How Emotionally Intelligent People Deal with Opinions

Separate Fact from Fiction

Vincent Vicari
3 min readMay 30, 2022
Photo by Philip Strong on Unsplash

Opinions are not facts. Opinions are plentiful. Like other things, everyone has one. Opinions are easily owned and fueled by whatever the holder feels is appropriate.

Opinion, if repeated enough and constructed carefully, becomes a perceived “fact.”

What’s more, these opinions passed off as facts, are designed to stir emotions. Those presenting these ideas want to elicit an emotional response.

Citing the University of West Alabama: An emotional experience is comprised of three components: a subjective experience, a physiological response, and a behavioral or expressive response.

Does this sound familiar? It may also feel similar, but we cannot confuse emotions for feelings. The key for emotionally intelligent individuals is recognizing the response they are experiencing.

Emotional Recognition

Those pesky human emotions interfere with many things. I suspect many of us, myself included, wish we had a little more of Spock in us. An innate ability to suppress our emotions would do a great deal of good.

Or, let’s take the Star Trek reference one step further and think of how Lt. Commander Data from Star Trek: The Next…

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Vincent Vicari
Vincent Vicari

Written by Vincent Vicari

Writing practical, no-fluff, leadership tips for mid-level managers, project managers, and team leaders. Publisher of The Mid-Level newsletter.

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