To find out, you don’t have to take a whole IQ test. If you have the following ten habits, you can count yourself as one of the brainy people.
You should consider one thing first though: it’s not always an advantage to be smarter than those around you
- Smart people stay cool
A fight with your partner, an interminable traffic jam, or a last-minute cancellation — there are a lot of things that can trigger frustration or anger. Smart people do lose their cool and give vent to their spleen sometimes, but less often than people with a lower IQ. They have more self-control.
This is what a long-term study showed from the University of Michigan, analyzing 600 participants, their children and parents for 22 years. Researchers wanted to know whether there was a connection between aggressive behavior and a low intelligence quotient. The results of the study revealed that children learn very early to react to conflict situations with anger and aggression. Growing up in a combative, aggressive environment impedes brain development.
- Smart people don’t think they’re better than others
Less bright people often have an inaccurate picture of their own talents. They tend to think they’re better than others. According to a study published in the magazine Psychological Science, less intelligent people are more often homophobic or racist, and tend to categorize people prematurely. They’re also more likely to cast others in a bad light while puffing themselves up.
Smart people know their own value and don’t need to condescend to others to prove it. Quite the contrary: they’re more likely to be willing to help others and rejoice in others’ success.
- Smart people admit to mistakes
Taking responsibility for your lapses and misbehavior? This is usually considered out of the question by people with lower IQs. They would rather blame others for their own failures. Brain development in children whose parents act like mistakes are a cardinal sin is greatly impacted by the stress: they grow up believing it’s the end of the world to admit failure and the subsequent fear of messing up inhibits their learning.
Smart people on the other hand have learned to admit to their own mistakes and take responsibility for their conduct. They don’t see mistakes as something bad, necessarily, but often as a chance to learn and grow. Another University of Michigan study showed that clever people’s brains react differently to mistakes than those of the less apt.
- Smart people have empathy
People with a lower IQ often care only about their own feelings and aren’t able to connect to others’ needs. It often has to do with the ability to empathize, projecting yourself into someone else’s experience and understanding it. Empathizing is essential for harmonious relationships. Less intelligent people have a hard time reconsidering their own opinions so they just try to convince others to agree with them. They also don’t usually notic if a person they’re talking to is actually cleverer than they are.
Researchers at Texas Tech University showed in a representative study that smarter people were more able to recognize the feelings of others. Those study participants also tended to be more willing to do something good for another person, without expecting anything in return.
Obviously intelligent people aren’t a bunch of “yes men,” but they have learned, perhaps from earliest childhood, that it’s safe to open up their sense to others, feel empathy, and offer help.
It makes sense that people growing up with cold, non-empathetic parents wouldn’t learn these skills, and their development could even be hindered by that childhood experience. After all, living with parents who don’t empathize with you is scary and exhausting, as well as a bad example. So those people’s brains had to work harder at surviving a cold-hearted environment (meaning hiding their own feelings), than at learning to recognize others’ feelings.
And when those kids grow up, they don’t expect the people around them to have feelings, or know how to read them when they do.
In any case, it’s clear that loving relationships in childhood, including resolving conflicts constructively, make a huge difference for kids’ brain development — and thus impact people’s entire lives!
But then, on the other hand…
- Smart people are anxious and mistrustful
Yep, you read that right. Smart people tend to worry more and take longer to make friends. They don’t trust people as easily. And they have the brain capacity to understand complex contexts and project into the future — to imagine everything that can go wrong.
The flip side is that they’re also better at deviousness, since it involves thinking through actions, inventing falsehoods, and planning ahead, which takes a lot of brainpower. Evolutionary psychologists came up with this result from a survey of 15,000 people between the ages of 18 and 28.
But for all their anxiety and lack of trust, once smart people build friendships they tend to be longer-term and more stable than less intelligent people’s relationships.
- Smart people are messy
Messiness isn’t necessarily a sign of laziness! Look at your friends’ and colleagues’ desks and you’ll get an idea of who’s likely to be clever or not. As lots of studies have already shown, people who place less value on tidiness tend to be more creative, readier to try something new, more likely to think big.
- Smart people swear more
More intelligent people don’t get upset as often as less clever people. But when they do, they do it right dammit! They swear more often and give free reign to their frustration. It might sound surprising, but a recent study in “Language Science” found that swearing was a sign of smarts! Perhaps the difference is in letting off steam with a little raw language instead of with violence or prolonged anger.
- Smart people are night owls
A number of studies from the London School of Economics have shown that smart people stay awake later than people with lower IQs. Study participants with an IQ of 75 went to bed before midnight during the week, while people with an IQ of 125 fell asleep at 12:30 at night on average. On the weekend too, the more intelligent were likely to stay up later than the less clever. (It should be noted, however, that the test subjects were all young people around the age of 20!)
- Smart people are lazy
Did you expect that? People who sometimes lie around doing nothing are apparently more intelligent! A study from Florida Gulf Coast University suggests that bright people use their lazy time to ponder the universe, whereas the less intelligent get bored and need to do something — often physical activity — to distract themselves.
- Smart people use the snooze button
Who doesn’t know this situation: the alarm goes off but you just Can’t. Get. Up. Instead, you press the snooze button a few (or a dozen) times, putting off the moment of truth as long as you can. Well, you don’t need to feel bad about it. A study published in the journal “Personality and Individual Differences” showed that smart people ignore their alarm clock more often. What good news!
So if you’re a cool-headed, mistrustful, empathetic, messy, lazy night owl who likes to sleep in, you might just be brilliant. And of course, if you’re not, don’t worry. Not only because smart people probably have less fun in life (all that anxiety), but also because there are, in fact, plenty of neat, trusting early risers who are smart too The essential thing in the end is being yourself, just as you are.
So are you really as smart as you though??
Nice write up. But i don't really agree with some of the facts stated, because i am smart and i hardly swear. And yes, i am smart.
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You are smart.. As long as u portray two or more of the trait
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Thats fair enough. Thanks once again for the information. I think i will use it for one of my classes.
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