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Rise of AI-driven emotional intelligence

Cape Argus

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July 31, 2025

Pillay is a psychology columnist and behavioral medicine researcher exploring how Al and emotional fluency can rewire emotional health for future generations.

- ANOLENE THANGAVELU PILLAY

WHEN we hear the word “no”, many of us feel an emotional echo: fear of rejection, guilt or anxiety about disappointing others. But what if saying “no” early in life isn’t just a boundary? What if it is a forward-thinking, emotionally intelligent act that builds psychological strength for the future?

Behavioral medicine research reveals that it takes just 10 seconds for the brain to regulate after saying “no”. In that split-second pause, the brain enters a golden learning window where it softens, tunes in and begins coding psychological strength. It is in this small moment that emotional fluency is seeded: scripting the brain for a lifetime of emotional adaptability.

This intentional moment which I call the “10-Second Power Pause,” is like a quiet reset that changes your emotional pattern. Practising this pause often helps your brain respond more wisely and clearly, improving mental health.

What if this pause is the start of futuristic learning, a new literacy where we decode and reprogram emotions like an internal algorithm?

This article explores how Artificial Intelligence (AI), behavioral medicine and emotional literacy converge to future-proof the next generation.

What if the most life-changing subject we learned in school was not history or economics but how to handle our emotions with precision, power and presence? Across playgrounds and classrooms, children are taught to count, read and solve for x, but not always to decode rising panic, rejection or the courage to say “no” It is like handing them mathematical formulas without teaching the emotional algorithms of life.

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