# Self-Awareness Examples: The Four Kinds and What Each Looks Like

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/self-awareness/self-awareness-examples/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/self-awareness/self-awareness-examples.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving building self-awareness at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

Real self-awareness examples, at work and in everyday life, sorted into four clear kinds - what each looks like, why it matters, and how to build the habit.

## Key facts

- Title: Self-Awareness Examples: The Four Kinds and What Each Looks Like
- Category: Self-Awareness
- Primary skill: Building Self-Awareness
- Related skills: Building Resilience, Communication
- Primary keyword: self awareness examples
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/self-awareness/self-awareness-examples/

## What this page covers

- Real self-awareness examples, at work and in everyday life, sorted into four clear kinds - what each looks like, why it matters, and how to build the habit.
- Practical guidance for self awareness examples
- How this topic connects to Building Self-Awareness

## Detailed explanation

Self-awareness examples are the small, concrete moments when you see yourself accurately: noticing a strength you keep underusing, catching the tension in your jaw before a hard meeting, realizing how your blunt feedback actually lands on a teammate, or pausing to ask whether a decision rests on evidence or just preference. They tend to fall into a few recognizable kinds. Most of us assume we already do this well — and that assumption is exactly where the topic gets interesting, because looking at the real examples usually reveals a gap we didn't know was there.

## Self-awareness examples, sorted into four kinds

It helps to know that self-awareness isn't one single thing. Organizational psychologist Tasha Eurich splits it into two independent halves — how clearly you see your own inner world, and how accurately you grasp the way others experience you — and in practice two more kinds sit alongside those: catching your emotions as they happen, and noticing the biases that quietly steer your judgment. Sorting the examples into these four kinds turns a vague idea into something you can actually look for in your own week.

### Internal self-awareness: reading your own inner world

Internal self-awareness is an honest read on your values, your strengths, and the patterns in how you react. A classic example, drawn from Indeed's career guidance: recognizing that you're genuinely good at generating ideas but tend to stall when it's time to execute them. What makes that self-awareness rather than self-criticism is the move that follows — you volunteer to lead the brainstorming and deliberately ask for help or set realistic timelines on delivery. It also shows up in noticing your own habits: catching that you always procrastinate on a certain kind of task, or that you tend to avoid conflict, and then digging into *why* the pattern repeats instead of just labeling it.

### External self-awareness: seeing how you land on others

External self-awareness is knowing how other people actually experience you — how your words land and what impression your behavior leaves. An everyday example: discovering that the "direct" feedback style you're a little proud of reads as blunt to a quieter colleague, and softening how you deliver it. Another is adapting on purpose — giving a detail-oriented teammate the specifics they need instead of your usual big-picture summary. This kind is harder, because you can't observe your own blind spots from the inside; it depends on what other people are willing to reflect back to you, which is why it's the half most of us overestimate.

### Emotional self-awareness: catching feelings in the moment

Emotional self-awareness is noticing your feelings and their triggers as they happen, not hours later. The examples are physical and specific: the tightening jaw and racing thoughts that arrive before a difficult conversation, or realizing mid-afternoon that a quiet disappointment about a project has been leaking into your tone all day. Once you catch it, you can act — naming the frustration and raising it with a colleague instead of letting it color everything. Replaying a conversation afterward to notice what actually set you off is the same skill, running one step slower.

### Awareness of your biases and blind spots

The fourth kind is spotting the assumptions and habits of thought that steer your judgment without asking permission. A concrete example: pausing before a decision to ask, "Am I choosing this on its merits, or because I already prefer it?" It also covers noticing an [unexamined assumption](/knowledge/self-awareness/unconscious-bias/) about a role or a group of people, or catching an [exaggerated belief](/knowledge/resilience/cognitive-distortions/) — that everything has to be perfect, or that one setback means you've failed — before it drives an overreaction. This kind rarely announces itself, which is precisely why deliberately checking for it is the example that matters most.

## Why these moments change what happens next

None of this is self-analysis for its own sake. Eurich's research found that although most people believe they're self-aware, only an estimated 10 to 15 percent genuinely are strong in both the internal and the external kind — most of us are sharp in one and blind in the other. That gap carries real costs and real payoffs: people high in both report better decisions, more self-control, less stress and anxiety, and more satisfaction at work. The encouraging part is that both halves are trainable. The internal side grows through reflection — [journaling](/knowledge/self-awareness/introspection/), or simply observing your thoughts without judging them. The external side grows only one way: by actively [asking for honest feedback](/knowledge/self-awareness/how-to-ask-for-feedback/), because the single perspective you can't supply yourself is how you come across. If you'd rather not guess where your own blind spots sit, an outside [read of your blind spots](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) can surface the ones you'd never catch alone.

## The skills that turn noticing into change

Look across those examples and a quieter point emerges. Noticing a strength, catching a reaction before it runs you, adjusting how you come across — none of these are fixed features of your personality. They're things you get better at with practice, and a few specific, buildable skills sit underneath them.

**Building Self-Awareness** does most of the work here. It's an ongoing practice, not a trait: identifying the strengths you're genuinely good at, surfacing the biases and oversized beliefs that distort how you react, and using feedback to find the blind spots you can't reach alone. That last piece is what turns scattered noticing into steady growth rather than a quirk you happen to have.

**Building Resilience** sits under every emotional example above. It runs on a simple pattern — an event sparks an automatic thought, which sparks a reaction — and the skill is catching the thought before it becomes the reaction, then questioning the thinking errors hiding inside it. That's the mechanism that turns "I noticed my jaw tighten" into a choice about what to do next, instead of an autopilot response.

**Communication** is what makes external self-awareness worth anything. Once you notice how you come across, this is the skill that adjusts it — reading the person in front of you and adapting your style so a detail-oriented colleague gets specifics and a rushed one gets the headline. Awareness tells you how your words land; communication is what you do about it.

These three are part of a set of twelve work skills the framework treats as learnable rather than fixed — and self-awareness only pays off once you know which parts to work on first. That's what the free Work Skills Test is built for: a quick way to [see where each skill stands](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) for you, so you develop the ones that will make the biggest difference instead of spreading your effort evenly across all of them.

## Recognizing yourself in these examples

If you saw yourself in a few of these examples, that recognition is already the skill in action. By reading this far and testing the examples against your own week, you've done the part most people skip. None of it asks you to become someone else — the patterns you just noticed are yours to work with, and the parts that feel underdeveloped are simply the ones you haven't practiced yet. That practice tends to count for more as your responsibilities grow: the further into a career you go, the more your effect on other people shapes what you can do — and it stays learnable the whole way. So the useful question isn't whether you're self-aware, but which parts are worth your attention first.

## Find your starting point

The only thing left is to see the full picture rather than the corner of it you can observe on your own. The **free** Work Skills Test is a short self-assessment of your work skills: in about 7 minutes it shows you where you stand across all twelve, and which ones will make the biggest difference for you right now. Think of it as the outside read that self-reflection alone can't give you — a clear starting point instead of a guess.

**[Take the skills test](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/)**

*Free, and about 7 minutes from start to your results.*

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

Real self-awareness examples, at work and in everyday life, sorted into four clear kinds - what each looks like, why it matters, and how to build the habit.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Building Self-Awareness. It also relates to Building Resilience, Communication.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/self-awareness.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/resilience.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

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## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
