Emotional Intelligence (FREE Bonus Included) Great Tips and Suggestions on How to Improve Your Emotional Intelligence and Take Control of Your Life
Emotional Intelligence: Great Tips and Suggestions is a book that examines the history and impact of Emotional Intelligence on our daily lives. Whether it be at home, at work, or as a leadership tool, there are ways to fine tune your Emotional Intelligence to become healthier and to take back control of your emotional life. Emotional Intelligence: Great Tips and Suggestions will explain to you the range of emotions and their relative impact on mental and physical health. The world around us is often chaotic, out of control, and the measure of a human being is whether or not they can show the right emotions at the right time. There is, of course, no discernible rhyme or reason to the standards therein, but rather they are fluid, constantly changing. Emotional Intelligence: Great Tips and Suggestions will walk you through the process of using the correct emotions at the right time and keeping them within the proper boundaries that will improve the quality of your life, rather than confuse and bog down your life. Emotional Intelligence: Great Tips and Suggestions is not a “new age” book wherein the primary exercise is to stare at a blade of grass and become one with it.
This book provides:
Real time tools to help you take control of literally every aspect of your life through increasing your Emotional Intelligence.
What Is Emotional Intelligence?
EQ Professional Application
EQ Personal Application
Getting Your FREE Bonus
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William Donaldson Clark was a prominent British journalist and public servant who blended a career in writing with high-level politics.
He was born on 28 July 1916, the son of John McClare Clark and Marion Jackson. He was educated at the independent Oundle School and graduated from Oriel College, Oxford with a First Class degree in modern history. He later attended the University of Chicago in 1938 as a Commonwealth Fellow. During World War II he worked doing public relations for Britain in the United States.
He became the London editor of Encyclopædia Britannica in 1946, a post he left for journalism in 1949 and later he was a foreign affairs correspondent for The Observer (1950–1955), and wrote political novels, including 'Number 10' (1966) and 'Cataclysm: The North-South Conflict of 1987' (1984).
He was also the first director of the Overseas Development Institute (1960–1968) and later served as Vice President for External Affairs at the World Bank (1974–1980).
In addition, he was the press secretary to Prime Minister Anthony Eden from 1955 to 1956, eventually resigning in protest over the Suez Canal Crisis.
He died of liver cancer at his home in Cuxham, Oxfordshire and was survived by his two brothers, Kenneth and Nicholas.
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