Freakonomics Radio - 401. How Many Prince Charleses Can There Be in One Room?
Episode Date: December 26, 2019In a special holiday episode, Stephen Dubner and Angela Duckworth take turns asking each other questions about charisma, wealth vs. intellect, and (of course) grit. ...
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From Stitcher and Dubner Productions, this is Freakonomics Radio, the podcast that explores
the hidden side of everything. Here's your host, and happy holidays.
This time of year, we would usually put out a repeat,
but instead we've got something new for you and something different.
This grew out of a friendship with Angela Duckworth,
a psychology professor at the University of Pennsylvania.
I first interviewed her a few years ago about the book she had just written called Grit.
I define grit as passion and perseverance for especially long-term goals.
She is also founder and CEO of the Character Lab, which tries to harness the science of grit or character development to help young people thrive in school and beyond.
And then she launched another, even more ambitious project
called Behavior Change for Good,
and we talked about that on the show as well.
The problem with human beings is that they're human beings
and that they repeatedly make decisions
that undermine their own long-term well-being.
Duckworth was always so interesting and fun
that we had her join us as a co-host for a bunch of live shows.
So is it true then that picky eaters and hypochondriacs
are more likely to be politically conservative?
One thing Angela does really well is ask interesting questions.
And I admire that trait,
since that's what we try to do every week on this show.
So I thought it might be fun to just sit down with her for a conversation
armed with nothing more than a question to ask each other.
This happens to be one of my favorite hobbies, a mutual question-asking society.
You never know where a conversation like this will go.
More often than not, it leads to more questions, like Russian nesting dolls.
And that is what you are about to hear, a little matryoshka of a conversation.
We had so much fun making this episode that we are thinking about spinning this idea off
into its own podcast, separate from Freakonomics Radio. You think that's a good idea? After you've
listened, write to radio at Freakonomics.com and let us know what
you think. All feedback welcome, whether you like it, hate it, or feel profound indifference.
And thanks so much for all your interest and attention over this past year. Every month,
nearly 4 million people around the world listen to at least one episode of our show.
I'm glad you're one of them. Okay, on to this special episode
of Freakonomics Radio. Happy holidays. Angela Duckworth, question for you.
All right, I'm ready.
Let's say that you personally are granted one genie wish, but it's multiple choice. You get to be in the top 1% globally in either grit or wealth or intellect.
Grit, wealth, intellect.
Now, let's say this is you are who you are, but not really.
I was just going to ask, like, you know, are we talking about then you're going to be like
in the bottom 1% of the other ones? No, no, no. It's not that. I just get going to ask, like, you know, are we talking about then you're going to be like in the bottom one person of the other one?
No, no, no.
It's not that.
I just get to like upgrade in one dimension.
Yeah, let's say that.
Well, no, that's tricky because you may already be, you may already consider yourself.
Right.
So let's say no.
Okay.
Let me rephrase the question.
Not you, Angela Duckworth.
You, person.
Yeah.
This is like a veil of ignorance that like I'm a human.
Right.
Who came up with that? It's John, is it Rawls?
Lock? Rawls, I think.
Really?
Yeah. It's either Lock or Rawls.
It doesn't predate that? I thought it was like Ring of Gyges.
No, I think the veil of ignorance is like, you know, within the last 200 years.
So let's say you put on the veil of ignorance and you are a new entity and i say you availed one get to be in the
top one percent globally forever in either grittiness intellect or wealth which do you
choose and why that's really what i want to know is the why i mean honest answer but predictable
answer i would choose grit because okay so first of all, for wealth, I mean, I really
just don't have any desire to be in the top whatever percent of wealth. And I'm sure you
could do a lot of good with that wealth. But it's just it's never been, you know, an appealing
pursuit. So maybe not for its own sake, but then instrumentally, though, I know you're saying like
you could do great good, right? Or even if not great good, whatever the stuff you could hope to get with the grit or
the intellect, couldn't you get a lot easier with the wealth? You know, I think there's a huge
difference. And my good friend, and you may know him, the psychologist Barry Schwartz has...
Paradox of choice. The paradox of choice guy. So Barry Schwartz has something new that he's
really obsessed about, and it is intrinsic motivation. And he would say, he calls it internal motivation, just to not be confused with what some people call intrinsic motivation. And basically, he says, if you have a garden, and the garden is producing beautiful flowers and beautiful fruits and vegetables, and you tend to the garden, there's a kind of worth, value, and satisfaction that is derived that is different from if you, like, pay a gardener to, like, do your garden.
And I think there is something about earning your accomplishments that I don't think wealth – because wealth is kind of instrumental.
Like, oh, I could pay somebody to, you know, accomplish this great research.
It's different from doing it yourself.
Or – so, I can't say I don't agree with you.
Or I can't say that what you said doesn't resonate.
Right, but on the other hand, I could argue, well, if I'm at the upper end in wealth, then I could afford to have 10 different gardens that I would tend myself and have all different kinds of experiments and experience to figure out, let's say, I believe that the satisfaction that you
just described of producing yourself, let's say that that is the most valuable thing. Well,
I've just increased my ability to have even more of that.
I have a portfolio of garden investments.
Exactly. Not just investments, but a portfolio of gardening opportunities.
Opportunities that you would then tend.
Yeah.
Although, you know, it's hard to tend gardens.
Well, how do you know? You haven't tried it. You're not wealthy enough to have 10 gardens.
That's true.
I'm not even wealthy enough to have one garden.
Okay, but you're knocking out wealth.
You're knocking out wealth.
But you know, I'm not passing moral judgment on anybody who wants to be wealthy.
Intellect, you're also knocking out.
Now, we should say.
And that was the horse race.
That's where I was like, oh.
And you're a pretty smart cookie, I have to say.
Thank you.
Okay, so here's what my husband would say of me, right? So my husband thinks that the great irony is that I have spent my entire professional career studying everything other than IQ. In fact, my doctoral dissertation is called non-IQ predictors of success, right? out there, you should hyphenate your compound adjectives. Yes. So if you have a high school teacher,
it should be high-hoffen, high-hoffen. It should be high-school-teacher. Otherwise,
you have a high school teacher. Yes, exactly. Or yes, that's true.
Yeah. The kind of person who might say hoffen instead of hyphen.
Yes, exactly.
Right.
So non-IQ.
So I study all these non-IQ things like grit and delay gratification and growth mindset.
And so the irony my husband thinks is that really I'm personally kind of obsessed with intelligence and that I love it and I wish I had more of it and And that, you know, I really enjoy people who are just, you know, wicked smart.
And you seek out and accord higher status to people who are wicked smart,
even if they don't seem that high status in other realms?
I really love talking to people who are fast.
Fast?
Yeah, like their brain. And I know that's not the only way to be smart,
but just that their brain moves really quickly. And you're like, oh, you know, and then like,
you know, it doesn't take them that long to process a thought and then move on to the next one
so he's right about that but I didn't pick it you know not just so I can be like consistent with my
brand but I do think if it were if you know you made it multiple choice Stephen so I can't really
like you know say that I wouldn't want to be smarter too but in the long long run yeah I mean
there are a lot of really smart people who don't accomplish much but in the long long run I wouldn't want to be smarter too. But in the long, long run, yeah, I mean, there are a lot of really smart people who don't accomplish much.
But in the long, long run, I don't think there are that many people who are just, you know, the epitome of passion and perseverance who don't, you know, do something.
Are you sure?
I mean, isn't the world full of people that we don't know about despite the fact that they've been super gritty and they've exercised as you just
ticked off perseverance and passion and yet didn't quote accomplish enough to become known.
Well, this is the thing about multiple choices, right? Like, you know, you're-
Oh, now you're blaming the test.
Yeah, I'm blaming the test. I'm blaming the test maker. I'm blaming you, Stephen.
True, fair.
So here's the thing, though, right?
Because I think in a multiple choice where you're forced to pick one, you know, really on any of these, you could say, well, what if?
Because I think actually what we want to be in life, you, me, and everyone else is, you know, we probably want to be more than one thing.
So you're right.
Grit isn't the only thing you need, you know, to be happy and successful.
But if you have grit and, you know, good judgment or, you know, grit and humility, grit and a big heart. So you're right. It's not
the only thing. But, you know, neither is intelligence the only thing. Right. So there you
go. Well, let me rephrase the question slightly then. Think about the purpose, I guess, of life
and what you think is the highest purpose or doesn't have to be one thing, right? What you believe to be kind of-
My highest purpose, you mean.
Right. So let's say that in order to successfully reach or fulfill that purpose as best as you can,
which of the following then would be most useful in pursuit of said purpose, grit, intellect, or money?
Again, you're making me pick one, which I get it.
Well, but first tell us what do you see as, what's the purpose of life?
Oh, what's the purpose of my life? I'm just going to use that big qualifier there because I don't
want, right? It's not, you know, not for me to tell you about your life. I think the purpose of
my life is to achieve something. In other words, I do not think that the purpose of my life is to do something like be the happiest person or have the most experiences.
You know, I remember distinctly the day I was taking a walk with my dad.
I was, you know, young enough to still be like holding his hand and looking up.
So I don't know how old I was, but I was a little girl.
And I asked him, so I was old enough to ask him this question.
I asked him if he was happy.
And he stopped because every time
he had to answer a question, he would just stop walking. It was very annoying. We didn't get very
far very many days. And he said, why would I want to be happy? I want to be successful. So I do think
I inherited my father's sort of like life is about accomplishing something important. And for me,
it's, you know, I want to help kids like lead a healthy life. But I don't really think like, oh, I want to, you know, I haven't been to that country.
Like, I want to see what that, you know, restaurant is like.
I just I don't care that much about like that kind of happiness.
And do you feel that you're driven toward that kind of accomplishment out of generosity and good heartedness?
Or because, look, you've accomplished a lot in your life.
Your CV reads like a track record of a successful person, right?
Great institutions of learning, great accomplishments.
You have a job, nice family, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Is it that you want to help other people, like I said, out of generosity, altruism,
or because you derive great pleasure and even, dare I say,
happiness from the feeling of accomplishment. So Kant, Immanuel Kant, or Kant, depending on
how you want to pronounce it, said, I think, that if you do something good because it brings you
pleasure, right, because it feels good to do good, then it doesn't count, right? And I remember when
I learned this, I was
taking justice, you know, moral reasoning. It was like my freshman year in college. And I remember
thinking like, oh, what a guy thing to say. Like, I feel like it's like, you know, like, oh, if it's
not rational and it's not like, you know, only because it's a moral principle. I actually think
that a lot of our most benevolent and honorable motivations come from like a kind of visceral,
like it feels good. So when you ask me the question, like, oh, why do I care about kids?
Like, I really like them. I mean, I really like, you know, give me a random kid. I just like them.
Give me a random adult. Like, I don't know. I often like them, but not as often as I like kids.
Where do dogs lie on that scale?
Oh, dogs are below kids. I'm really kind of not a dog person.
But above adults?
Yeah.
Well, let's see.
Yeah, dogs might be somewhere between.
No, I kind of like adults.
I think I actually like adults more.
You like dogs the least.
Cats?
You didn't ask me about cats?
Cats are right there below kids.
I'm kind of a big cat person.
Oh, so you're just a cat person.
So I just asked you about the wrong animal.
Exactly.
Gotcha.
So you like cats more than adults?
Yes.
Let it go on the record.
If an adult has a cat.
Then I like them 10 times more.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I do get a lot of just like, I don't know, selfish enjoyment from being with kids and
like the idea that you could make some kids out there like happier.
So there's a, you know, I don't think it's a, you know, purely, you know,
an unemotional motive. I really appreciate that distinction you just made. And it makes me think,
you know, back to the kind of grit theory of life, which is without a passion for something,
then it becomes a little bit of a, you know, accomplishment for accomplishment's sake or success for success's sake, right? I mean, I think you can be a gritty person who's using all your grit for bad.
I mean, let me just be clear.
Like, I don't want to say that.
Hitler was gritty.
Yes.
The canonical sort of, you know, everyone rolls out Hitler as the example of like,
oh, but then again, there was Hitler.
But in this case, yes.
Sorry, I'm sorry if my example is a cliche.
Stalin was also gritty.
Hitler was, yes, Stalin.
Let's take Stalin for a little variety.
But no, seriously, I think in general, one of the things that really motivates people to stay committed to something for a long time
is feeling like you're part of something bigger than yourself. Now, again, you can be misguided,
but very, very often it is a kind of like benevolent, you know, like, oh, this isn't
just for me kind of motivation that also it's maybe not your only fuel, but it's also one of the things that motivates you. So for me, like, yeah, I would pick grit, because I feel like I would be able to achieve what I want to do with my life, which is to accomplish something for kids. Intelligence, I think, would also be awesome. If you made it two choices, of course, I'd pick intelligence probably as my second choice. But you know, why don't I just be the gritty person who gets all the smart people to work on this project?
That's basically my strategy in life.
Coming up after the break, Angela Duckworth has a question for me.
This is the question I could have studied in graduate school for psychology, but I took another path.
Which inevitably leads to more questions.
Like how many Prince Charles's can there be in a room, right?
You are listening to this special experimental question-asking episode of Freakonomics Radio with Angela Duckworth.
We'll be right back.
Steven, I have a question.
Hit me.
This is the question I could have studied in graduate school for psychology, but I took another path.
And here it is.
Charisma.
The other day I was talking to my younger daughter, Lucy, and she said something about how you can't teach charisma.
Some people are naturally super charismatic
and some people nobody wants to be with
and you can't get from one end to the other.
Do you think that charisma can be taught in like,
I don't know, you've interviewed a lot of people.
Who's the most charismatic person you've ever met?
So I like the question.
I could answer the most charismatic people part.
That's easy. But let me go back to the nature of the question. So the nature of the question is charisma, learned or inherent, correct? Yeah, like nature, nurture, charisma.
Okay, so in order to answer that, I would want to turn it around and ask you, how are we defining charisma? Because I have a definition in my head, but I want to know what yours is. All right, so I'll go first, and then you tell me yours, okay? So I think charisma is kind of almost like a magnetic force that draws people's attention in a very positive way.
So when you think of somebody who is, like, really charismatic, it's like you can't take your eyes off them, and they're the star.
They sort of, like, you know, it's not like you can't take your eyes off them and it's terrible. It's more like it's a very admiring and also, I think, kind of like almost an affectionate
kind of attention. Yeah. I think that was a very good definition. Better than I could do because
I was about to think that you were describing someone who could also be terrible, but then you
saved it at the end by bringing in affection right
it has to be a positive right i mean well i think we all know people who are charismatic who have
bad intentions donald trump is charismatic oh gosh i mean i think do you agree i think even
the people who hate him the very most would agree yeah okay so that's what i mean so i'm not saying
that i gotcha gotcha right yeah so yeah, I like your definition much better than mine.
Mine would be something like charisma as the quality, someone having the quality that makes me want to do what they do or believe what they believe.
Oh, so you want to emulate them.
It makes me want to emulate them in some in some way so it's a little bit
different than an inspiration but it makes i define charisma as somebody who embodies or
articulates a whatever an idea a point of view yeah that strikes me as like yeah that is so
they're persuasive they're like maximally persuasive.
Well, not necessarily because look, the people, there are a lot of people who hate Trump as
a president who describe him as charismatic and plainly they're not being persuaded.
Right.
That would be me.
Like, I don't think he's, yeah, he hasn't persuaded me a very much.
So who, okay.
So other than Trump, who, let's just name some people that we think are super charismatic.
So first of all, I'm really bad at filling the blank.
I'm better at multiple choice.
But you asked me who I've interviewed that I think are charismatic.
So I'll name a few.
Wynton Marsalis, the musician.
Now, I happen to like his music.
And I happen to like him as a person.
And I happen to like his story and what he does.
And he was just like, I just wanted like have a stool and carry the stool around
and sit wherever he was he was just yeah he has a spirit about him that i find joyful and challenging
and large and he has a way of dealing with bad
things that people have said or done, too,
that is very like, yeah,
that was a crap
thing, and that's not my problem.
I'm going to figure out how to
do my thing well. And I love
that. You know, Bill Clinton, I have
an interview, but I interacted with him a few times.
He has... Oh, if you Google it,
because I have i googled
it i mean i didn't do a phd on it but i googled it yeah well you're like who is super charismatic
or like charismatic role models or if you go on youtube and you look for like charisma videos
so usually get like will smith bill clinton actually interestingly they're mostly men
when i was thinking through just now i was coming up with men and I had to like actively turn on the search engine over.
So I did think of a couple.
Well, let me.
OK, let me finish my list because Clinton, whatever.
But I think a lot of politicians.
I mean, that's how they're successful.
It's like Eric Garcetti, the mayor of Los Angeles that you and I.
Oh, my gosh.
Super charismatic.
Also, the mayor of London who we had on the show recently,
Sadiq Khan, super charismatic.
But again, I think there's a strong overlap
between charisma and electability.
Okay, yeah, yeah.
Probably not so surprising.
Here's someone I found super charismatic
even though he's not like vibrant necessarily,
Steven Spielberg.
Oh, really?
Because-
Don't know him.
I found him, this was a long time ago, but I spent about a week with
him writing a piece about him. And I found him really remarkable in this sort of combination
of, this is probably not quite right, but it felt like a combination of confidence and humility
that made him appealing. So appealing. Super attractive. But now I feel like our definition
is getting too big, right? Because now I feel like our definition is getting too big.
Right?
Because now I feel like
we're just like,
oh, and I sure like
Steven Spielberg.
Either that or I never
interviewed charismatic people.
And truth be told,
I think most people
that would be characterized
as charismatic
are not the kind of people
that we interview.
I would agree with that.
I don't think you get many,
like,
Except for you.
It's present company excluded.
No, but I don't think
you get much, like, mileage in academia by having, you know, charisma.
Well, that's probably not true.
I mean, I think you get a little bit, right? But here's the thing. Here's a narrower definition, because I don't want it to just be like, oh, people we public, you know, public speaking, you know, like Ted or some other venue, you know, where it's not just like, oh, you and Wynton Marsalis
just happened to be at a coffee shop. And like, he happens to be really, I mean, I know we use
that word charisma also to describe those people. But in that case, then the question is like,
what makes somebody who's in a kind of public role? Really? Why did Hillary Clinton, I think
Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton are really good example, because if you Google Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton charisma.
Do you think he did a charisma transplant in her sleep and stole hers?
So you're saying the same thing that everyone says, which is that he was naturally charismatic and she was the opposite.
I didn't say naturally, by the way, but.
Yeah, I did.
I did put that word.
Do you want to say it?
It's multiple choice.
I have no idea.
I mean, I've read a fair amount about him. My sense is that he realized from a very early age what he wanted to do and figured out how to do it. And part of that was being charming. The first time I met him, like I said, I've interacted with him a few times.
Just playing golf or something? Actually, I warmed up for him as a speaker several times a few years back.
We had the same, I think we had the same lecture agent, maybe still do.
And he was out speaking a lot and I was out speaking a lot.
And sometimes we'd be like part of the same.
Yeah, you'd be on the docket together.
And the first time I met him, I came up, this is an example of his charisma.
I just finished speaking.
I came backstage and he was standing there.
And he was nice and kind and chatty, whatever.
And then check this out.
He goes out to start his talk.
And how does he start it?
By complimenting me, the former speaker.
He said something like, how about that Freakonomics?
You've read the book.
Now you've seen the movie.
It was even better.
Like a totally gratuitous.
It was warm.
It made me feel good.
It was generous.
It was super generous.
Yeah.
So anyway, to me, that is like, that's the fine line between like charisma and what's right before it or after it.
Because like charisma, I just looked up the etymology.
I don't know how accurate this is.
The English term charisma is from the Greek, which means favor freely given or gift of grace.
Oh, that's so interesting interesting which implies a sort of
benevolence divinity too also it implies a kind of because if you imagine somebody who's like lower
status than you being charismatic it doesn't feel right you know it feels right for someone to be
oprah and charismatic but not like somebody who is you know so wait a minute go into say give me
an example what do you mean?
Well, here's my view.
So, by the way, I was an intern in the White House during the Clinton administration.
Actually, I believe it was the Monica Lewinsky summer.
What do you mean you believe it was?
You know it was.
Okay.
I know it was.
I know.
I sound like a politician.
Like, well, it may or may not have been the summer of Monica Lewinsky.
And how much did you interact with President Clinton?
Well, I was in the speechwriting office. And so I penned a few of his very short remarks,
including the, you know, address to the land grant colleges. It was like a anniversary.
And I did get to meet him once.
Can you give us a phrase from one of your speeches? On maybe on the land that was a big deal i cannot recall verbatim but i believe that he
expressed his you know steadfast commitment to this great american tradition wow that's juicy
thanks for sharing that there you go i was like 20 something i didn't know what i was doing
so you met him once i met him and you know then, because now I feel like, you know, in some ways his reputation
as like the go-to charismatic role model has even become greater than it was during his
presidency.
And even then everybody said like, oh, gosh, all you have to do is be in the same room
as Bill Clinton, you know, for a minute and you'll fall in love.
So one thing that people say about him and many other people who are, quote, charismatic is that when you're talking to them, they make you feel as if you're the only person in the room.
Yes. And I think he did have that kind of rapt attention. And so I will say that when I met him, I mean, it was something like all of 12 seconds, right? Like, he thanked me, you know, he shook my hand. He took both hands in his hand. Like, you know, he used both of his
hands to shake my hand. Did he kiss you on the lips? He did not kiss me. I was not his favorite
intern, I guess. But he does look you in the eye. And he did do something. Now, I may be conflating
this with like YouTube videos. I've subsequently watched on like how to be charismatic because,
like I said, I find this just interesting as a scientist. He, you know, he kind of like you
make eye contact, right? And it feels like he just wants to keep looking at you and like that
you look away, right? Like he can't take his eyes off. And his eyes are so intense that you just
can't stay locked on because you're afraid you'll melt. I can't say, but I tried this out. So I'm
like watching these YouTube videos now, this is fast forwarding, you know, like many years, like a couple decades later.
And it was actually during my book tour.
And I was, you know, sort of like both interested in charisma.
But also I was like, oh, when you're signing books for a line of people where you can only interact with people for like six or seven seconds, like what advice do you have?
So I'm Googling charisma.
And here's something that I found on YouTube.
Again, this is not validated scientific fact, but it said, for example, when you're in a receiving line, don't look away.
They're eventually going to look away, but don't be the first one to look away.
And I do think that's all about signaling to somebody like, I want to be here.
You are the object of my fascination.
There's nothing else I
want to do, but listen to what you're going to say next. So did you learn to sign their book
while looking at them? No, but I did try to actually not look away because I thought, well,
first of all, I just want to try it and see. And I do feel like it was one of those like nonverbal
cues of respect, right? Like, okay, think about the opposite. Like, you know how people, I remember
this when I was in college, there would be certain people that you'd have breakfast with, you know, and you're in the cafeteria and they're kind of looking over your shoulder to see if there's someone better to talk. I hate that. And this is just the opposite of that. Right., you know, you obviously have to be very efficient. Did you also say their names when they left?
You mean the Dale Carnegie effect?
Exactly.
The power of positive.
Wait, not the power of positive.
How to win friends and influence people.
So the Dale Carnegie effect where you say someone's name, Stephen, right?
Do I do that?
Well, you know, I think Dale Carnegie was right about a lot of things.
And I think he's right about this one, which, again, all you're doing is you're giving somebody a cue that they matter. Right. And I think a lot of charisma is like this person really thinks that you matter, but it's only half of the equation. Right. I think you also have to signal that you're high status. So, you know, it's kind of like I like you and I'm worth and the world likes me.
Yeah. So what do you do if you're not high status?
Well, I remember figuring this out in third grade a little bit for myself because we moved. So we
moved from like one side of town to the other. You know, my dad got promoted and I actually think
there were railroad tracks. So maybe it's like the wrong side of the tracks to the right side
of the tracks. And it was January and, you know, it's the middle of school year. So I had to make
friends and this new kind of posh, posher neighborhood where the kids were wearing designer jeans.
I was just like, well, how do I do?
So I actually had that problem, right?
Because I had these like frugal parents.
I wasn't wearing designer jeans.
I was the new kid.
There wasn't anything especially awesome about me.
I wasn't very athletic.
So I remember like explicitly thinking out loud.
I think even maybe wrote it in my diary, like to make friends,
you just need to communicate two things. I like you and I like me. So if you want to communicate,
I like you, you know, eye contact, you know, mention their name, like be interested in what
they're saying. How do you signal I like me, which is really a proxy for the world likes me.
That actually I think is a little more like
nuanced. But I think that, you know, smiling or, you know, basically not being self-deprecating,
maybe things like posture help. But I think the most effective, you know, way to do it is for
somebody else to signal that you're high status or that the world likes you.
So you pay people to treat you as if you're better than you are? Is that what you're saying?
That would be one way. I didn't have a lot of pocket money when I was in third grade.
How did you signal as a third grader then that you liked yourself?
I mean, the thing is, first of all, I did. I was pretty happy.
So you just put the humility out there.
I was just letting it all hang out. And I think I was happy. I mean mean, I think that the people who like walk around the world and they do signal those
two things, and I'm not saying it's a recipe to follow, but I do think like if you just
notice the people that are attractive, it is so often that they make you feel like you're
great.
And they also seem to have like a healthy, you know, they have healthy self-esteem.
Let me ask you one last thing on the topic of charisma is charisma
a not finite but limited resource in that again it runs out well no no not quite but is it is it
not quite a zero-sum uh issue but like if there's a group of 20 people oh how many people can how
can be yeah because everybody's charismatic that isn't nobody charismatic yeah i do think there is something about, you know, when people are like, oh, they stole the show.
I think that we use that language because there is a kind of exclusivity about charisma.
And that's why I say there's something about status.
Like, you know, I met the prince, well, Prince Charles.
I was very young.
I was in my 20s.
And I think for him to be charismatic, you know, he already had the high
status part, right? So he had half the equation, like, you know, just by birth and by everyone else
treating him the way they were treating him. All he needed to do is the second part of the equation,
which is like when he's with you to be completely wrapped, to be just totally fascinated by what
you're going to say. And he pulled it off. I will say he was genuinely charismatic. So I think there
is a kind of like how many prince
charles's can there be in the room right like you know the moment a king walks in he's no longer
you know the highest ranking person that's so interesting and i never thought of like stealing
the show in that way right because if you gain somebody loses so it is maybe not zero sum but um
so if people listening to this want to have more charisma, is the easiest way to just surround yourself with people with really low charisma?
The contrast effect?
I don't know, because you're also trying to signal that the world loves you, right?
So like, I like you and the world likes me.
Those are the two parts of the equation.
This is my little proto theory.
So if you really were someone that the world liked, like, why would you be hanging out with losers?
Right.
So I like it.
I like how they went from nice, low charisma people to losers.
I know.
Look at that.
Me being all high status and all that.
Maybe not the most charismatic thing to say.
Thanks for listening.
This little stocking stuffer of an episode with Angela Duckworth.
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take it? When we gave it to sedentary mice, the drug progressively activated the genetic program
that is normally activated by exercise. The zero-minute workout, just in time for your New Year's resolution.
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