Grades, certifications, and how quickly one could solve a paper problem have long been used to define intelligence.
Society frequently honors those who memorize the most, compute the quickest, or speak the fastest.
Still, there is another form of intelligence—quiet, usually unseen but extremely potent.
It is human knowledge of intelligence. The capacity to listen without interruption, read feelings without words, and react compassion rather than judgment.
It is evident in the individual who remains calm under duress, selects patience above response, and creates harmony in charged situations.
A young employee once battled to stand out among a cutthroat workplace. He wasn't the most academically embellished or the loudest.
He did, though, possessed an uncommon strength: he knew people. He promoted confidence, settled disagreements, and encouraged colleagues.
He gradually grew into the person everybody relied on.
This is a form of intelligence other than that. Though it cannot always be quantified, one may always feel it.
Those who use emotional wisdom with knowledge will always climb in a world fueled by competition because real intelligence is about how you treat others, not just what you know. Shalom
Thank for your time