The Three Intelligences: What a Life in Science and Writing Has Taught Me
For most of my professional life, I lived in the world of IQ.
Not just casually, but intensely, methodically, rigorously, and with purpose. My years at the FDA demanded it. Decisions weren’t abstract; they carried consequences measured in human lives. Every conclusion had to be supported by data, every recommendation defensible, every judgment grounded in evidence. It was a world of serial processing, step-by-step logic, where the left brain reigned supreme.
And for a long time, I believed that was enough. But life, as it often does, gently and sometimes abruptly teaches us otherwise.
The Limits of IQ Alone
In the FDA, I learned how to analyze, evaluate, and decide. But what I gradually came to understand is that being right is not the same as being complete.
You can have perfect data and still miss the human story. You can follow every protocol and still fail to connect. You can make the correct decision and yet leave people unheard.
That’s where EQ-emotional intelligence, quietly enters the picture.
The Emergence of EQ
Emotional intelligence is not something typically listed in scientific protocols, but it lives in every meeting, every discussion, every disagreement.
It’s the ability to read the room. To sense hesitation in a colleague. To understand that behind every dataset is a patient, a family, a story.
Over time, I realized that the most effective professionals I worked with were not just brilliant, they were empathetic. They listened as much as they spoke. They understood that collaboration wasn’t just about exchanging information, but about building trust.
EQ brought balance to IQ. But even that wasn’t the full picture.
Discovering SQ Through Writing
Since 2009, I’ve been writing, consistently, reflectively, sometimes searching for answers I didn’t yet have.
Blogging became something more than a habit. It became a space where I could integrate not just what I knew, but what I felt… and eventually, what I believed.
This is where SQ-spiritual intelligence entered my life.
Not in a religious sense alone, but in a deeper, quieter way:
- Asking why things matter
- Finding meaning beyond achievement
- Connecting experiences into a larger narrative
- Seeing life not just as a series of events, but as a journey
SQ is what allows us to process life synchronously, not in steps, but as a whole.
It is, as in the first image above suggests, the “whole brain” experience.
From Analysis to Integration
Looking back, I now see my life in three phases:
- IQ shaped my career
- EQ shaped my relationships
- SQ is shaping my understanding of life itself
And blogging, day after day, year after year has been the bridge connecting all three.
Each post is not just an exercise in writing. It’s an act of integration:
- Taking the analytical precision of my FDA years
- Blending it with human experience and emotion
- And elevating it into something reflective, sometimes even timeless
Why This Matters Now
As I continue writing for readers around the world, I find myself less concerned with being “right” and more focused on being real. Less focused on conclusions, and more open to meaning.
Because in the end, a well-lived life is not defined by IQ alone. It is enriched by EQ. And ultimately, it is guided by SQ.
A Final Reflection
If I could offer one thought to those reading this, especially those still deeply immersed in their careers-it would be this:
Develop your mind, yes. But don’t neglect your heart. And don’t ignore your spirit.
Because true intelligence is not divided into parts. It is lived as a whole.
And perhaps, in the quiet moments whether in a laboratory, a meeting room, or in front of a blank page, you begin to realize: You are not just thinking your way through life. You are learning to understand it.
Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview:
- Linguistic Intelligence: The mastery of language, sensitivity to the sounds and rhythms of words, and the ability to use written words to accomplish specific goals.
- Logical-Mathematical Intelligence: The capacity to think conceptually and abstractly, discern patterns, and investigate issues scientifically.
- Synthesizing Intelligence: A concept Gardner explores deeply in his memoir, , which involves taking massive amounts of information from different disciplines and organizing it in a way that is coherent and useful for others.
Lastly, here are five of the biggest news items today, April 24, 2026:
Tornadoes hit northern Oklahoma, injuring at least 10 people and causing significant damage.
A powerful storm outbreak in Oklahoma also forced an Air Force base to close after roofs were torn off buildings and homes were destroyed.
President Trump said he is considering a taxpayer-funded takeover of Spirit Airlines, then reselling it later.
Meta is planning to cut roughly 10% of its workforce as it increases spending on artificial intelligence.
A shooting at Baton Rouge’s Mall of Louisiana injured 10 people.
Other major headlines today include a Pentagon email about possibly suspending Spain from NATO over the Iran conflict, and reports of a former officer arrested over an alleged mass shooting plot.

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