Social intelligence is the skill set that lets us read other people’s feelings, respect unspoken rules and adapt our behaviour smoothly. When that skill set is weak, it tends to leak out through unmistakable habits. Here are the eight that current commentary highlights most often:
- Missing emotional cues – People low in social intelligence struggle to notice facial expressions, tone or body language, so they misread how others really feel.
- Weak eye contact and weak listening – They avoid steady eye contact, let their gaze wander or plan their reply while you speak, leaving you feeling unheard.
- Excessive self-focus – From bragging about achievements to speaking too loudly, they try to keep the spotlight on themselves without sensing the strain it puts on the room.
- Conversation-hogging – Interrupting, talking over people or steering every topic back to their own interests shows poor awareness of give-and-take.
- Boundary-blurring – Standing too close, probing sensitive topics or oversharing intimate details signals difficulty recognising where other people’s comfort zones start.
- Insensitive humour – Jokes made at someone else’s expense (often meant to impress bystanders) betray a blind spot for social impact.
- Poor conflict handling – They either avoid disagreements altogether or swing to defensiveness and aggression, leaving issues unresolved.
- Low adaptability – Using the same tone, stories or behaviour everywhere—from casual cafés to formal meetings—shows failure to tune in to context.
Spotting these habits is not about judging people; it is about recognising skills that can be learned. Research shows that honest feedback, empathy training and practice with active-listening drills can raise social intelligence across the lifespan. Improvement begins the moment we notice the first habit in ourselves and decide to change it.
Swiss Psychology Open: “A Robust Negative Relationship Between Self-Reports of Social Skills and Performance Measures of Social Intelligence”, Heck et al., 2024
The paper finds that people who believe they are socially skilled actually perform worse on objective social-intelligence tests, underlining how easy it is to overlook our own blind spots.
The Importance of Mindful Communication for Mental Health
Explains how empathy, active listening and boundary-setting reduce stress and strengthen relationships. Training in mindful communication boosts emotional resilience and social connectedness—practical routes to raising social intelligence.
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