Freakonomics Radio - 569. Do You Need Closure?

Episode Date: December 21, 2023

In a special episode of No Stupid Questions, Angela Duckworth and Mike Maughan talk about unfinished tasks, recurring arguments, and Irish goodbyes. SOURCES:Roy Baumeister, social psychologist and vi...siting scholar at Harvard University.Daniel Gilbert, professor of psychology at Harvard University.John Gottman, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Washington.Kurt Lewin, 20th-century German-American psychologist.E. J. Masicampo, professor of psychology at Wake Forest University.Timothy Wilson, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia.Bluma Zeigarnik, 20th-century Soviet psychologist. RESOURCES:"Life and Work of the Psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik," by M. Marco (Neurosciences and History, 2018)."Why We Need Answers," by Maria Konnikova (The New Yorker, 2013)."Consider It Done! Plan Making Can Eliminate the Cognitive Effects of Unfulfilled Goals," by E. J. Masicampo and Roy Baumeister (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2011).The Science of Trust: Emotional Attunement for Couples, by John Gottman (2011)."'Let Me Dream On!' Anticipatory Emotions and Preference for Timing in Lotteries," by Martin Kocher, Michal Krawczyk, and Frans van Winden (Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper, 2009)."Explaining Away: A Model of Affective Adaptation," by Timothy Wilson and Daniel Gilbert (Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2008)."On Finished and Unfinished Tasks," by Bluma Zeigarnik (A Source Book of Gestalt Psychology, 1938). EXTRAS:"Can We Disagree Better?" by No Stupid Questions (2023)."Would You Be Happier if You Were More Creative?" by No Stupid Questions (2023)."How Can You Be Kinder to Yourself?" by No Stupid Questions (2023)."What’s Wrong With Holding a Grudge?" by No Stupid Questions (2022).Somebody Loves You, Mr. Hatch,  by Eileen Spinelli (1991).

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner. This is the time of year we like to play for you some of the other shows we've been making for the Freakonomics Radio Network. Today, an episode of No Stupid Questions with Angela Duckworth and Mike Maughan. We started this show a few years ago with me as Angela's co-host, but when it came time to replace myself, well, I think you will agree that Mike has done brilliantly. Mike is an executive with Qualtrics and does a variety of other interesting things. Angela, in case you don't know, is a research psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania and author of the book Grit. I hereby predict that you will love this episode of No Stupid Questions, and that you will immediately follow the show on your podcast app. So don't make a liar out of me. As always, thanks for listening. Yeah, that was basically psychology 100 years ago. It's just like, what's this restaurant?
Starting point is 00:00:58 Let me tell you what happened. I'm Angela Duckworth. I'm Mike Mahn. And you're listening to No Stupid Questions. Today, on a special episode of the show, do you need closure in order to move on? When a lottery gets to over $1 billion, I call a friend in another state and Venmo him some money. Mike, we have an email from Shreya Bhargava, and it is something I have long wanted to talk about. Let's go. Hi, Mike and Angela. I recently read about the Zeigarnik effect and wanted to ask, is it true that people remember unfinished or interrupted tasks better than completed tasks? And could this be extrapolated to human relationships? Do relationships that have no closure
Starting point is 00:01:55 stick around in our heads more than the ones we've been able to resolve and amicably close? Oh my gosh, yes. Yeah, your like knee-jerk reaction is, yes, when you have closure, it's totally different. It, what, leaves your head? Is that your intuition?
Starting point is 00:02:12 Yeah, and just in general, I love closure. I appreciate closure. Even the Irish exit drives me insane. Wait, what's the Irish exit? It's when someone just like leaves and doesn't say goodbye. They just slip out of a party. Why is it called the Irish exit? It's when someone just like leaves and doesn't say goodbye. They just slip out of a party. Why is it called the Irish? Do Irish people do that? I actually have no idea. You look around and you're like, where's the Irish friend I had? Maybe it's a terrible thing to say now. I actually don't know. It could be. It could be wildly inappropriate.
Starting point is 00:02:39 I've done it before, though. I mean, haven't you done that, by the way? Like you go to a wedding reception and you think strategically, I'm going to be super visible, like you're in the line of sight of the bride and the groom and the bride's family and the groom's family. But then, you know, in this moment where everybody's distracted, they're throwing the bouquet or something like that. I've totally snuck out. Have you not done that? No, I agree with you 100%. I've also done that. I'm thinking about a wedding I went to this summer. And the minute everyone was distracted, and I made FaceTime with enough people, beeline to the car. And then it was weeks later that the groom was like, wait, were you there for the dancing? And I was like, oh, yeah, I think so. Yeah, it was great.
Starting point is 00:03:20 That might be your first confession to me of fibbing ever. Oh. Now I have to reevaluate everything. We're going to have to get closure on this or it's going to keep bothering me. But until then, I might be thinking about it. And that is actually the Zeigarnik effect, right? So, you know, this email from Shreya asks, is the Zeigarnik effect real? And I guess I should tell you what it is. I don't know that you've heard about it. I have not.
Starting point is 00:03:45 So the Zeigarnik effect is attributed to Bluma Zeigarnik. She was a psychologist and she was a student nearly a century ago. She studied with Kurt Lewin. He was a great psychologist himself. Zeigarnik says that she was in a restaurant and she observed that the waiter could keep in their head just like a ridiculous number of orders and drinks and who's getting what and have they been served. So she's just marveling at this. And she's like, how is it that you can keep all these things in your head?
Starting point is 00:04:23 But then she's even more astonished because and this is a little bit like myth now. You know, she did write about it, but I think it's been maybe embroidered as myths are. We've mythologized all things that are cool. We do. So maybe this is a bit of a screenwritten ending. But after the waiter serves everyone's food and serves it correctly, what happens is they finish eating this large group that Bluma Zygarnik's part of. And one person, you know, legend has it, goes back to retrieve an item that they left behind. And this guest spots the waiter and asks for help and thinks that, oh, this waiter, who can obviously remember everything, would remember where they were sitting.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And the waiter looks at this dinner guest and seemingly has no idea who they even are, much less where they sat and whether they had left something behind. And so the waiter had kind of like erased the hard drive of memory once the task was finished. So the Zeigarnik effect refers to keeping in our minds unfinished tasks. And when we have closure, when something is checked off or resolved,
Starting point is 00:05:32 then that thing exiting our mind, that's the myth. Here's a really interesting corollary. And this is maybe why I believe it because I went to school. Tell me if I'm way off on this. I mean, how often did you cram before a test? You have all this information in your head, or maybe not even cramming, but you study, you study, you get ready, and then you take the test, and then it's all gone. I have the closure
Starting point is 00:05:57 of having finished the class or taking the test, and it just flows into the ether. I had not thought about that, Mike, but I think that would be an excellent demonstration of the Zeigarnik effect. For me, what is salient is being a professor. Sometimes I will put up a slide in my class and it will be like verbatim. The main point of the last class, sort of like a goal is defined as blank, right? And I think to myself, well, class was only a week ago. I spent three hours in every possible way demonstrating these definitions. My students love me. They love this class. They have readings to do on this subject. And I am sometimes astonished at the sub 100% accuracy of these easy to me questions. But one could argue
Starting point is 00:06:49 that if you are just like, oh, great, that class is over, or I've taken that quiz, like, I don't need to know that anymore. I mean, the zygotic effect is narrowly speaking about unfinished tasks. But you could also just say like, you know, someone tells you a passcode or a phone number and you're like mentally rehearsing it in your head. 724, 724, 724. And then you like type in 724 and then you have no idea afterwards. And sometimes I can't even hold on long enough until I need to. I know. But OK, so Bluma Zygarnik lived a century ago and she had these observations.
Starting point is 00:07:22 But let's just say that Bluma Zygarnik was not running a lot of randomized controlled experiments. She was going to restaurants. Yeah, that was basically psychology 100 years ago. She was like, what's this restaurant? Let me tell you what happened. So more recently, two social psychologists, E.J. Messicampo and Roy Baumeister, they had the idea of doing an experiment to see whether Bluma Zygarnik was right and whether it was really true that unfulfilled goals persist in our minds until they are fulfilled and then they exit. I'll just give you an example of one of the studies they did to show that there really is a Zygarnik effect. They said, you know, the thing is that when you're doing something and you have to keep it in your head, like 724, 724, 724, it's like an unfinished task. It eats up cognitive bandwidth. And it gives you, by the way, an idea of why the brain doesn't
Starting point is 00:08:14 actually remember 724 after it doesn't need to, because you want that cognitive bandwidth to do something else. We only keep in our minds active what we need to. And so they just ran these clever experiments where, for example, they gave people something to read that they needed to focus on, like a passage from a novel. And if you had had a task assigned to you that you had not yet completed that you knew you were going to have to do afterwards, you were more likely to mind wander and to understand less of what you're reading. I mean, the analogy would be if I go to a meeting and I know that there was this one thing that I wanted to email before I went to the meeting, but I ran out of time. What they found in this experiment is that you're a little distracted the whole time
Starting point is 00:09:04 you're doing this intermediary task by the task that you have a little distracted the whole time you're doing this intermediary task by the task that you have not yet finished, but you know you have to. But is that not everything in life? I mean, how often? Do you finish everything that you need to do? Yeah. I mean, I keep a pad of paper by my bed. And as I'm going to bed, the lights are off. I've already fallen asleep and I wake back up and it's like, oh my gosh, didn't do this. Close my eyes, wake back up. Didn't do this. Okay. So you write things down on the pad before you go to sleep.
Starting point is 00:09:36 Right. So then in the morning I'll remember to do them. But when have you gone to a meeting? Okay. Wait, wait, wait. I want to go back to the pad. Yeah. Okay. Okay. I think that's doing two things. One is when we write things down, it's just externalizing memory. So you're not going to forget the five things that you were supposed to do that you didn't do that you need to do in the morning. Great. But the other thing is you're keeping those things out of the buffer of your head. So you're allowing yourself, for example, I assume to like just go to sleep and not be 7 to 4, 7 to 4. And that's what Messy Campo and Baumeister found. In a way, it's like the antidote to this kind of preoccupation we have with unfinished tasks. Because you're right, Mike,
Starting point is 00:10:11 this happens all the time. But also, all the time, we make plans. And what they found in these experiments is that if the volunteer in the experiment, who was being subject to the Zeigarnik effect, if they had an opportunity to write about a thing that they were supposed to do, basically write down a plan, then they didn't suffer from the Zeigarnik effect. So the idea that you have of keeping that pad of paper and a pen at your bedside, and I keep, as you know, like this $1 notebook, you know, those cheap composition notebooks.
Starting point is 00:10:42 I have this system where on the right side of those pages, I take my notes. They're always dated. I can go back to my lab notebooks from my very first year of graduate school because I have them all. But on the left side of these pages, which are often blank, if I'm in a meeting or doing something, I'm in a main task. But in my head, you know, you ever have those little thought bubbles and you're like, oh, I forgot to buy milk, right? Like, oh, I have to email that person. I have maybe 4,000 of them a day and it's very distracting. So I have all these plans. And as soon as I write them down, they're out of my head. I don't have to remember 724 or 724 because the next time I open my notebook, it's just there for you.
Starting point is 00:11:25 So part of it is this externalization of memory, and that allows us the quote-unquote closure of that task, whether it be done or not, so that we can then focus on what's right in front of us. Yeah, I think that the way to think about it is your brain is doing what it needs to do. It's prioritizing. And the brain is relieved of the responsibility of keeping something in its working memory, like the kind of active memory of the brain, because you know that you've written it down, you know you've made a plan, and you don't have to worry about it anymore. This is, some would argue, one of the great leaps forward for human civilization. When we have writing, It's a way of externalizing
Starting point is 00:12:06 all the things that you don't have to like keep in your working memory and frankly even in your long-term memory because you can go look it up. But this general idea is, yes, you can free up the brain to do things that it more urgently needs to do because you have externalized. Still to come on this special episode of No Stupid Questions, Angela and Mike discuss how the Zeigarnik effect comes up in our relationships with other people. A little bit of mystery, Mike Maughan. A little bit of mystery. It goes a long way. Now, back to Angela Duckworth and Mike Mons' conversation about closure and the Zeigarnik effect on No Stupid Questions. So, Mike, when it comes to the Zeigarnik effect, I think, in a way, the more interesting thing is what happens emotionally. And my favorite thinkers on this are Tim Wilson
Starting point is 00:13:06 and Dan Gilbert. And they are psychologists who have this idea that we all have like psychological immune systems. What? I know, right? Meaning something that keeps me healthy psychologically? Yes. Just like the body regulates its temperature and its blood pressure and its metabolism, we also regulate the processing of emotion. Oh my gosh. Yes. Right? Sometimes we're so, well, I should not speak. I am so bad at that.
Starting point is 00:13:34 You? I think you are so even keeled. But I think all of us have moments where we get thrown off base. Yeah. The times when I think I'm least regulated emotionally, maybe, are the times when I have so much to do and am feeling immense time pressure, and I just need people to be efficient and do their job and do it well, and I don't have a ton of time to explain or walk through or be patient. And those are the moments when I have the greatest regret because maybe I've
Starting point is 00:14:06 acted inappropriately because I'm so under time pressure and other pressures. So in such a stressful situation, in one word, what would you describe your mood or your emotion as? Deep frustration is probably the emotion that explodes out. Okay, so let's think of a time recently where you were stressed and people around you were not doing what they needed to do when they needed to do it. And you got frustrated. And then I want to ask you, you're not frustrated now, right? No. So tell me the story of what happens with that frustration.
Starting point is 00:14:42 So I recently was going through an experience where I was supposed to meet with this person. This unnamed person. And I needed an introduction to this person from somebody else. And it just never happened. I talked to the person. I said, hey, will you set up the meeting? Didn't do it.
Starting point is 00:14:59 Hey, I need to have this meeting. Didn't do it. So I'm growing increasingly frustrated. And I think I'm going to send them a text that's kind of loaded and darn it, just do your job type of thing. And instead I waited. And then the next time I saw the individual, I said to them, hey, we're supposed to be having this meeting. Can you help me understand? Are you avoiding it because you don't want me to meet with that person, or you feel threatened by my involvement there, or you don't care? I just need to understand, why are you not doing this? And I forced the conversation for them to then explain,
Starting point is 00:15:36 because I think so often we don't want to have an uncomfortable conversation, or we don't want to tell them the real reason, so we just avoid. So did you get the explanation that you wanted? I got the explanation. This person just said, hey, I don't think it's the right time. I'm working on this through them. I think that we'll be better off if we do it this way. Okay, maybe we disagree with strategy or maybe I agree with that strategy. But regardless, I'd never been told that strategy and none of us on our side had. So we got some level of closure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:07 And then what happened to your emotion? Were you as frustrated before and after the explanation? Or did your frustration diminish? Which is what Tim Wilson and Dan Gilbert, you know, that's their big theory. That emotions linger when there's lack of closure. And emotions end when we do have explanations about what's going on. What happened for you? I would say that my frustration with the lack of action diminished and then a new frustration grew that either I did not present myself in such a
Starting point is 00:16:41 way that this person felt they could be fully honest with me and frustration that they didn't feel that. So it was kind of a mutual, hey, if I'm not being the kind of person that you can talk to, then I need to fix that or you need to give me feedback or let's figure that out versus just avoidance. So I'll try to give an accounting for like how emotion works and when we continue to feel frustrated, when we stop feeling frustrated. I, by the way, want to say this applies to positive feelings, too. The idea is that our feelings linger, whether they're positive feelings like joy or negative feelings like frustration. They stop when we have a complete accounting for what happened.
Starting point is 00:17:18 So, like, the idea of you being frustrated with this colleague, according to this theory, that once they explain to you why they didn't want to have the meeting, at least a certain kind of frustration should have gone down because you're like, oh, I get it. Now you could have a new frustration, but that new frustration is because
Starting point is 00:17:36 now you don't understand why you don't have the sort of relationship where they wouldn't have just told you in the first place. And when you get closer on that, the prediction is that you'll, again, feel a diminishing of that frustration. So our emotions go up and down with closure or lack thereof. That makes perfect sense to me in negative emotions. This doesn't make sense to you for positive emotions.
Starting point is 00:17:55 For positive emotions. I mean, do I want closure and joy? I feel like I want that to keep going. Yes. Oh, that was so beautiful. And now I have closure and I no longer feel joy. That seems terrible. Yeah. So let me tell you about one of their studies where they asked college students to read text messages from other students. In this case, they were students from the opposite sex who had evaluated them positively. Now, if you were uncertain about which student had actually written the message, then your positive mood lingers longer than when you do know. This reminds me, in high school, we used to have this Valentine's Day fundraiser every year. And you could send carnations to someone, right?
Starting point is 00:18:42 Yes. Okay. I was going to say, that's what we did, too. It's always carnations. It's always carnations. It's so cheap. Dime a dozen. Yeah, exactly. Maybe literally. So, you know, you could of course sign the note or you could choose not to, or you could put like an admirer or whatever. Exactly. You know, why is it so intriguing to have a secret admirer? It's because like you have lack of closure and, you know, explanations bring an end to emotion. And I think you're right, Mike, you might not want that. No, that makes sense. When you phrase it that way, like I get it. I also think,
Starting point is 00:19:14 and maybe this is not at all the same thing, but part of playing the lottery, they always say is not actually about winning the lottery because the chances are so small. Yeah. But it's when you buy the ticket, there's this anticipatory effect where you think about all the fun things you could do. And it brings so much joy just thinking about like, oh, this would be amazing. And then it doesn't happen. But nobody ever actually expects it to happen anyway.
Starting point is 00:19:38 And that whole time when there's lack of closure, you get to marinate in your low probability fantasies about what you're going to do when you win the lottery. Exactly. And it's actually really, really fun. You have never played the lottery, Mike Mon. Have you? I live in Utah. It's actually illegal here. Wait, what? You can't buy lottery tickets in Utah. You don't have a lottery in Utah? We do not. No. Can I just say that I need to move to Utah? Because lotteries, okay, this is a totally different topic, but I think lotteries exploit the general human inability to understand low probability phenomena.
Starting point is 00:20:15 They're kind of evil, TBH. I actually agree. And obviously all the data shows what you're saying is that they're almost a regressive tax. So all of the moral arguments that I agree with are why lotteries are bad. So now I'm going to confess something that you're going to hate. When a lottery gets to over $1 billion, I call a friend in another state. No.
Starting point is 00:20:39 And Venmo him some money. You do not. Seriously? Only because I feel like I've been caught right now. Holy schmoly. But only because I just think it's fun. It's so darn fun. Have the like opportunity to just fantasize for a little bit about everything. I know I'm not going to win.
Starting point is 00:21:00 Yeah. But it's almost like paying the $10 to go see a movie. I pay $10 to spend three days thinking about what I would do with the lottery winnings. And that's really fun. And then I get closure that clearly it didn't work. As you're saying, the positive emotion goes away. But it was a really fun three days and I'm okay with that. And you don't totally know you're not going to win. Well, but I'm pretty sure. Pretty sure, right? Yeah. You're no quantitative idiot, but you also know that the probability isn't zero.
Starting point is 00:21:30 So I think relatedly, one of my favorite studies that Tim Wilson and Dan Gilbert ever did, they have this study where they approach students, undergraduates who are studying in the library, and they give them an index card. And the index card has a dollar coin attached to it. So it's kind of like cool and unusual. Now there's two conditions. In the uncertain condition, the card conveys this vague information about the source and purpose of the money. It's signed by the Smile Society and just says like, we like to promote random acts of kindness, but it's sort of like, what? I'm in the library. You just handed me a card. That's the uncertain condition. Then there's the certain condition. Students in the
Starting point is 00:22:09 library, they get handed an index card. It's got a dollar coin taped to it. Except now, each of those elements of information are preceded with a very helpful question. Instead of just the Smile Society, which you're like, what? It's proceeded with, who are we? The Smile Society. And then instead of just getting, we like to promote random acts of kindness, you get, why do we do this?
Starting point is 00:22:35 We like to promote random acts of kindness. And it asks a question for me to maybe anchor me in understanding or... Yeah. Okay, I see that. So that's the clever little experiment. So I'm going to give you a little closure now because you may have guessed what's going to happen.
Starting point is 00:22:49 Because I need closure. I'm a person that needs closure. Yes, let me give it to you. So Tim Wilson and Dan Gilbert knew all about the Zeigarnik effect. In fact, that was one of the inspirations for their theory. And the prediction would be that when you do have this closure, where you're like, oh, I know why I got this dollar coin and I know who these people are, that the positive emotions would end sooner. And that's exactly what they found. So these students who were studying library
Starting point is 00:23:18 and getting these cards, then they were approached by another experimenter a few minutes later and they were asked to complete a survey. And those who had received the certain card, meaning the card with the questions that explained everything that was going on, were actually in a less positive mood than those who had received the uncertain card. That's so interesting. So you're exactly right, Mike. You can use this to make your negative emotions go away sooner, and you can use this to make your positive emotions linger if you can find ways to forestall or delay closure. This is so interesting. I mean, there's this Valentine's book that we always read as kids called Somebody Loves You, Mr. Hatch.
Starting point is 00:24:04 Is this the Mon family? Yes, this is the Mon family. Oh my gosh. I want to be part of this family. I'll mail you this book. It's an awesome book. But there's this older gentleman, lives alone, never had a family. And he gets this big box of chocolates that says, Somebody Loves You. And it talked about how before he ate the same crappy sandwich every day and ate alone at his job at a shoelace factory and had no friends. The shoelace factory.
Starting point is 00:24:30 I mean, they portray this as a very sad situation. But the point is the guy's life completely changes because, quote, somebody loves you. But he doesn't know who, right? Yeah, right. He's like, maybe it was the person I buy the paper from. Maybe it was someone at work. Maybe it was the person I buy the paper from. Maybe it was someone at work. Maybe it was the neighbors. And he becomes so involved in his community and he starts making brownies and inviting people over and all this. And then the postman comes back and says, Mr. Hatch, I'm in a lot of trouble. I delivered this to the wrong house. Wait, and then what happens?
Starting point is 00:25:01 Gotta read the book. Just kidding. I'll tell you. Okay. What basically happens is then the postman tells everyone in town, hey, I made this mistake. And then it ends with this beautiful, like, everybody loves you, Mr. Hatch. And they have this party. But the whole thing that changed his life in this very short fictional children's story. To be clear.
Starting point is 00:25:19 Not knowing who, quote, loved him. And therefore, he went on this journey to find out, could it be any of these people? And it opened up a whole new world to him of opportunity to build relationships and anticipation of positive things. A little bit of mystery, Mike Maughan, a little bit of mystery. It goes a long way. Look, I do want to give you some advice from John Gottman. John Gottman is the most famous couples counseling slash how to have a good relationship. So what does Gottman say? I'm going to read to you from the science of trust, emotional attunement for couples. And it's about how couples can build a healthy,
Starting point is 00:26:00 trusting relationship. And he says, negative events in couple relationships are inevitable. The way relationships fail is through something called the Zeigarnik effect. If a couple's negative events are not fully processed, that's what he calls attunement, like getting to closure. If they're not fully processed, then they're remembered and rehearsed repeatedly. Oh, yes. Turned over and over in each person's mind. Then he says that you find some way to get a kind of closure by attributing blame to the other person. It kind of spirals. And he says the potential role of the Zeigarnik effect is colossal. If we engage in attuned processing, right, getting to closure of a negative emotional event or regrettable incident with our partner, we will only foggily remember
Starting point is 00:26:51 it. The details will become hazy and the event insignificant. On the other hand, if we dismiss and avoid processing a negative emotional event, it will not disappear. It will fester, ready to be triggered again. Gottman continues, this is why attuning, right, getting closure to a negative regrettable incident is so incredibly important. Like the Viennese waiters in Zygarnik's Cafe, if partners avoid processing the incident with attunement, the event and its negative emotion will lie inside
Starting point is 00:27:26 each partner like an improvised explosive device, an IED, ready to explode if inadvertently stepped on. Let me give you an amen and a hallelujah. Going back to a relationship I had, this is 15, 20 years ago. I don't know. It's a long time ago. Anyway, this person lived in New York. I lived in Arizona. They said, if I move out to Arizona, can we date? They moved out to Arizona, didn't talk to her for a year. Wait, why? I don't know. I'm just dumb. I don't have a good reason. But the point is that we then did date and this fight came up over and over a million. Oh, the fight about like what happened. But then you didn't even call me for a year. And then you didn't call me for a year. So like,
Starting point is 00:28:10 I don't know how to take Godwin's advice on this because I was like, I don't know what else to say. I was wrong. I'm sorry. You're right. Oh, but it wasn't a sufficient explanation then for this anonymous person. Okay. See, this is what I guess we're getting to. There was never closure. This is not why it didn't work out, but it never ended. We never got closure. And I guess what you're telling me is I am responsible because I never gave sufficient explanation, probably because there wasn't sufficient explanation, because I just didn't. I don't know. Maybe either you didn't fully understand or your explanation wasn't a complete enough explanation for that person. When I was in French class in high school, and I'll never forget it, my teacher, Dr. Rowland said, in French,
Starting point is 00:28:53 of course, to understand is to forgive. And I never forgot it because it's so true. To understand is to forgive. Not to understand is not to forgive, right? And if anything, I think we can generalize because this is true for positive emotions too, right? To comprendre, c'est tout fini. Which, I mean, I hope this is correct in French. But to understand is to have it finished, you know, whether it's good or whether it's bad. Yeah. to have it finished, you know, whether it's good or whether it's bad. And Mike, I wonder if we might ask our listeners if they have an experience of closure or the lack of closure and what it means to them. So if you have such a story, Mike and I both would love you to record a voice memo in a quiet place with your mouth close to the phone. Email us at NSQ at Freakonomics.com and you'll get closure by listening to yourself on a future episode of the show. like this show and want to support us, the very best thing you can do is simply to tell a friend
Starting point is 00:30:05 about No Stupid Questions. You can also spread the word on social media or leave a review in your podcast app. They can also send it to someone who ghosted them and say, hey, listen to this. I need closure because I can't move on without it. So why don't you give that to me? Thank you very much. Yeah, but you can send it from a random email address and sign it the Smile Society and, you know, they'll have no idea what's going on and then they'll be ruminating about it forever and ever. But let me get some closure on this conversation, Mike. We, I think, have given some closure to Shreya about her outstanding question. I guess for me, you know, you started off by talking about the Irish exit from weddings and so forth. I guess I want to
Starting point is 00:30:51 ask you, do you feel like this conversation has changed anything that you might do in the future at a wedding or otherwise? Well, as I mentioned, I love closure. I'm someone who I think generally needs closure or appreciates closure. I think on the negative side, it motivates me to be kinder and make sure that my explanations are thorough and that we're, you know, if some closure is needed, that we're there.
Starting point is 00:31:18 I think actually the most fun part of this conversation for me though is thinking about the joyful effects that can come from also maybe not giving closure on happy things. I think that's a really beautiful thing about random acts of kindness, maybe, or just like the somebody loves you, Mr. Hatch type idea that there's so much joy that you can create out of this as well. Do you know what my very favorite thing is about this conversation? That you're going to just pause there and end and then we'll have no closure. I'll tell you next time. No, stop it.
Starting point is 00:31:50 No. Dot, Rebecca Lee Douglas. And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation. In the first half of the show, Mike and Angela wonder about the origin of the phrase Irish exit or Irish goodbye. And they wonder if it's offensive. It's certainly not a compliment. The expression is supposedly based on a stereotype of Irish people over-imbibing, the connotation being that they would be too intoxicated to say goodbye before leaving a
Starting point is 00:32:37 social event. Another theory is that the phrase was inspired by the mass Irish emigration during the 19th century potato famine. However, the idiom is primarily American. In Great Britain, rudely leaving without saying goodbye is referred to as taking a French leave. And in other parts of the world, it's leaving the English way or the Polish exit. It seems that whichever country you're in, there is sure to be a xenophobic way to describe this particular behavior. Later, Angela tells the story of how psychologist Bluma Zygarnik observed that interrupted tasks are more remembered than completed ones. Angela adds that the restaurant anecdote is possibly more folklore than fact, and indeed,
Starting point is 00:33:22 she's correct. According to a 2018 biographical review of Zygarnik's life, published in Neurosciences and History, it was actually Zygarnik's mentor, psychologist Kurt Lewin, who was inspired by the working memory of a waiter, not Zygarnik herself. We should also note that while experimental methodology wasn't practiced in the way that is expected of academics today, there was more to this research than just going to a restaurant and observing the waitstaff's behavior. Zygarnik and Lewin conducted an experiment involving 164 subjects who were asked to perform a series of tasks that were either interrupted or completed.
Starting point is 00:34:01 It was in that study that the Zigarnik effect was officially documented. Finally, Mike and Angela reminisce about high school Valentine's Day fundraisers, in which students could send one another flowers. They guess that carnations were commonly used for this tradition because of how cheap they are to buy in bulk. The reason may partially be financial. Carnations are notoriously less expensive than other popular Valentine's flowers like roses or lilies, although they're not literally a dime a dozen, as Angela suggests. However, it's also true that carnations have been used throughout history to represent love. In the Victorian era, a red carnation was given to express admiration. Dark red conveyed an intense love or yearning. A striped carnation signified
Starting point is 00:34:46 refusal. And yellow meant disappointment or disdain. That's it for the fact check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear listener thoughts on some of our recent episodes of No Stupid Questions. Here's what listener Logan Thompson-DeSa had to say after listening to episode 162. How can you be kinder to yourself? I do think there's a lot of benefit to having a conversation with your friends about the kind of things you say to yourself. I decided to ask one of my friends if she feels she's very self-critical. You know, we had a really nice conversation about it. And towards the end, I mentioned to her, I have the tendency to come home from work and think about something dumb that I said or a
Starting point is 00:35:30 mistake that I made and say to myself, like, oh, you moron. And she looked at me and said, I would punch somebody who said that to you. Honestly, it made me tear up in the moment. But since then, anytime I think to myself, oh, you f***ing moron, I stop myself halfway through and I think about that conversation. Here's what listener Jason Adams had to say in response to episode 168. Would you be happier if you were more creative?
Starting point is 00:35:58 Hi, this is Jason. I enjoyed listening to your episode about happiness and creativity. Listening to it, I had so many feelings. I co-wrote the song Scotty Doesn't Know, which appeared in the movie Eurotrip in 2004. And despite some success, this song has not made my fortune as a musician. I became a freelance software engineer myself to survive. This work can be dry and tedious, and sometimes you just cannot satisfy your creative
Starting point is 00:36:22 urge with the work you do to subsist. I can say with some authority that creative work, like other work, has its ups and downs. It's got its own tedium and agony. The great appeal of creative work, on the other hand, I think, is control and escapism. Creation offers the prospect, perhaps illusory, of controlling one's reality. You can take refuge, however briefly, in a world of your own. And here's what listener Judy Bates said after listening to episode 169, Can We Disagree Better? I wanted to share that the best tool I ever learned in dealing with conflict with others was to start with the phrase, help me understand. That phrase put the other
Starting point is 00:37:02 person in the mindset of explaining to me versus fighting with me and helped me to keep my mind more open to opposing viewpoints. This ultimately led to more collaborative relationships with my colleagues and better end results. Hope that helps. Thanks so much to those listeners and everyone who sent us their stories. And remember, we'd love to hear your thoughts on closure. Send a voice memo to NSQ at Freakonomics.com. Let us know your name. And if you'd like to remain anonymous, you might hear your voice on the show.
Starting point is 00:37:39 Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner again. I hope you enjoyed this special episode of No Stupid Questions. There are many more where this came from. Just search for No Stupid Questions in your podcast app. Meanwhile, coming up next time, another show from the Freakonomics Radio Network. This one hosted by my Freakonomics friend and co-author Steve Levitt. His show is called People I Mostly Admire. And you'll hear a fantastic conversation with Kat Bohannon, the author of Eve, How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution.
Starting point is 00:38:13 The most important thing we ever did was get our hands on the levers of reproduction to overcome our most basic problem, which is that we suck at making babies. That's next time. Until then, take care of yourself. And if you can, someone else too. Freakonomics Radio and No Stupid Questions are both part of the Freakonomics Radio Network. Our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio. This episode was produced by Rebecca Lee Douglas. Lyric Bowditch is the show's production associate. Our staff also includes Alina Kullman, Eleanor Osborne, Elsa Hernandez, Gabriel Roth, Greg Rippin, Jasmine Klinger, Jeremy Johnston, Julie Canfor, Morgan Levy, Neil Carruth, Ryan Kelly, Sarah Lilly, and Zach Lipinski. Our original music is composed by Luis Guerra. If you would like to read a transcript
Starting point is 00:39:01 or check out the underlying research of this or any of our shows, that is all at Freakonomics.com. As always, thank you for listening. Wow, I did not know what to make of the portrait of humanity that you just painted there. The Freakonomics Radio Network. The hidden side of everything. Stitcher.

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