Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:
Emotion,
in its rawest form, is data. It is the body and mind signaling that something
has been perceived, processed, and assigned meaning. The mistake most
professionals make is not in feeling but in concluding too quickly from what
they feel. They treat emotion as instruction, when it is merely indication.
Every
emotion carries a message, but not every message carries truth. Anger may
signal a boundary crossed or simply an ego bruised. Anxiety may indicate risk or
just unfamiliarity. Excitement may point to opportunity or to impulsive
attraction. Emotion, therefore, is not a verdict. It is a notification.
To
operate effectively, the commerce being must develop the ability to pause
between feeling and interpretation. This pause is where advantage is born.
Instead of reacting to emotion, one interrogates it: ‘What is this telling me? What triggered it? Is it valid, or is it
conditioned?’ These questions transform emotion from a disruptor into a
diagnostic tool.
There is
also hierarchy within emotional data. Some signals are immediate and loud,
others subtle and delayed. The untrained mind responds to volume; the
disciplined mind evaluates relevance.
Not every strong feeling deserves action, and not every quiet signal should be
ignored. Interpretation requires calibration.
The
danger lies in emotional absolutism, the belief that because something feels
real, it is real. This is where judgment becomes compromised. Emotion
amplifies perception, but it does not verify it. The professional who
understands this does not dismiss emotion, they cross-examine it.
Over
time, a pattern emerges. Certain triggers repeat, certain reactions recur.
Emotion, then, becomes not just situational data, but behavioural data. It reveals tendencies, biases, blind spots. In
this way, emotion becomes a mirror that reflects not the world as it is, but
the self as it responds.
This is
where emotional neutrality reconnects. If emotion is information, then
neutrality is the processing system. Sans neutrality, information becomes
noise. With neutrality, it becomes insight. The edge is not in eliminating
emotion, but in refusing to be governed by unprocessed signals.
There is
also strategic value in recognizing the emotions of others as information. A
colleague’s defensiveness, a leader’s urgency, a client’s hesitation, and these
are not obstacles, but indicators. To read them accurately is to navigate more
effectively. Emotional intelligence, at its highest level, is not empathy alone,
it is interpretive precision.
The
disciplined professional, therefore, does not ask, ‘How do I feel?’ and stop there. They ask, ‘What does this feeling represent, and what
is the appropriate response?’ This shift moves one from participant in
emotion to analyst of it.
In conclusion
‘Emotion
is information’ is not a soft but a structural one. It repositions emotion from
a force that controls outcomes to a source that informs them. When paired with
emotional neutrality, it becomes a complete system: feel fully, interpret
carefully, act deliberately. With the repertoire thinking of today which is
driven by reaction, the one who can decode emotion, within and with not, does
not just understand the game. They begin to read it ahead of others.. .dp
_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.
Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .
¦KgeleLeso
Contributor: ChatGPT