Leveraging Relational Intelligence
đ Just finished "Relational Intelligence" by Dharius Daniels
đĄ Our ability to build the life we want is directly tied to your ability to steward the people in your life well.
This book teaches that relationships are not one-size-fits-allbthey require discernment, boundaries, honesty, and intentional action.
Hereâs my key takeaways, questions to consider, and a practical action step đ
đ¤ 1ī¸âŖ Friends
đš Takeaway: Friends offer mutual love, honesty, and emotional support.
â Question: Are my friendships marked by trust and truth?
đ Action: Evaluate friendships based on the above and clarify who is truly a "friend" and who needs to be reassigned
đĨ 2ī¸âŖ Associates
đš Takeaway: Associates share proximity or purpose, not intimacy.
â Question: Am I expecting too much from an associate?
đ Action: Adjust expectations to match the role.
đ¯ 3ī¸âŖ Assignments
đš Takeaway: Some relationships exist for growth, development, or a season.
â Question: Am I trying to turn an assignment into a friendship?
đ Action: Clarify boundaries and purpose in this relationship.
đ§ 4ī¸âŖ Advisors
đš Takeaway: Advisors provide wisdom, perspective, and restraint.
â Question: Who challenges me and helps me avoid costly mistakes? Am I coachable?
đ Action: Seek, thank, or listen more closely to an advisor.
đĒ 5ī¸âŖ Reflection
đš Takeaway: Relational clarity begins with honest self-reflection.
â Question: What am I feeling and why?
đ Action: Journal before reacting emotionally.
đ 6ī¸âŖ Evaluation
đš Takeaway: Feelings and fruit reveal the health of relationships.
â Question: Are my relationships producing growth or frustration?
đ Action: Evaluate the fruit, not just the feelings.
đ§ 7ī¸âŖ Clarification
đš Takeaway: Unspoken expectations create resentment.
â Question: What expectation have I failed to communicate?
đ Action: Clearly articulate what you need or expect.
𤲠8ī¸âŖ Acceptance
đš Takeaway: Accept people for who they are not who you wish they were.
â Question: Am I trying to change someone instead of accepting reality?
đ Action: Release unrealistic expectations.
đŖī¸ 9ī¸âŖ Advocation
đš Takeaway: Healthy relationships include support and advocacy.
â Question: Am I speaking for people or about them?
đ Action: Advocate for someone when theyâre not in the room.
đŦ đ Conversation
đš Takeaway: Growth requires honest, courageous conversations.
â Question: What conversation am I avoiding?
đ Action: Schedule the conversation instead of postponing it.
đ§ 1ī¸âŖ1ī¸âŖ Limitations
đš Takeaway: Limits protect emotional and mental health.
â Question: Where do I need stronger boundaries?
đ Action: Set one limit and honor it consistently.
âī¸ 1ī¸âŖ2ī¸âŖ Elimination
đš Takeaway: Some relationships require distance for peace and health.
â Question: Is this relationship costing me more than itâs giving?
đ Action: Create space where necessary without guilt.
đĒ 1ī¸âŖ3ī¸âŖ What Kind of Friend Are You?
đš Takeaway: Healthy relationships start with personal responsibility.
â Question: Am I the kind of friend I want others to be?
đ Action: Identify one character trait you need to strengthen.
đ§Š 1ī¸âŖ4ī¸âŖ A Model for Healthy Relationships
đš Takeaway: Healthy relationships require clarity, honesty, and alignment.
â Question: Are my relationships intentionally structured or accidental?
đ Action: Re-map your relational circle intentionally.
đ 1ī¸âŖ5ī¸âŖ Howâs It Going?
đš Takeaway: Relationships need ongoing check-ins and adjustments.
â Question: What needs attention right now?
đ Action: Do a relational audit this month.
đŦ Final Thought:
Relational intelligence isnât about cutting people off. Itâs about putting people in the right place and respecting the roles and boundaries you set for each relationship category.
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