Tag: emotional intelligence

  • Front page: The Candidate You Meet Beyond the CV

    Front page: The Candidate You Meet Beyond the CV

    In a world that moves fast enough to forget its own depth, I have always chosen to move from the inside out. My work, my path, and my philosophy have never been about chasing titles, industries, or opportunities — but about honouring alignment. True alignment. The kind of alignment that exists beneath perception, beyond credentials,…

  • 🌿 Navigating Career Paths: Aligning Values and Skills for Success

    🌿 Navigating Career Paths: Aligning Values and Skills for Success

    In a world where careers are increasingly shaped by adaptability and alignment, Susan Ndinga Wright offers a refreshing, multidimensional approach to professional growth. Rather than pursuing titles or industry labels, she focuses on finding environments where values, insight, and human intelligence are genuinely recognized. Drawing from her deep expertise in human behavior, leadership, communication, and…

  • When Chivalry Meets the Culture of Violation: Understanding the Field That Allows It

    When Chivalry Meets the Culture of Violation: Understanding the Field That Allows It

    When Chivalry Meets the Culture of Violation We live in a world that calls itself civilized yet normalizes violation on every level — physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual. People think rape begins and ends in the body, but the truth is, it begins long before that — in the subtle ways we ignore, bypass, manipulate,…

  • Anger: The Sacred Fire of Sovereignty

    Anger: The Sacred Fire of Sovereignty

    Anger: The Sacred Fire of Sovereignty Anger isn’t low vibration — it’s liberation in motion. It’s not the enemy of peace, it’s the protector of truth. When a boundary is crossed or authenticity suppressed, anger rises not to destroy, but to reveal. We’ve been taught to fear it, to bury it, to call it unspiritual…

  • To the creators of our own destiny

    To the creators of our own destiny

    Every time we try to understand and/or explain something we don’t fully comprehend, or something we’re just learning to express, we have to look at how we’re willing to internalise the situation and how much of our past if impeding us seeing or explaining the situation for what it is, not from what we’ve learned…