brain consisting of layers: the innermost geared toward our survival, our alleged emotion system known as the “limbic system” sitting atop that, and finally our allegedly rational and uniquely human cortex wrapped around that (Barrett, 2017).

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