Creating Confidence with Heather Monahan - Laurie Santos & The Happiness Lab: Exploring The Science Behind Happiness Episode 42

Episode Date: February 18, 2020

We all want more happiness. But what if our brains lie to us about how to get there? Psychologist Dr. Laurie Santos, whose Yale course “Psychology and the Good Life,”  is the most popular class�...�ever offered in the history of the university, illuminates what science says about what makes us happy and also how to put effective happiness strategies into practice. But not everyone can enroll in Santos’ class at Yale or has the time to take the online equivalent on Coursera. In Season One of THE HAPPINESS LAB, Dr. Laurie Santos explores startling truths and explodes myths about what makes us happy in ten exhilarating and informative episodes. Examining questions such as: will a new job or relationship make us happy, are we happier when we have unlimited choice and how can we harness technology to improve our well-being.  Through surprising interviews with the likes of David Byrne, Michelle Kwan and Michael Phelps’s coach, along with in-depth storytelling and the science to back it up, Santos explores how our minds lie to us about our feelings of contentment and teaches listeners how to find more effective ways to become happier.  About The Guest: Laurie Santos is a Professor of Psychology and the Head of Silliman College at Yale University. After observing a disturbing level of unhappiness and anxiety among her students, she began teaching a course entitled "Psychology and the Good Life," which quickly became the most popular course in Yale's history and has also reached over 350,000 people from all over the world through it’s online version. Although she’s now best known as a "happiness expert,” Santos's research explores the much broader question of "What makes the human mind unique?" and often includes comparing the cognitive capacities of non-human animals to humans.   More from Laurie Santos, AKA “The Yale Happiness Lady”: Listen to THE HAPPINESS LAB podcast Website: hapinesslab.fm Finding Laurie Santos: Twitter: @lauriesantos If you'd like to ask a question and be featured during the wrap up segment of Creating Confidence, contact Heather Monahan directly through her website and don’t forget to subscribe to the mailing list so you don’t skip a beat to all things Confidence Creating! *If you know someone who might be feeling like they're in need of a Confidence Boost be sure to share this or one of our other unique episodes with them! Also be sure to subscribe, comment and review us on iTunes!   See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm on this journey with me. Each week when you join me, you are going to chase down our goals. overcome adversity and set you up for better tomorrow. After you're asleep, you're ready for my close-up. Hi, and welcome back. I'm so glad you're here. You have no idea how excited it is for me truly.
Starting point is 00:00:19 It's really kind of ridiculous how excited I get. But it's true. It's real. Keep it real for you today So in the spirit of keeping it real I Had this big plan for my week Always on Sundays. I sit down. I map out the week I do it for my son in his school his tests his games, etc
Starting point is 00:00:38 And then I do it for me and what I want to accomplish What is potentially out there? I take my to-do list from the prior week. I go through to see if there's anything still pending, anything that I need to follow back up on. I really try not to let balls drop and it's just a good exercise for me. Sunday's just the night that I or the afternoon that I really like to get on top of everything and have that plan. Granted, the plan changes. Oh my gosh, the plan does change. So it was so funny. There was two big things. One really big thing. I have to share with you first. I wrote my second book, and I did that over the past year. And I did it in different ways.
Starting point is 00:01:22 Like when I was, was so different than my first book, Confidence Creator, which I forced myself to sit down right when I got fired and just write every day. I did it differently this time. I don't think there's a right or wrong way for anyone to do it, but you know, this time I would, if I was feeling the vibe like I wanted to write, I would sit down and write. And then I might not write for two months.
Starting point is 00:01:41 And then I was getting my hair bleached blonde, which means a lot of hours in a chair and I said you know why don't I write right now. So it was just a different approach this time. Bottom line is I got the book done or at least semi done and I thought I want to do this with a partner. I don't want to do this alone. Alone is so much work. I want to try the traditional publishing route even though I didn't do that my first time, just to see if I could compare like which situations better and everyone has different opinions on it, but I can't speak to it because I hadn't done it yet. So I googled who is Rachel Hollis as agent because she's the biggest in the personal development game right now. I find the woman online,
Starting point is 00:02:21 I get her email address, I send her a pitch on me. She comes back to me and says, no, you're not the right fit for me. However, you are probably the right fit for my partner, my partner skews heavier on the business side, and I don't. So she connected me to her partner. This is probably six months ago. We headed off and she said, yes, send me a proposal. Well, I said, I don't know. I have a book. I don't have a book proposal. Hello, rookie author Heather. And she said, okay, why don't you talk to this guy, Peter. He's done a lot of book proposals.
Starting point is 00:02:55 I think that you will enjoy working with him. Great. So I reached out to Peter. We began working together. I hire him. And before you know, we have a book proposal. I sent it off to her. This is probably September of last year.
Starting point is 00:03:08 It's a long process. Writing the book proposal has actually taken me more effort time and work than writing the book, which is so weird. I didn't know that would be the case. I don't know if that's the case for everyone. Definitely was for me. It's really different.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Okay, so anyhow, not gonna kill you too much about the whole writing world, but which is even bizarre, I am an author and bizarre. I'm even talking to you about this because I never, ever saw myself this way. I always saw myself as a sales leader and in corporate America.
Starting point is 00:03:40 And now here I am sitting at my kitchen table, recording my show and talking about writing books and book proposals. Holy cow, I'm still shocked about this. Okay. I get the book proposal over to her and you know, she comes back with, wow, you need a lot of work on this. You're marketing and sales section is amazing. Shocker, that's my expertise. So that was good. She said, we get the why you, but she said, I actually don't like the chapter, some reason you've done. I don't see the key takeaways. I don't see this from a perspective that I can definitely sell this. You need to refine this. Well, when I heard that and it was in September, it was August or September of last year,
Starting point is 00:04:24 I had my TED talk was coming up and I just thought, you know what, I get a tune this out right now, shut this down. I put the book proposal on a back burner, I did not want to jump into something else when I needed to focus intently on my TED Talk because I really wanted to kill it. So, I put it on a back burner and forgot about it initially. And then about a month ago, I got a DM from one of my listeners, one of you, saying, hey, what's up with the second book? When will it be out? And I thought, oh my gosh, I literally put this proposal on a shelf and haven't dusted it off.
Starting point is 00:05:01 I got to get on this. So I appreciate when you guys remind me of things that I need to be working on because it really got my attention. I immediately jumped right back on, I got a hold of Peter, we reworked the proposal and within two weeks we had a new version done, brought it back to Jill, the agent, and she came back with me, hey, this is really coming along nicely. However, I'd really like it to be from the vantage point of the reader and I'd like you to re-tool the beginning of the proposal, which now we're six months after the last time we were reworking this together.
Starting point is 00:05:36 She had different thoughts on it versus how she had seen it last time, but she did say the work that we did on the chapter summaries, a key takeaways, et cetera. She loved it. Okay, great progress. Anyhow, right now I'm sitting on version nine of the book proposal. Still has not been approved yet, but I believe that this next one that we send into her will be, I'm just waiting on Peter to get back with me.
Starting point is 00:05:57 So that's just to give you a little insight into the work that goes into a book proposal. Again, this is my first one I've ever done. It's really arduous, but hopefully, well worth it. Hopefully, we make enough money off the book deal that I say happy to write 10 versions of any book proposal. Okay. So that was there. Going into this week, I felt that was my number one goal, getting the proposal approved by Jill and getting out to pitch the publishing houses together because that's a new and exciting experience for me. However, it's sales, so I feel really confident, you know, hopping on a plane and going
Starting point is 00:06:32 with her to these meetings to pitch the book for a book deal. Come to find out Peter is swamped right now, had prior commitments this week and the book proposal is getting delayed a little bit, even though I had everything done on Friday and to him, you know, after respect that he had other commitments previously. And so we're going to wait. Now, hopefully by the end of this week we'll have it done so we can send it into Jill, get it approved, and then see what those next steps are. So I'm learning as I go and trying to work with the people that I've picked and hoping that this process us can accelerate because it's dragging a little bit right now.
Starting point is 00:07:11 So that big thing I was waiting for this week didn't happen. However, so interesting on social media and wow, thank goodness for social media. Somebody had posted about my show and ironically I was speaking at the University of Miami law school last week and my good friend is the instructor and after the class we were outside talking and she said hey did you see my friend posted about your show and I said no I didn't. Well I went home and saw that this person had an extremely high position at a company that represents talent and I have been as you know for sure. I've been wanting to get my book made into a movie. I've
Starting point is 00:07:58 been I have so many different ideas around a TV show and Netflix special around empowering others. And so I DMed him asking if he could connect me to someone, which he did. And this was not on the plan for the week. So I'm sharing this just to, I want you to be hopeful because I want me to be hopeful, because we never know what's happening next.
Starting point is 00:08:19 And this is such a great example of that. So I sent him a DM and he wrote back immediately, hey, yeah, I would love to help. I will connect you to the woman in charge of that. So I sent him a DM and he wrote back immediately, hey, yeah, I would love to help. I will connect you to the woman in charge of that. And so by Monday, this thing that I had not planned on, I now had a meeting for and the meeting went great and I don't know where it's going to go yet. But that was something that wasn't on my radar, wasn't on my to-do list, wasn't even there. And it all happened because I created content that someone found online on social media. They consumed it, liked it, and posted about it. And I replied. And so, you know, it's about showing up,
Starting point is 00:08:53 putting yourself out there, creating content, and responding to people. When they do post about you, message about you, you know, I always like to retweet, repost on InstaStory, and share on LinkedIn, because you just never know whose attention you might get. But again, back to, I try to plan everything out and every week I'm constantly reminded that my plans never turn out the way that I think they are. The big moments that I'm hinging on don't happen. However, sometimes really amazing things do show up.
Starting point is 00:09:23 Okay, so that's kind of the craziness of so far this week and we're very early and on the week. So who knows what's going to happen the rest of this week? I'm actually very excited to see. Hope the proposal gets done. Okay, so I get a message yesterday from a friend of mine from back in the media business and he's gone out on his own and has his own agency now and he said,
Starting point is 00:09:43 hey, I really appreciate if you would look over an email that I'm going to be sending out to solicit business. I said, yeah, of course, I'm happy to. He sends me this email that was completely about him, about his track record of success, about the businesses he's grown, about him, him, him, him. And all I could think of, I was trying to put myself in the shoes of the prospective clients that he's trying to close, is I would delete that email if somebody sent it to me. So I got right back to him and I said,
Starting point is 00:10:15 wow, my friend, no, no, no, send this to no one, because you're not gonna get an answer anyways. They're gonna delete it. First of all, it was so long, It's going via email, which so much email goes to junk email or clutter and never get seen anyway. And that's all about you. So this is what I suggested to him. I suggest to you and I suggest to myself too.
Starting point is 00:10:35 When we make it about the other person, they're more inclined to listen. They're more inclined to read the message, read the email, or at least pay attention for a moment. But when we're making it about you, and they don't even know who you are, why would they care? So my suggestion to him was make it all about them. Research them online, find out how their business is growing,
Starting point is 00:11:00 find out some of their challenges, find out something about their industry or about them, and lead with that. Lead with it, you did your homework. Lead with it, you did your due diligence and how you're going to help them reach that next milestone, that next goal that they have, but make it all about them. Hey, Bob, I saw that your industry has been in decline in the last 12 months and I know how challenging that is with you having just opened your new location in Miami or whatever it is, but you know get specific about that. I've got a million dollar idea that I have successfully implemented
Starting point is 00:11:37 for clients just like you and I feel like this timing is ideal with a challenger facing. Can I come in for 15 minutes to share the idea with you? Keep it short, be brief, make it about them, do your homework and offer a solution for their problem. And that's really one of the things that I do when I'm looking to get big guests is, and I just sent out an email actually to a huge guest I'm really excited to get. And he said yes and I can't. I not gonna tell you who it is yet but I sent this blind email all about him why I'm such a fan of his how I'm super excited for him how I think he's so funny and sarcastic and you know noted different times I've seen him that I
Starting point is 00:12:18 I really grab value and how I loved his book and you know I made it all about him and in the end was my ask. You know, I'd appreciate it. You know, unfortunately, the whole world doesn't know about you yet. And I'm on a mission to help change that. So I would so appreciate if you could give me 40 minutes of your time for an interview,
Starting point is 00:12:37 which he said yes to. But again, we've got to separate ourselves in one of the ways to do that is to recognize the greatness and other people. People love that. Who doesn't love that? And I always go back to this one woman who interviewed me for her podcast. The way she got me, she sent me private videos to my DM on Instagram. And we weren't connected. And one day I just saw I was getting all these videos and it was her.
Starting point is 00:13:04 And she, it was just her interface saying getting all these videos and it was her. And she was just her interface saying, I'm such a fan of yours, Heather, and it would mean the world to me. It was so cute and different and nice that I felt compelled to say, yes, I would love to. And actually she's become a friend. And now when I go to California,
Starting point is 00:13:20 I make time to see her. And it's just so interesting that there are an unlimited amount of ways that we can get people's attention, that we can reach them in a different and unique manner. And when we do that coming through as our real selves, people sense that they feel it and that's when you start connecting those dots. So just don't forget, we're all in sales, whether you're an author writing a book, you need to sell said books. Whether you're a vacuum cleaner salesman going door to door, clearly in sales, or you're a lawyer, and I talked about this at UM this past week, part of a lawyer's job is to sell
Starting point is 00:13:59 people on their services and bring new business in. You know, so when you think of a lawyer, you think of someone with a red pen out, you know, going through documents or going into court and arguing a jury or presenting to a jury, but really none of that starts until they land the client. And everyone's in sales, it doesn't matter what business you're in. For me, I've got to sell people coming on as a guest onto my show. We all have to sell ourselves. And I really believe when you make it about the other person, when you find the greatness in them and share that with
Starting point is 00:14:34 them, and then solve a problem they have or potentially have, that's when the dots start connecting and that's when we start bringing it all together. So hopefully that helps. I hopefully that helps you this week in your business and your life and whatever it is that you're trying to sell or accomplish. I hope that that insight might help you connect those dots. All right, and I'm so excited for my guest this week because it's all about happiness,
Starting point is 00:14:57 it's all about positivity. And when we're in a better, more positive mindset and attitude and outlook. Things start really clicking for us. Momentum starts picking up and we bring some sunshine and brightness to the world. So I'm really hoping to do that for you and hang tight your vote to get excited.
Starting point is 00:15:18 We have different guests. Each week, we're gonna go on the show. Helpless crew. Welcome back to creating confidence. I'm really excited for you to meet my guest, Laurie Santos. She's a professor of psychology and the head of Syllumin College at UGOTA Yale University after observing a disturbing level of unhappiness and anxiety among her students. She began teaching a course entitled Psychology and the Good Life, which quickly became the most popular course in Yale's history and has also reached over 350,000 people from all over the world
Starting point is 00:15:58 through an online version on Coursera. Although she's now best known as a happiness expert, Santos' research explores the much broader question of what makes the human mind unique, and often includes comparing the cognitive capacities of non-human animals to humans. Oh my gosh, I have so many questions. Thank you so much for being here, Laurie. Thanks for having me. This is so exciting. So first of all, you just launched a new podcast, launch September 17th of this year, the Happiness Lab.
Starting point is 00:16:31 And that's essentially very similar to the course you've been teaching with great success at Yale. I mean, so we have a sort of short online version of the class I teach at Yale, but like, being real, not everybody is going to sign up for a Yale class online and have time to like, you know, take the class and do the quizzes and so on. The happiness lab is a podcast version of trying to give all these insights about the science of well-being to people who are busy, but, you know, have a half hour or so to listen to a podcast. And you have your doctorate in psychology, and this is really where the fundamentals for your course
Starting point is 00:17:05 and the podcasts are stemming from? That's right. Yeah, it's really thinking about this question of what does science say about how we can achieve well-being. There's lots of different kinds of approaches, but the scientific approach really says, okay, scientifically, what do we know about what causally makes people happier? What are happy people really doing? And what can you steal from what happy people are doing put into effect you steal from what happy people are doing put into effect in your own life to become a little bit happier. And so, you know, it's a scientific approach. It's kind of not a lot of woo or that kind of stuff. It's really like, you know, scientifically, what does it say?
Starting point is 00:17:36 And I feel like it's a cool approach because it resonates with a lot of people who you know, want to do something to be happier, but they don't want to like, you know, dive into the self-help section or like they want like empirical answers You know, these are like the kind of nerds like the people I hang out with who really want like just the science day about what we can be doing better And what drove you? I know that we said that you saw a lot of anxiety in the university within the students Was that really what pushed you to do this? Yeah, about four years ago I started this new role at Yale. So before I was just kind of a normal professor like up there in front of the classroom and I saw students that way.
Starting point is 00:18:10 By the way, a normal Yale professor. Normal Yale, but you know, as one that exceptional, but okay, but it's kind of like the stereotypical version. Like I'm up at this big lecture class in front of some podium, like I didn't get to know students or student life very much. But four years ago, I took on this new role at Yale where I became one of their heads of college and so this requires some explanation So Yale's kind of like Hogwarts and Harry Potter where it's got it's like Griffin Doran's Lither and it's got these like colleges within a college
Starting point is 00:18:35 And so I became head of the Yale version of one of those Cillum and College But that means I live on campus with students like my houses in the middle of all their dorms Like IE with them in the dining hall, and that was a completely new experience because now I'm seeing students up close and personal. And I wasn't expecting what I saw, what I was seeing was this so-called student mental health crisis,
Starting point is 00:18:56 where not just at Yale, but nationally we see cases where like 40% of students report being too depressed to function, over 60% say that they're anxious a lot of the time. So it was really scary what I was seeing. Does that have something to do with the generational issue? Or does that stem from a lot of different things technology and the honest answer is we actually don't know where it's coming from. I think technology plays a huge role.
Starting point is 00:19:22 This is something I see where my students rather than talking to their friends, are sitting there with big, Bose headphones on, skyping with somebody, and then they report that 70% of them feel lonely a lot of the time. I think it stems from the kinds of pressures that students face of trying to get into a place like you. All my students were probably depressed and anxious. Many of them on the way getting here,
Starting point is 00:19:42 because of the pressures they face, feeling like they needed to get into a place like you. We can only look to the college student admissions scandal and see the kinds of lengths that people are willing to go, you know, to get their students into school. And so I think we're facing all kinds of new pressures, but what's crazy is how much the mental health crisis has changed like just in the last decade. So there's research suggesting that we have twice the number of young people who are depressed then we did 10 years ago. Like twice the number, we doubled the number of young people
Starting point is 00:20:12 who are in serious psychological distress in like less than 10 years, which is really scary. But can I ask you this? So to me, we were just talking about age and what not. So I'm 45 and when I was younger, nobody talked about this. I might have been depressed in college, but no one asked me how I was feeling.
Starting point is 00:20:30 So I wonder what is that delta from, if the same conversations were happening 20 years ago versus now, is it more similar or my way off? Yeah, I mean, I think this is a challenge, I think for social scientists to figure out like how much is this a real change in what's happening in terms of people's mental health, and how much is a change in reporting? You know, it's just easier to admit that you're depressed now than it was say in the 70s or maybe even in the 90s. The trick comes when we see such rapid
Starting point is 00:20:58 change in 10 years, you know, wasn't that tough to admit you're depressed in anxious in 2009, like, probably not that much different than right now And we're still seeing like you know twice the number of individuals So some of it might be reporting and kind of stigma is less But I think a lot of it is a real change and the kind of climate that we see on college campuses and even beyond But you even bringing up 2008 2009 was the recession, right? So I would think more people would be depressed back than would be today. Yeah, I mean that's the striking thing and
Starting point is 00:21:28 particularly when you see these kinds of levels in like an Ivy League school, right? Like in some ways these students have kind of hit the life lottery. I mean for me, right? Like they're 19, they're at Yale University, you know, they're healthy, they have their whole life ahead of them. And you get, you know, so many of them reporting these like horrible mental health statistics. Another really scary one is that over 10% of college students nationally report seriously considered suicide in the last year. Like more than one in ten, you know, take your college classroom and one out of every ten of them is seriously contemplating suicide. Like something's wrong, something big is wrong. So you've taken this initiative on and you not only are you teaching you
Starting point is 00:22:05 taking science to back up specific steps that your students can take to create more happiness which obviously has made this course such a success and now is is creating this amazing podcast. So I want to get into some of these specific so we can share it with everyone. Some of the keys that you're providing for the students are our listeners, to take away to impact their lives and create positive change. Yeah, and that's one of the great things from the sciences. You know, you might think like, oh, I'm just going to learn all these scientific findings
Starting point is 00:22:36 and things. But really what the science teaches us is that happy people are happy because they just engage in a suite of behaviors that all of us can copy that seem to have a causal impact on your well-being levels. In other words, it's not like happy people are like genetically born happy or they have special circumstances like, you know, they're all millionaires and live in wonderful houses and things. Like happy people are happy because of how they behave. And so if you're not feeling so happy, if you just copy the behaviors of some of these happy folks, you too, in theory, can increase your well-being levels.
Starting point is 00:23:07 But even beyond theory, because you've studied it and it works. That's right. It's like, you know, study after study shows how easy it is to change your happiness levels through just like some simple changes in behavior. And that's when we prescribed our students, you know, the typical like Ivy League class has homework that's like, you know, quiz or read this paper and so on, our homework was what we called rewirements and that they were, it's kind of a play on requirements. It's this idea that you can rewire your own habits
Starting point is 00:23:33 and your own behaviors to increase more well-being. And so students were literally prescribed these behaviors that we know help them. So to take time for social connection, like students were prescribed, you know, today it calls them when you haven't talked to you in a long time, or just strike up a conversation with the breeze at the coffee shop. Like try to make a new social connection.
Starting point is 00:23:51 And that comes from lots of research suggesting that first of all, happy people tend to be more social. They tend to talk to more people and just be around people more often. But more, there's research suggesting if you kind of force people to be more social than they want to be. It actually improves their mood.
Starting point is 00:24:05 One of my favorite studies that looked at this was a study by this researcher, Nick Epley, who's a professor in Chicago at Chicago Business School, and he forced commuters to talk to the passengers next to them on a commuter train. So he's on the L train in Chicago, he has people who are commuting, they get a little $10 Starbucks gift card for participating, he says, in this study, I want to just spend your train ride talking to the person next to you. And really don't just talk about the weather, like really try to make a social connection. So that's kind of one group of subjects.
Starting point is 00:24:35 The other group he says, during this train ride, don't talk to anybody. Really just try to enjoy your solitude as much as possible. National security experts are warning. Our aging power grid is more vulnerable than ever. January marked a third time a power station in North Carolina was damaged by gunfire. Authorities are saying the attack raises a new level of threat. Authorities are now checking our grid for vulnerabilities. They've identified nine key substations.
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Starting point is 00:27:25 I'm sure their face is fall, are you kidding or are you talking to someone next to me? But what really happens is when they engage in this behavior, it feels really good. Like, they report that it's much more positive than they expect. And this is true for extroverts and for introverts. And so that gets to like one of the themes of this podcast, which is, there's super simple things we can do to feel better. You know, strike up a conversation with somebody on your commute, like one of the themes of this podcast, which is there's super simple things we can do to feel better. Strike up a conversation with somebody on your commute,
Starting point is 00:27:47 but we don't predict that those things are gonna work. Like one of the challenges to engaging in these habits is like when we think about it, you're like maybe for some people, but not for me. Like I'm not gonna do the talking to strangers thing, but it turns out all of those things will work better than we expect. And so one of the big themes is that a challenge is like, our minds are lying to us about the kinds of things things will work better than we expect. And so one of the big themes is that a challenge is like,
Starting point is 00:28:05 our minds are lying to us about the kinds of things that will work. I think like, oh, just scrolling through my Instagram feed for the rest of this train ride is going to feel great. Turns out that feels kind of crummy. I predict talking to this random stranger that I've never met next to me is going to be super awkward and weird.
Starting point is 00:28:20 Turns out it's actually way more positive than we think. That's so surprising to me because I, two decades I've been traveling for work every week and I always throw in my ear buds and either read a book or start working on my computer for fear that someone might talk my ear off and be annoying and I mean I totally shut down when I'm on flights and now I have no choice but I'm going to have to I'm on a flight. I'm going to make myself talk to the person next to me I'm on flights. And now I have no choice, but I'm gonna have to, I'm on a flight this nature. I'm gonna make myself talk to the person next to me. I gotta try.
Starting point is 00:28:48 Well, this is, I mean, but this is the challenge. It's like, I have to make myself do it too. Like, I know the science, I'm gonna have literally read these papers, these empirical papers, and my intuitions don't change. Like, whenever I'm on a flight, I sit down, you know, I'm like, all right, I know it's gonna make me happier to talk to this person, but really seems kind of weird
Starting point is 00:29:05 But then every time I do it afterwards, you're like, actually that was how's better than I then I thought and it's the kind of thing Where you get a lot of pushback like I talked about these results once when I was on on television and Twitter Just started like flaming me people are like talk to strangers. Are you crazy or like didn't your mom I teach you anything like this place lady's crazy. She's gonna get shot. And it was like, I think people have incredibly strong intuitions. And what the science shows is that some of them are just wrong.
Starting point is 00:29:33 So even your listeners who heard that and just made this face of like, oh, I am so not talking to the person on the train. Try it, you know, baby steps or try, you know, talk to someone in a coffee shop. Just like, strike up a casual conversation. And then take time to be mindful to be like, well, was that good?
Starting point is 00:29:48 Did that feel better? My guess is it might kind of just bump your mood up more than you expect. Well, it's also an interesting point that you brought up, which is somewhat questioning these things that we were told or taught when we were younger, which we just accept as that is the way it is. You're not supposed to talk to strangers,
Starting point is 00:30:04 you're supposed to focus on you and pay attention to what's happening around you. But maybe that was true when you were three and four and five years old. But now as an adult, maybe you're better equipped to actually engage with others. And again, we're not saying, walk into the middle of central park at two in the morning and talk to a stranger.
Starting point is 00:30:24 The person we're suggesting is the guy who's next to you on the flight. That person's probably not a psychopath or some crazy person. That person's probably just another person who's going somewhere interesting. You're especially people who are on your commute to work in Nakedly study. These are people who lived in the same Chicago neighborhood
Starting point is 00:30:42 as the other people in the study and are going into the city, you actually probably have more in common with these folks than you sometimes think. So it's not just talk to any old stranger or people who clearly have some mental illness or something like that. It's talk to, you know, the people around you in your spaces. We forget just those little kind of happiness moments can feel better than we tend to expect. All right. I'm on it. So I'm going to speak to a stranger this week. It's going to make
Starting point is 00:31:07 you happy and hopefully me too. Okay, I want to dive into your second episode, which is really interesting to me personally because it's this concept that we mispredict what certain situations and incurrences, how that impact might result, how we feel, and might be negative or positive. And I thought that was really interesting that for me, I thought getting fired would be horrific, life-changing, negative event. It definitely was in that moment.
Starting point is 00:31:37 However, it's played out differently over the last two years, but we're definitely trained to respond to certain situations very negatively. That's right. And I think we're constantly, I mean, this is just a thing our human minds do, right? We're constantly making predictions about things that will make us happy and things that won't, right? You know, so if I ask you, would you rather have a root canal or a nice vacation to Paris, like you can do that simulation really fast, like you're going to go with nice vacation to Paris. So we get the valence, right? you know, being fired is yucky, but we get wrong our two things. First, we get wrong the magnitude of how bad or how good things are going to be. You know, we think getting fired is going
Starting point is 00:32:12 to be like a hundred on the bad scale, but it's not immediately as bad as we think, but the bigger thing that we get wrong is the duration of how we're going to feel bad, because sometimes when we think about bad things, we think that's going to feel bad forever, or for years, or for much longer, and it actually is going to feel bad. And that's because we forget that we as humans are pretty resilient. Like, once you get fired, you immediately start looking for other jobs, other options,
Starting point is 00:32:37 do things open up. And it's never kind of as bad as we think. And so, and from the psychologist perspective, it's kind of fascinating, like, why are we so bad at predicting? But from like a real person perspective, this matters a lot, because we make plans based on our predictions. You know, if you were thinking about, should I leave this job, you know, should I take this risk that might get me fired, you might choose not to do those things and stick in a job because you think, well, if I got fired, you know, the world would be over, like, definitely can't do that. But in practice, we're much more resilient than we think.
Starting point is 00:33:07 And that means we're not taking the risks we should be taking. We're not taking the kinds of chances we should be taking. We're not getting out of situations that are bad because we think that transition might be worse. But in some ways, it's not just not as bad as we expect. In some ways, it can be fantastic. It can be life changing in a positive way. We just don't realize that.
Starting point is 00:33:26 So that's so interesting. I interviewed Sarah Blakely last week who happens to be a billionaire inventor of spanks and that was her number one business tip is take massive risks. Nothing massive and huge and successful happens unless you take that leap. However, we're all so trained not to do it out of fear.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Yeah, and I think the fear is one side of the coin. The other thing is that we sometimes put the positive things in the same way, right? We're sometimes fearful because we're like, well, we have to go after the perfect salary or the perfect relationship and so on. We put these positive things out there with like a huge thing too.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Like it has to go perfectly or else, I'm gonna be miserable and so on. I think that's really critical as well. It's not just that we're avoiding the bad things. Sometimes we put these positive things in our life on such a high pedestal that we never reach them. If that can be potentially problematic too. It's not just about being kind of going for the risky thing and going for the awesome thing. Sometimes if we don't get that, it's gonna be better than we expect. So it's lowering expectations on those really perfect, idealing, you know, how our life could be this amazing, perfect way.
Starting point is 00:34:32 And then kind of pulling off this fear on the other side of how bad it could actually be somewhere in the middle is probably more realistic. Yeah, I think the main takeaway is that, you know, our life circumstances both good and bad. Don't impact us as much as we think. That means that getting fired, it's going to be bad for a while, but only for a while. You're just going to get better from it.
Starting point is 00:34:54 But the flip side is that perfect marriage that you think is out there, that perfect relationship or that perfect job. It might be good for a while, but you're also going to return back to baseline from the good things. And that means we can't keep putting our life on hold until these wonderful things come about. Like, you know, life is going to turn back to life even, you know, when this thing you've dreamed of occurs. And that's good too. The way that often plays out is I think, you know, people kind of have these expectations about how certain life events will go. So I think, you know, when I get married, I'll be happy or when I move to a new city, I'll be happy. And then they're lucky enough that that happens.
Starting point is 00:35:28 And they're not as happy as they think. And so they think something went wrong. They think, you know, I predicted that was gonna be, you know, 100 happy, like when I got into this new relationship, and I'm happy, but I'm not as happy as I thought, no, maybe something's wrong with this relationship. And it's like, no, something was bad,
Starting point is 00:35:42 something was wrong with your prediction. Like that's what went wrong. And so if you kind of understand how the mind works, you can make more accurate predictions. And that causes you to be, you know, less kind of overachieving in ways you don't need to be for the good stuff. But it causes you to be more resilient in the face of some of the bad stuff, too. So what is that self-awareness? It's partly self-awareness. It's in the kind of nerdy scientific parlance. It's what my colleague, Dan Gilbert calls kind of overcoming your impact bias. Impact bias is this idea that you think things are going to have this much bigger impact than you think.
Starting point is 00:36:17 And so you can kind of overcome that just by simulating like, okay, what's really going to happen if I move to a new city? Like, you know, that'll be great for a little while, but like, there's still going to be laundry. You know, there's still going to happen if I move to a new city. That'll be great for a little while, but there's still going to be laundry. There's still going to be bad weather. You kind of put it in perspective so you get a better set of predictions. And the same thing, it's something bad happens. I'm going to be fired. You're thinking, oh my god, my life is over.
Starting point is 00:36:36 It's like, no, if you get fired, there's still going to be sunny days. You're still going to have your friends. There's still mundane things kind of continue. You get this a more accurate set of predictions, which allow you to make choices that really leads to your well-being a little bit more efficiently. Interesting. So you have some very cool guests on this, on the season and some of your episodes, Michelle Kwan is one of your guests, correct? Yeah, which is so humbling and crazy to get to talk to Michelle Kwan. I mean, when I started this journey, I'm good at like knowing the different signs of happiness.
Starting point is 00:37:10 You know, that's what the class was about. But when I thought about the podcast, I thought like, I really want to meet people who are putting these things into practice, like in their own lives. Like who are the people who are getting it right? You know, so many of us are getting it wrong, like who can we really learn from?
Starting point is 00:37:24 And Michelle Kwan is really a great example of this. I think, you know, she obviously is an incredibly successful figure skater and so on. But, you know, by certain standards in the field, you know, if you, the only way you measure success is to say by getting a gold medal, you know, she never really made it there. You know, she got her silver when she was really slated to win the gold and got a bronze later. But what does that do to an athlete like her? She constantly craving this thing she didn't get.
Starting point is 00:37:50 It turns out that even though lots of silver medalists do that, it turns out silver medalists are often some of the most unhappy people because they kind of miss this one gold that's out there. But she never felt for that. That was in part because it turns outquang was really good at paying attention to the journey. She was really good at finding happiness in the small moments. And I love telling her story in this podcast
Starting point is 00:38:13 because again, her story's not one about, being this at least athlete. It's one about taking pleasure in the small things and kind of paying attention to the journey and not the final outcome. That sounds so easy to do. I personally find that very hard, you know, to find this amazing time in the journey. Well, I have these goals that I want to achieve. And every time I achieve one of those milestones, I'm off, you know, I'm going crazy. I'm so happy. So to find
Starting point is 00:38:40 that happiness in those daily struggles, I find really challenging. How do we change that to make that a more enjoyable experience? Well, part of it is just to kind of be mindful of it. I mean, Michelle talks a lot about this in her episode where she talks about like paying attention to the simple things in the grind that she enjoyed. You know, paying attention to like how her state sounded
Starting point is 00:39:03 on the ice that she was going and making sure that every time she looked in the Olympic stadium, she paid attention to like how her state sounded on the ice as she was going and making sure that every time she looked in the Olympic stadium, she paid attention to what it felt like to like skate over the Olympic rings and see the color under her feet, right? But beyond the just kind of the moment, she was really paying attention to the grind. Like she had parts of it that she liked, you know, every day, you know, hearing her tell her story doesn't sound super awesome to like get up really early and go out to the ice every single day. But she was like, oh, there are parts of that part that I really like to.
Starting point is 00:39:28 And I think we can forget this. You know, oftentimes we have these goals for ourselves, whether they be in career or personal life, and we kind of get obsessed with the goal, but often there's stuff along the way we could dig to. We just have to find better ways to remember that we dig it and kind of enjoy it over time. That's an excellent point. But it is very hard. Yeah, it's not easy. Yeah, it's retraining. So I also like that you had Michael Phelps coach on your show as well.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Yeah, and so that was for a special episode about whether or not it makes sense to think positive. I think this is another spot where sometimes self-help gurus can lead us to stress. You know, there's a lot of this idea of like, well, only you think positive, everything will work out and it'll happen swimmingly. But if you really look at the way some of like, really athletes play best, it's not often by thinking positively and imagining these positive futures. Like sometimes we get really ahead in life by imagining the obstacles, you know, making a good plan for when things come up. And so Michael Feltz's cult told us a story of one particular race in question
Starting point is 00:40:34 where Michael was swimming in a gold medal matchup and his goggles flew off in the middle of this, which would probably throw off even the most a week of athletes. But Michael was fine. He swam it perfectly. He's won one the gold medal and made a world record time. And he was like, really? And his coach was like, well, how did you do that?
Starting point is 00:40:50 What did you do? And it turned out that Michael had gotten so good at the typical imagine the positive scenarios where you kind of imagine the perfect race. He got so bored with that. He started imagining terrible races. What would happen if I missed my dive time and I jumped in a little bit late?
Starting point is 00:41:08 What would happen if my boggles flew off? What would happen if I hurt my foot when I first dove in? And he would actually practice how he would get through these bad scenarios. And this is critical. It's not just like ruminating about these bad things. It's like, if obstacle, how would I solve it? And it turns out that what the science suggests is that that kind of goal setting, that kind
Starting point is 00:41:27 of goal setting where you're really paying attention to the obstacles, is actually really powerful. It might even be more powerful than just these positive fantasies, because it allows you to figure out whatever you want to do to ground it in the gritty reality of how it's actually going to play out. And so in that episode, we talked about, okay, how can you apply this to say, I don't know, going to the gym more often, or getting ahead in your workplace and so on. If you just think about the positive outcome, that's fun and you can kind of fantasize,
Starting point is 00:41:54 but you don't necessarily get any insight into, okay, what is holding me back? Like, what are the either-and-outer obstacles that I'm really going to need to get through if I actually want to achieve this? And when you start thinking of those, you can say, oh, yeah, there is that obstacle for me going to the gym, which is like, you know, I like to sleep in. It's like, okay, how can I fight that?
Starting point is 00:42:12 You know, or that's the obstacle of like, I got to make my kids lunches earlier. If I'm going to do that, okay, how can I fight that? And so thinking about purely the positive outcome doesn't work as well as we think. And so Michael Phelps, in addition to being, you know, a crazy, a wee athlete, which is an amazing physical form, he also mentally kind of had this insight about, you know, sometimes thinking positive doesn't work as well as we think. Do you think there's, because I personally,
Starting point is 00:42:38 anytime I'm doing something really big that I'm going to that next level I haven't, you know, gone there yet in my mind, I go through it, it's gonna go great. I play music that I is like my theme song that gets me so fired up that I know it's gonna go great. I start seeing it go great in my mind and I always visualize that, you know, days leading up to the event so that when I get there, I know it's gonna go great when I walk on stage or, you know, there's, I'm not nervous. I'm not, you know, flipping out the way that maybe I would be if I hadn't seen it already play through.
Starting point is 00:43:09 However, when you were talking about Michael Phelps, I thought to myself, the other thing I'm also playing through is I remember the first time I walked on stage and the AC went out and it was 110 degrees out and people started sweating and complaining. And I also remember that when I'm going through that, I survive that and I have people laughing. And that's still in my theme song.
Starting point is 00:43:29 It's part of the images that come to my mind. So I guess I am always playing through that ideal situation, but I also play through the other challenges that I overcame. And maybe that's similar in some regards to that strategy that you just described. That's right. And so if you only play through the perfect version
Starting point is 00:43:46 of your talk, then when the AC goes out, you're like, wait, what should I do, what should I do? But if you add in those obstacles, then you can kind of see it. It's not so much that you want to copy the worst thing ever happening, but you're kind of like, oh, if this goes down, I'll kind of automatically know what to do.
Starting point is 00:44:01 And so you have the kind of perfect version, but also like, if this goes badly, how am I going to fix this? And this is a technique that folks train on. In fact, in one of our episodes, we talked to a Navy SEAL who has told us she was like a planner in the SEALs where she would like have literally have these tables filled with sand where they have these little action figures and figure out like, okay, what if happens if the enemy comes this way or what happens if you're cut off and we can't get to our supplies, like they play through all these bad scenarios.
Starting point is 00:44:29 And that way they know what to do as soon as it comes up, you know, they don't have to kind of figure it out on the fly. And so the advice would be, you know, as much as possible, yes, imagine it going smoothly. But then add in these subtle little obstacles about how you're going to kind of figure it out. And sometimes as you do that, as you do that imagining, you're like, oh, wait, I have to remember to put that into place. Mine when I'm giving
Starting point is 00:44:48 talk somehow is often like the shoes I'm wearing, you know, I'm like walking up to the stage and like, wait a minute, that's like a step with a hole in it. If I have heels on, I'm like, I'm gonna fall, you know. Oh yeah. Because we all fall. Why do they have, you know, floor boards that have like big heels? But anyway, but the point is like that only came through imagining have, you know, floorboards that have like, pickles, but anyway, but the point is like, that only came through imagining like, oh, wait, if that happens, then I just won't wait heels or, you know, that's a silly example, but the point is that if you're not thinking of the obstacles, if you're not thinking of the real things in your way, it's
Starting point is 00:45:16 really easy to just pretend they're not there. But if there's a real obstacle, it's not going away. So the more you can practice dealing with that, all the better. But it's so funny that you just use the heel example, cause I was walking out into state. I had my big heels on and one of my shoes got caught and my
Starting point is 00:45:31 foot came out so they my heel and flying. So it was just one of those fumble moments. Grab the shoe and went, you know, kept going, but yeah, for sure about knowing that I've seen that movie before I've gone through other obstacles
Starting point is 00:45:43 before it didn't it didn't deter me. That's right. That's right. Whereas if you never, you know, if you never even conceptualize that and have been about knowing that I've seen that movie before I've gone through other obstacles before it didn't it didn't determine That's right. That's right. Whereas if you never you know if you never even conceptualize that and have been thought of that before It might throw you off, but if you're like no that's in my repertoire And this is one of the beauties of being a human right is that you know our repertoire doesn't have to be Every real experience of you're here following off. You can just imagine it Now is the power of Michael Phelps' approach. He just imagined these bad things happening.
Starting point is 00:46:07 And it was as though his mind solved it. He had it and he kind of mental rolodeck of what to do when things go wrong without having to go through that negative experience in real life. That's great. I love that advice. Thank you for sharing that.
Starting point is 00:46:20 One of your episodes that I'm really interested in is about being around negative people taking on negative people's feelings and or what is it like when you're around positive people? How much effect does that have on our happiness? Much more than we think. I think we you know We often think that you know the people around us we can choose to pay attention to them or not But this episode really deals with the automatic contagion we get from other people. Like we're literally catching other people's emotions, like the common cold.
Starting point is 00:46:50 And I think we forget how powerful that can be and how much it's affecting us in our daily life. We hear from a researcher who did a study with Facebook on how much other people's emotions on Facebook are kind of contegiously affecting us. And the answer is much more than we think. It turns out if your feed has a bunch of negative posts in it, you're more likely to start posting negatively, whereas if I engineer your feed to have a little bit more positive posts,
Starting point is 00:47:14 you're going to end up posting more positively than yourself. And this is crazy because this isn't like, you know, people around you in your workplace whose emotions you're catching. These are like randos online and random advertisements that you're kind of picking up. You know, they're powerful enough to affect our emotions. You know, what about people in our teams? Like, what about the people in our jobs and so on? And so the message of that episode is really not to kind of be, you know, sad about this and say,
Starting point is 00:47:40 oh god, I'm never going to interact with anyone again to protect my kind of emotional like register. The message is that that means that we can have a much huge effect on the emotions of the people around us that we think, because just as we're affected by other people, so too can we be the one that's the positive comment in the middle of the meeting. We can start what researchers call a positive affective spiral. We can be the first step in other people catching our positive emotions. And if we don't pay attention, we can also be the negative nilly as my kids around in school say, but causing negativity in ways that we don't really expect either.
Starting point is 00:48:18 So this is interesting to me, especially with political season approaching, there's so much negative ads around politics and just people being negative in regards to the politics in general and opinions and whatnot. So is the strategy unfollow those people or, you know, how do you best protect yourself knowing that we're in that space? Yeah, I think two things. I think one is not all a just power, right? You know, and I think this, you know, I experienced this to myself for like, you know, sometimes I'll be like, oh, I have like a little break in email. You know, let me just hop on Twitter. And then I do that for 10 minutes. And I leave feeling like, oh my gosh, like my chest is tense. Like, what's happened? And it's like,
Starting point is 00:48:56 wait, I just caught that stuff. You know, and so next time I go on Twitter, I can go in there knowing, right? Like, you know, am I in a space where I can do with this stuff right now? Or maybe I want to do something else for there knowing, right? Like, you know, am I in a space where I can do with this stuff right now, or maybe I want to do something else for my break, right? A second thing you can do is, again, remember that you have control over it, right? You know, all that negative stuff is out there, but you can post a positive comment. You know, as I tell my students, you can share the wholesome meme, right? You can be a comment that's going to affect other people.
Starting point is 00:49:22 And in some ways, kind of just contributing in a positive way, like you can start changing the culture around. So we're not necessarily as trapped as we think by knowing a little bit about how this works. We can kind of be the change that we want to see in our Twitter feeds, in our Instagram feeds, in our office, wherever we are. Be the change we want to see.
Starting point is 00:49:41 I love that. So I'm interested in this. This caught my eye when I was going through your episodes, the unhappy millionaire. So so many people, and I know you mentioned, you touched on this briefly, you know, oh, if I had enough money, if I if my if I was living in that bigger house, my life would be happier. But in fact, that is not always the case. Yeah, and this episode was really fun. We meet with this psychotherapist, Clay Cockrell, who's a psychotherapist for the insanely wealthy. So all his clients earn more than $15 million.
Starting point is 00:50:12 And you might at first glance, they like, why do those folks need a therapist? Like their life should be perfect, but it turns out not at all. Not only do they face the kind of mental health problems of the rest of us, they face their own very specific mental health problems, the rest of us, they face their own very specific mental health problems, like kind of guilt, right? They're sitting on $50 million, but they're not happy. And that's like, what am I doing wrong? It's like a special form of guilt.
Starting point is 00:50:34 Unlike us, they can't fantasize about how awesome their life would be if they made $50 million because they have it. And they're still kind of not there. They also face lots of social problems it turns out. They call it the 1% for a reason. It's hard to relate when everybody isn't necessarily as rich as you.
Starting point is 00:50:51 So that can also cause disconnection and guilt and so on. The main message of the episode is, again, this idea that there's certain things that we put up there. If only I could get to that level of wealth, then I would be happy. But the research just suggests that that's simply not the case. It is the case that more money will make you happier if you are below the poverty line.
Starting point is 00:51:12 If you really can't put food on the table or a roof over your head, then yes, earning more is going to help. But for most middle class Americans, like getting more just isn't going to help in the way we think. One of the estimates suggests that once you're earning about $75,000 in the US right now,
Starting point is 00:51:27 even doubling or tripling your salaries, just not going to have an effect on your well-being on the ground. It's not going to decrease your stress, it's not going to increase your positive mood. We definitely don't expect that. Many of us really look forward to our annual bonus checks thinking it's going to make us happy. Many of us pick our job with the one with the highest salary because we think that's gonna, you know, influence our happiness.
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Starting point is 00:55:09 Well, you've convinced me. Let's go eat. I've got time now! Shop Blinds.com and save 40% on selected products. Get 40% off selected products right now at Blinds.com. Rules and restrictions may apply. Yeah, so I definitely chased a paycheck for the majority of my
Starting point is 00:55:28 career. And I'm definitely, you know, I'm the poster kid for it. It did not pay off in the end. I didn't feel fulfilled. I didn't have a purpose driven life and I was seeking more, but still almost addicted to that page. I love that and I used to tell, I'm, I have golden handcuffs.
Starting point is 00:55:47 I can't leave. I truly in my mind believed I couldn't leave. And I'm not saying it was easy getting fired and leaving and starting over. It was hard. However, I had closed my mind off to any other potential out there than that one I was living. And it's so easy to look back and see that now.
Starting point is 00:56:05 And I see it in so many of my friends, past colleagues, well, I'm not like you Heather, I can't reinvent myself. And I'm like, what do you, wait a minute, what are you talking about? I was just like you two years ago, what do you mean? And it's frustrating to say, you know, I'm starting to get on on that other side,
Starting point is 00:56:23 but to look back and see how those blinders we put on ourselves are really shocking. I love that you said you get addicted to it, because I think this is what we saw in an episode for some of these rich folks, is they think, I'm not happy right now, what's wrong? It's like, well, I might not have enough money. Maybe once I get a hundred million dollars or maybe once I make you know a super partner or something You know he played talked about you know how you know
Starting point is 00:56:52 He sees a lot of people who have like five hundred million dollars, and they think well as soon as only I could get to a billion It's only could be a billionaire than I'd be happy and so they don't these rich folks are unhappy don't generalize Well, maybe it's not money. Maybe I need something else, maybe I need meaning, or I could change, they just say, maybe I just don't have enough yet, which is really kind of drawing. But I actually, I never made anywhere near $500 million or $50 million.
Starting point is 00:57:17 I'm not claiming that I did, but I sort of do understand that, in that I did very well financially, and I would think, okay, if I could just get it too, so I can take my son for a month to Europe, that was something we never did, or if I can land the seats for the super bowl, expensive things that are really those bucket lists,
Starting point is 00:57:35 you know, I would think, and those things, we did go to the super bowl, and it was unbelievable and a great memory, but it only lasted for a shorter period of time and I put a bigger value on how that would change my life or his life maybe than it was really worth. Yeah, and we also talk in that episode about sometimes these awesome experiences, even kind of these really unique experiences, can be tough because they sometimes alienate you.
Starting point is 00:58:03 You know, he talks about cases of, you get the furrow seats at the Super Bowl, but then, you know, you go to your friend and like, how do you talk with your friend? You know, it's like, you kind of can alienate you from the normal person because not everybody is gonna get those and then that can make you feel guilty. And so it again just gets back to this big problem that we have tough time predicting
Starting point is 00:58:23 what's really gonna make us happy. And we think material possessions, we think the kinds of things that money can buy are going to do it. I'm by and large, they just don't work as well as we think they're going to work. Yeah, I definitely, you got my vote on that one, sadly. Okay, so what about choice overload? This is something that I've never heard of before. Yeah, so choice overload kind of plays on another bias
Starting point is 00:58:45 that we have, which is most of us think that the best way to happiness is to have lots of freedom of choice. Do you want just like three Starbucks drinks or like 800,000 Starbucks drinks? We think that actualizing our preferences requires a lot of freedom of choice from what we buy in terms of what we wear
Starting point is 00:59:03 to what we eat and so on. But it turns out that in reality that level of choice can sometimes make us feel crumpy. Like first of all, it can make us feel really overwhelmed right like the active, you know, I feel like this even, you know, sometimes with the act of like, you know, going to Starbucks like literally where it's like, which size do you want? Do you want foam or venté or whatever. And you're like, I like, I just want to coffee, get out of here. Say you would choice of clothes, like, oh my gosh, there's so many different styles and this and so on.
Starting point is 00:59:31 And so we think more choice will make us feel better, but in practice, it's sometimes exhausting. And it also sometimes makes us feel chronic, because even when we get an option, we like. Part of us is thinking like, well, there were so many other styles. Like, maybe I would have liked this other one better. And so we think that we want to have as many choices as possible, but in practice, that's like, that sometimes makes us more miserable than we
Starting point is 00:59:53 think. And in this episode, we learn from a woman Courtney Carver, who is kind of a like a lifestyle specialist, who just decided to limit her choices. She started this project called Project 333 where she only wears 33 items of clothing for three months. So she just cleans her closet out. This is only 33 things. And most people when they hear that thing, that is completely crazy. Like there's no way I'm going to pair my whole wardrobe down into 33 pieces. But what she finds is that people who do that feel this overwhelming freedom. Like they go to their closet, and there's not this moment of choice overload
Starting point is 01:00:29 when they open the closet. It's not like so many choices you feel exhausting. You can just kind of pick, and it's easier than we think. And so choice overload is this idea of having weights to many choices. And it turns out we're happier when we sometimes restrict our choices,
Starting point is 01:00:42 more than we expect. So what's the difference then? Because I don't disagree with what you're saying, and I relate to like the coffee thing. I'm so sick of hearing about 17 times of milk, like just whatever, give me the latte, whatever you have. I don't want to pick macadamia and almond or whatever. Okay, so I get that, but to the close point,
Starting point is 01:00:59 sometimes I'll get it what I think is a rut. I'm, you know, I don't want to think about anything, and I just keep wearing that same black jeans with a blazer and whatever. And people start saying, every time I see you, you're in the same uniform. And then I start thinking, I think I'm in a rut because I don't even
Starting point is 01:01:15 want to put the effort into it. And I don't think that's necessarily good either. Yeah, so I think this kind of project, 333 ideas, sort of in between. Like the rut sometimes cons. I mean, I can kind of feel this myself, where it's like this kind of project, 333 ideas, sort of in between. Like the rut sometimes cons, I mean, I can kind of feel this myself, where it's like you open it and you're like, oh my God, this is just overwhelming.
Starting point is 01:01:31 I'm just gonna reduce this to the problem I figured out yesterday because I just don't have the mental effort to do that, right? And that's actually what a lot of busy people choose to do. There's a bunch of kind of like, you know, phasemist business exact types that have done this of picked a uniform.
Starting point is 01:01:44 The jobs. Steve Jobs, president Obama, would wear the same like tie all the time. And it's like, and Obama, when he was interviewed about it, said, you know, I have to decide so many things in a day, like why am I going to waste my emotional energy on, like, you know, picking what I'm going to wear in the morning. And so I think what you want to do is if you narrow it down ahead of time, then it's not so exhausting. You can kind of almost get out of the rut because you can pick a few things that seem manageable to make a choice about.
Starting point is 01:02:11 You know, we can make choices. It's just like a choice set of 10 things is not as exhausting. It's a choice set of like thousands of things, which you know, sadly, many of our wardrobes end up being. And because often the way we try to solve the rut is we don't think I need less choices. We think I need more. You know, I need to go online and shop and get five different dresses. And I think like, oh, that's going to make the choice easier tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:02:31 But actually, it just makes it even harder. Yeah. So maybe it's pairing down what we currently have. And it's a time to do a cleanse of the closet again. Exactly. Yeah. She kind of inspired me to do a bit of a jewelry cleanse for myself. I've lots of different necklaces and things.
Starting point is 01:02:47 And many of them I don't even wear, but they're there. And it's like, kind of causes just like, oh, I can't. But if you pair it down to just like a couple items that you really, really love, then it kind of just, it's just much more relaxing in the mornings. All right, I'm giving that a shot. Okay. What about the don't think of a white bear? This was interesting to me.
Starting point is 01:03:06 Yeah, so this is an episode where we're looking at this phenomenon of what's called thought suppression. So that title don't think of a white bear is from a famous study, which literally told subjects for the next 30 seconds don't think of a white bear. What happens when you tell people to do that? Instantly what? You're thinking of a white bear, right?
Starting point is 01:03:23 Turns out all of our mind works that way. We have really bad mechanisms for shutting thoughts off. And that means that whenever there's a thought that you don't want to think about, that you're like, don't think about this, don't think about this, don't think about this. It means you're much more likely to think about it. Or if there's like some emotion that you don't want to feel, we really don't feel that, don't feel that, don't feel that. It kind of comes back with inventions. And so what this episode is teaching folks is that if there are kind of unwanted feelings or unwanted thoughts that you have,
Starting point is 01:03:51 really the way to deal with those is not to kind of try to force them out of your mind. It's to actually come up with some acceptance of them, to kind of be mindful and accept them and just kind of be with them, which I think in an emotional domain can be incredibly powerful. Sometimes we think, you know, if there's sadness or guilt or fear, like, I'm just going
Starting point is 01:04:08 to like, you know, shut that down at all costs. And what we don't realize when we're doing that is that our emotions almost work like a pressure cover, like the more you kind of shut them down, the more they're going to come out eventually. And so a better strategy that we learned from talking to scientists like Eve Eckman, one of the scientists at the Berkeley School for Greater Good, is like, if you're just going to take some time to like accept your emotions and just be with them and realize they're not that bad, kind of feel how they feel, it actually works much better.
Starting point is 01:04:37 This is true for anxiety, I'm actually feeling a little fearful right now, or I'm actually a little bit angry, like by actually feeling your emotions and not trying to squish them and shut them down, you can kind of process them appropriately and get a sense of what you need rather than kind of squashing them in a way where they sort of come back with the vengeance later. So it's interesting because I definitely have been one of those people that I'm too busy and I can't deal with this right now so I'm going to, I call compartmentalized. Right, like this is going over here and I'm shutting that with this right now. So I'm gonna, I call it compartmentalized. Right, like, this is going over here, and I'm shutting that door for right now
Starting point is 01:05:06 because I'm going back to work. And I can't deal with this sadness from a relationship or whatever is going on. However, what I've noticed over the years is I would take that trend and it would start showing up in other parts of my life. So I suddenly wasn't happy at work. Remember, because I had to focus on work,
Starting point is 01:05:23 but now I wasn't happy there. So I would, I'm going to ignore that part of work and keep doing my job. And then you start ignoring all of these different things in your life that, you know, some things start really getting your attention and your force to say, oh my gosh, I'm creating this pattern. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:38 And I think you see that crop up in so many different areas, right? What you forget is that the negative emotions from one area, if you're trying to squash them down, they come out in another. We talk about this one study of parents where you bring parents into the lab, you kind of give them negative feedback about something at work and you say, well, you're going to go play with your kids now. Whatever you do, like try to squash down your emotions,
Starting point is 01:05:59 your kids don't know that you're stressed right now. And what you find is that those parents inadvertently act the worst with their kids. Like they kind of are like more short tempered with their kids and so on. don't know that you're stressed right now. And what you find is that those parents inadvertently act the worst with their kids. Like they kind of are more short tempered with their kids and so on. And then if you look at how the kids play, the kids play worse, they play less creatively,
Starting point is 01:06:14 would say a group of Legos or something. And then the kids show more negative emotions. And so the idea is we think we're squishing it down, but it does, it comes out more than we think. And it can come out in the worst of circumstances for us. So this is right in line with Amy Morin, who is a therapist and author of 13 Things Mentally Strong People Don't Do. It's the exact same direction that she gave me, which is, and she suffered the loss of
Starting point is 01:06:39 a husband, and it was about sitting with that sadness and feeling that sadness instead of picking right back up and going back to work or going on dates or whatever it might have been, but to allow that sadness to exist for as long as it needed to until she could process it and move forward even though it wasn't that was tough. Yeah, it's not fun like sitting with your emotions. There's a reason we're motivated to squash them. Problem is it just doesn't work like it makes it worse. It's like scratching the mosquito bite. It's itchy, but you're only going to make it more itchy in the future. Kind of emotions work a little bit like that. You know, our instinct is to just get rid of them, but that's not how they work. In the podcast we talk about researchers who've worked with the
Starting point is 01:07:20 Dalai Lama, and they're like, even the Dalai Lama, when he's angry, he can't just like show off his anger, right? Even he can't do that. But he can be with it and notice this and just kind of accept it. Like, oh, I'm angry. And then it stops affecting you, right? Because you can kind of be there with it and process it. Speaking of a Dalai Lama, so do you dive into meditation or and the effect that has on people? Yeah. And in some of our future episodes, we talk a lot about this idea of mindfulness and what you can do to kind of be with your present moment, whatever that is, if it's negative or something like that, and just take this kind of non-judgmental attitude towards accepting it.
Starting point is 01:07:56 A lot of what we talk about in that white barrack, so to sort of about that, what can you do to be with your emotions and accept them, turns out one of the best kind of strategies you can do to kind of train up on that, what the gym is for with your emotions and accept them, turns out one of the best kind of strategies you can do to kind of train up on that. What the gym is for accepting your emotions is actually meditation, mindfulness meditation. And so what do you suggest in regards to meditation?
Starting point is 01:08:13 Does it have to be so much time allotment per day or how does it work? Yeah, really what you find is that, especially for novices, it's really just the act of doing it. It doesn't take a lot of time, five minutes a day, we're here and there just like, give yourself a little ping on yourself one to say, hey, take a mindful pause.
Starting point is 01:08:29 Ignon judgmentally, just pay attention to what you're feeling right now. And even like, you know, scattered across the day in a couple of quick moments, like it's just the act of kind of getting into this habit of being more mindful. And those things can have an impact on our emotion regulation,
Starting point is 01:08:44 on how we had a process emotions. They also can have an impact on our emotion regulation, on how we had a process of emotions. They also can have impacts on our concentration and also our overall wellbeing. How about sleep, do you dive into that? Yeah, so sleep is one of the things I prescribed from my undergrads a bunch. We forget sleep is as powerful as it is. I actually think we could solve
Starting point is 01:08:59 most of my college student mental health crisis by just like getting them to sleep more often. If you look at the data, there's one study suggesting that after about a week of impaired sleep and by impaired sleep, they don't mean like zero hours of sleep. They mean like five hours of sleep instead of eight hours of sleep. You can see like significant reductions in overall mood and mental health functioning after just a week of less sleep. Given that my college students on average get about four or five hours of sleep a night, that's what many college students are averaging. I actually think if we could just get them to sleep more, we might solve a lot of this crisis on campuses.
Starting point is 01:09:32 And what are you suggesting seven to eight hours of sleep? That's typical. I mean, again, it kind of depends. There's a lot of, you know, individual like needs there. But, you know, by and large, if you're getting about four or five, you probably want to bump it up a bit. All right. I'm going to work on that as well. Lori, I'm so excited for the Happiness Lab to be out and for everyone to check it out. I'm cheering you on. How do they find the Happiness Lab podcast? It is available wherever you get your podcast. So Apple Spotify, Stitcher, just log in and
Starting point is 01:10:03 just type in the Happiness Lab. And you should be able to find it. And how can people find you? They can check me out on the Happiness Lab website, which is happinesslab.fm, or they can just Google Yale Happiness Lady and can find out more about the online class and the podcast. I love that, the Yale Happiness Lady. Thank you so much, Lori, for being here. I'm so excited for your show and I really appreciate your time today. Thanks so much, Lori, for being here. I'm so excited for your show and I really appreciate your time today. Thanks so much for having me. I know you can try to find your passion. Hi, and welcome back. I hope that you love that interview
Starting point is 01:10:34 and feeling a little bit more sunshine in your life. I definitely am. Okay, so I've gotten a bunch of DMs lately with questions. So keep them coming. I love to answer your questions. Here's one that I got on LinkedIn. Heather, what advice would you give me in the situation? I went through an interview process
Starting point is 01:10:52 and was offered a position. The offer was low, but I took the offer without countering, errr, because I was just so excited to have received an offer. Now I'm feeling underpaid and kicking myself for not countering. When is too early to ask for a raise? Is six months too soon? I feel like an idiot for taking the job without countering. All right, wait a minute. First of all, do not beat yourself up, right? We all live and learn. So this is an opportunity to live
Starting point is 01:11:17 and learn and grow from something. So do not call yourself an idiot. Like that's baseline ground zero. This is where we're starting. We need to call ourselves brilliant from being willing to learn from the experience and grow from it. So talk to yourself the same way you would a child or someone you love be kind to you. Let's start there. Okay, we're going to roll it back and say we're brilliant for looking into this. All right, let's go. Next, it is never too soon to ask for a raise. Now, while you might be frustrated, your employer doesn't know what's going on in your mind,
Starting point is 01:11:53 so people can only respond to and react to things they're aware of. If they don't know your upset and feeling undervalued, they can't do anything for you, which is terrible. So you need to have an honest conversation. And the way that I would do it is, I'd first get honest with myself, I would write down what the expectations were for the job when I took them. I would compare my performance and results to what the expectations were. Right, you want to evaluate, are you worthy of a raise right now in the company's eyes. Have you done and gone above and beyond what
Starting point is 01:12:25 they expected of you? Because if you have, they're going to be loving you, they're going to see your value and there is a tremendous opportunity cost when a good employee leaves. Not only is there the cost of that person no longer being there in the revenue they were creating or the value they were bringing, but there's also a window of time where you have to search for someone, probably pay a recruiter, then you have to take a chance, well, then you have to interview an interview, an interview, which takes a lot of time, but then you also have to take a chance on somebody that is not, they're not proven in your building. They might have done well in other companies, they might not mesh in your company. So there's so much cost involved in losing a good employee. And so often employees think, oh, you know, I'm lucky to have the job and I'm lucky to have
Starting point is 01:13:12 this. The reality is the company is lucky to have you. Never have I realized this so much now since I got fired. I just have to sidebar right now. The company that I was working for that I was fired from that mined you in the 14 year time that I was leading the revenue side of the business, we had more than doubled our revenue from 100 million annually when I joined to an excess of 200 million annually when I was fired.
Starting point is 01:13:37 That stock was trading at double digits the day that I was fired, and I just looked and it's trading at $3 now. So, if you don't think that there is an impact when you take your greatness elsewhere, let me tell you with experience, there is an impact. So, don't devalue that and you have no idea what series of events could happen, what domino effect you leaving would have an organization and how crippling that can be to a company. So come at it from that perspective. So the first thing we do is we lay out why we deserve a raise, we look at the facts, the statistics, the performance evaluations, whatever it is that you have,
Starting point is 01:14:18 that is proof positive, that you know you've accomplished what you've set out to do, and you call a meeting and you sit down and you explain to that person you report to what's going on? Hey, Bob, I Want to sit today to to go over a few different things number one I want to talk about my performance. I feel really proud of the job I've done this far in six months time Here's what I set out to do. Here's what I have accomplished I wanted to confirm that you feel really positive about this too And feel like I've exceeded expectations right you want to get the information from this person that yes
Starting point is 01:14:52 You are doing a great job. Yes. We are super happy with you here Because that's going to set your conversation up for success on where you want to take it So you lead with showcasing what you've done, what was expected of you, what you've accomplished. You ask these probing questions to find out and confirm that yes, the company loves having you there. They're happy that they hired you. You know, that you're showing up beyond what they thought the potential that you have. Then we're gonna take the conversation to be honest
Starting point is 01:15:20 and let them know. I've gotta be honest with you. I was so excited about coming to work here. I didn't counter your offer and that was my fault and I want to explain to you why. And then you want to give them some insight. One of the things that really gets people's attention is when you share, I had another offer for more money
Starting point is 01:15:39 or recently so and so approached me for more money. I know that the value that I bring is worth more in other places, but I never gave you the opportunity to make it worth more here, because I was so excited just to take the job. And I regret that, and I want to find a way to stay here. I love being here. I love working for you. I love my job. Whatever it may be, however, I also need to fill this gap in the discrepancy and pay from what I'm making here versus what I could be making if I left here, which I
Starting point is 01:16:10 do not want to do. How can you and I figure out a solution so that I can make the potential money that I should be making? And there's a lot of different ways to go about that. You know, you can look at bonus structures, you can things like that don't cost the company anything. And that was really how I made a lot of money in my last job is I got them to really double down on if I overachieve your budget numbers. So beyond the numbers you plan for, then I want a percentage of that because it costs you nothing. It just makes you and your shareholders more money.
Starting point is 01:16:44 So when I could show that I would over-deliver beyond expectations, over-deliver what they had planned for, they were happy to give me a cut of that. So there's a lot of different ways you can look at this and approach this, but it's critical to have the conversation. You don't want to just ignore this and stay frustrated because that's not going to be good for you or your employer. So take action now, shoot an email and ask for the meeting and get the ball rolling. Okay. I've been asked a lot lately about going to networking events, going to dinners for business and, you know, how do you connect with people?
Starting point is 01:17:17 Well, I always believe in doing research on people ahead of time whenever you can because then you can say to them, oh my gosh, you went to University of Ohio and my families from Ohio. You're always looking for points of connection and commonality that really makes people feel excited and comfortable and it's you making the conversation about them, which people love. But I also have a couple of games that I am known for playing
Starting point is 01:17:43 at big business dinners when people are, you know, coming together with vendors, clients, whatever, and no one really knows each other. I like to break the ice and do a game where I say, all right, let's go around the table. If you weren't a podcast host, Heather, what would you be? So if you weren't in the job that you're currently in, what would be the one job that you wish you could have had
Starting point is 01:18:04 or you, you know, what would be the one job that you wish you could have had, or you would have gone for it instead. And it always opens up super interesting conversations because you could be sitting there with a CFO who's needy been finances and they say, I would have been a singer. And you say, what? Where is this coming from? Oh my gosh. And they'll tell you a super interesting story about their life. Okay, so that's a super fun game that always gets conversations spinning up into totally different directions that you didn't expect. The other one is, what one thing about you does no one at the table know? And that's a super interesting one too, because it can be ridiculous like I had braces for five years and I was a nerd in high school or it could be I was arrested or it could be you know anything but it starts again a conversation around a topic nobody ever expected and it makes a conversation exciting that people are really engaged and want to hear.
Starting point is 01:19:01 I also like to do an MVP award and I like to set the expectation with everyone. Listen, we're gonna be naming an MVP at the end of tonight. It's gonna be all about who's shining their light, who's bringing more value and making things fun, whatever it is, but it just makes it, it's a funny, cute thing that you've award someone at the end of a night or the end of a retreat weekend with the MVP player. It's just kind of a night or the end of a retreat weekend with the MVP player.
Starting point is 01:19:25 It's just kind of a cool way to recognize people and keep people interested paying attention and involved. So those are a couple of tips for some networking and business type events that you might not be excited about trying to put a spin on it to make it more exciting for you to attend and for the people around you. And of course the people around you. And of course, the key is put down the phone. That's the number one. Nothing's gonna happen until you put that phone down.
Starting point is 01:19:52 You know, put it on vibrate, turn it face down and start showing up for the people that are sitting there with you. They took the time to be there. Why not really be there? And you never know what great things can happen. So wishing you the greatest week, hopeful for so much goodness to come your way and excited to report back next week on some of the major progress I'm hoping is going to happen until next time, keep
Starting point is 01:20:15 creating your confidence. I'm on this journey with me.

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