Bible_Belt
Master Don Juan
What we call 'inner game' is a facet of emotional intelligence. It's basically having your own mind together enough so that your own personal issues do not screw up your life. That sounds easier than it is.
One of the comments to the article below was by a retired teacher who blamed bad parenting. I think that if no one ever taught you how to emotionally relate to people, then you'll probably have a hard time with women, because they are emotional creatures. Guys who are good with girls tend to be intuitive. If you can get an idea of what a woman is thinking by looking at her, then it's easy to pick out the horny ones. That's emotional intelligence.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/15/m...telligence-be-taught.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
...So-called noncognitive skills — attributes like self-restraint, persistence and self-awareness — might actually be better predictors of a person’s life trajectory than standard academic measures. A 2011 study using data collected on 17,000 British infants followed over 50 years found that a child’s level of mental well-being correlated strongly with future success. Similar studies have found that kids who develop these skills are not only more likely to do well at work but also to have longer marriages and to suffer less from depression and anxiety. Some evidence even shows that they will be physically healthier.
One of the comments to the article below was by a retired teacher who blamed bad parenting. I think that if no one ever taught you how to emotionally relate to people, then you'll probably have a hard time with women, because they are emotional creatures. Guys who are good with girls tend to be intuitive. If you can get an idea of what a woman is thinking by looking at her, then it's easy to pick out the horny ones. That's emotional intelligence.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/15/m...telligence-be-taught.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
...So-called noncognitive skills — attributes like self-restraint, persistence and self-awareness — might actually be better predictors of a person’s life trajectory than standard academic measures. A 2011 study using data collected on 17,000 British infants followed over 50 years found that a child’s level of mental well-being correlated strongly with future success. Similar studies have found that kids who develop these skills are not only more likely to do well at work but also to have longer marriages and to suffer less from depression and anxiety. Some evidence even shows that they will be physically healthier.