What’s Your Emotional EQ?

Assess your emotional intelligence before you walk down the aisle.

You have the same taste in movies, furniture, and pets (cats, never dogs) and the same hopes for the future: kids, financial security, and disinterested mothers-in-law. So there’s no question that you’ll live forever in marital bliss—right? Not so fast, says Dr. Patricia Covalt, a psychotherapist specializing marriage and author of What Smart Couples Know: Using Emotional Intelligence as a Revolutionary Way to Guarantee Greater Success in Relationships. “Success in marriage is likely to be dependent almost entirely on how much you develop and use your emotional intelligence,” she warns. And your engagement period is the perfect time to assess your EQ—which is loosely defined as your ability to read and understand your partner’s feelings while clearly expressing your own. Planning a wedding isn’t easy, but to ensure that your marriage will be, Covalt recommends adding this self-test your to-do list before walking down the aisle:

- Do you know and understand yourself and your fiancé at a deep level including:
o Your personal history and how this has contributed to who you are today.
o Your early life experiences and the influence of your family of origin.
o Your parents’ marriage and its inevitable effect on your new marriage.
o Any major losses or traumas and the effects of those on your psyche and emotions.

- How do you identify, express, and manage your emotions? How does your fiancé identify, express and manage his/hers?

- How do you react to each other’s emotions (the good ones as well as the tough and uncomfortable ones)? Do you help each other in the face of very strong feelings or do you get locked into battle?

- How well developed is your ability to genuinely “tune into” your fiancé?
o Do you fully and attentively listen and empathize with him/her?
o Do you think he/she feels truly heard by you?
o Do you show compassion and understanding even in the face of a disagreement?

 
 
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  • 1 Carmenita // Oct 26, 2007 at 12:51 am

    Every little tip goes a long way, but we must realize there are nomagic formulas for anything - from making money to that forever relationship — just as tongue and teeth fall out, so goes the ups and downs of anything. A long-lasting relationship can be compared to a house. You buy or build one, move in — but you have to do things to keep it up (maintenance) - - take care of the little things that ignored can become the big, complicated and expensive things to correct. So is a relationship - - it is not a 50/50 thing - - sometimes one party gives 75 to the 25, and so on. A mature person will try to keep this in mind, and realize that things just don’t happen, you have to make them happen. Continue to do those things that brought you together in the first place, rather than laying low after the “capture” . Don’t think you can change a person later, work on it before, because those little things that bugged you early on can/will become the biggies later.

 
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