This guide reveals how to identify low emotional intelligence through specific verbal cues, body language patterns and behaviors, and includes proven strategies to protect yourself in these interactions.
Verbal and non-verbal signs of low emotional intelligence
You’re in a meeting when a colleague dismisses your concern with a quick “you’re overreacting.” Later, your partner responds to your frustration with an irritated “calm down.” Your boss gives you a smile that somehow feels more like a wall than a welcome.
These moments leave you questioning yourself. Am I too sensitive? Am I reading too much into this? The answer is probably no. What you’re picking up on are the telltale signs of low emotional intelligence, and your gut is right to notice them.
Emotional intelligence isn’t just a buzzword from corporate training sessions. It’s the ability to recognize, understand and manage emotions in yourself and others. When someone lacks this skill, it shows up in specific patterns that most people can sense but struggle to name.
The words signalling low emotional intelligence
Listen carefully to how someone speaks during conflict or stress. Their word choices tell you everything about their emotional awareness.
The body language signalling low emotional intelligence
Facial expressions leak the truth, even when someone controls their words. Contempt is the single strongest predictor of divorce. You can spot it in a unilateral lip raise, where one corner of the mouth pulls back and up. This microexpression lasts less than half a second, but it signals moral superiority mixed with disgust.
When someone displays contempt while listening to you, they’re communicating “I’m better than you” regardless of what they say out loud. Research shows this expression doesn’t just predict relationship failure. It also correlates with physical illness. Couples who regularly show contempt for each other get sick more often. Living in a state of low-grade emotional warfare suppresses your immune system.
The smile that doesn’t reach the eyes tells its own story. A genuine smile engages both the mouth muscles and the muscles around the eyes, creating crow’s feet. But people with low emotional intelligence often produce “social smiles” that only move the mouth. These non-Duchenne smiles don’t just mask discomfort. They actively signal psychological distance. When someone gives you a tight, polite smile, their brain is categorizing you as “other” and pushing you away socially.
Eye contact patterns matter too. Chronic avoidance might signal shame or anxiety, but in the context of low emotional intelligence, it usually indicates a lack of interest and emotional availability. Same with constant phone checking during conversation. Someone who prioritizes their screen over your face is telling you exactly where you rank in their priorities.
How low emotional intelligence act when things get hard
Behavior patterns reveal emotional intelligence deficits more clearly than any single moment. Some people explode when stressed. They yell, they slam doors, they create an environment where everyone walks on eggshells. They often believe “letting it all out” is healthy, completely unaware of the trauma they inflict. This pattern shows a fundamental struggle with self-regulation. Their amygdala takes over, bypassing the rational brain entirely.
Others shut down completely. When conflict arises, they give you the silent treatment, walk away mid-sentence, or refuse to discuss anything “heavy.” They rationalize this as preferring logic over messy emotions, but it’s just avoidance dressed up as rationality. This stonewalling prevents any resolution, which means problems fester and relationships slowly decay.
Some people confuse self-awareness with self-absorption. They monopolize conversations with their own dramas, using friends and colleagues as unpaid therapists. They overshare heavy personal details without asking “is this a good time?” and they completely miss signs of listener fatigue or discomfort. This trauma dumping reflects a deficit in social awareness. They can’t gauge whether their disclosure is appropriate for the context or whether the other person has the capacity to hold it.
Then there’s passive aggression. Some people fear direct confrontation but can’t regulate their resentment, so it leaks out through sarcasm, “forgetting” important tasks, and backhanded compliments. “You did great for someone with so little experience” sounds like praise until you actually hear it. This behavior forces the recipient to become the aggressor by bringing up the issue, which lets the passive-aggressive person play victim.
How to respond to low emotional intelligence
Recognizing low emotional intelligence is only half the battle. The harder part is deciding how to respond in ways that protect your wellbeing without escalating the situation.
The key principle across all these strategies:
“Don’t explain yourself to people who aren’t actually listening!”
When you explain your behavior to a high-conflict or low-emotional-intelligence person, you signal that you believe you’re answerable to them. They don’t listen to understand. They listen to find hooks, new information they can use against you. In these dynamics, the person who speaks less often holds more power.
Why this matters for your relationships
Low emotional intelligence isn’t just annoying. It’s corrosive. Left unaddressed, it creates patterns that damage trust, breed resentment, and make genuine connection impossible. You can’t have emotional intimacy with someone who invalidates your feelings. You can’t resolve conflicts with someone who stonewalls. You can’t feel safe with someone who explodes unpredictably.
The research is clear: emotional intelligence predicts success in relationships far better than traditional measures of compatibility. You can have shared interests, similar values and great physical chemistry, but if one person lacks the skills to recognize emotions, regulate reactions and respond with empathy, the relationship will struggle.
The good news is you don’t need the other person to develop emotional intelligence for you to change your experience. You can’t control whether they learn to identify their feelings, manage their impulses or show empathy. But you can control your responses. You can set boundaries. You can refuse to engage in circular arguments. You can choose which behaviors you’ll tolerate and which you won’t.
This isn’t about changing them. It’s about protecting yourself while you decide what kind of relationship, if any, you want to maintain with someone who lacks these skills. Some relationships are worth the investment of patient communication and clear boundaries. Others aren’t. Only you can make that call.
Pay attention to the patterns. Trust what you see in their words, their faces and their actions. Your emotional intelligence is picking up signals that matter. The question is what you’re going to do with what you know.

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