Good Life Project - How to Make Impossible Conversations Possible | Spotlight Convo
Episode Date: November 23, 2023In an era of polarization, we’ve lost the art of gathering, listening, and connecting across divides. How can we rediscover the power of discourse to build mutual understanding? Priya Parker, Anand ...Giridharadas, and Jonah Berger reveal simple but transformative tools to help us relearn how to truly listen, relate, and influence. Through stories and guidance, we uncover how to create spaces for bearing witness to shared humanity, open minds and hearts through persuasive conversation, and choose words that connect rather than divide. Join us as we uncover a path back to empathy, dignity, and healing in our fractured world.Episode TranscriptYou can find Priya at: Website | Instagram | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with PriyaYou can find Anand at: Website | Instagram | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with AnandYou can find Jonah at: Website | Twitter | Listen to Our Full-Length Convo with JonahCheck out our offerings & partners: My New Book SparkedMy New Podcast SPARKED. Visit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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To me, the most powerful gatherings are ones where people take risks, share stories, show a part of themselves that they may not be used to showing or perhaps have in the past even feared showing and that the people around them are willing to allow that to be.
And by doing so, they are witnessing a moment that because it is witnessed and lasts in multiple people's
memories, it exists.
So what if the path to healing our divided world began with simple human one-to-one conversation?
I don't know about you, but my heart aches seeing the divisions fracturing our world
these days.
I just desperately want to
bridge the widening gaps between us. But where do we start? In an era of polarization, so many have
lost faith in the art and practice of gathering and listening and convening across divides. And
not just the art and the practice, but the skill. Conversations become minefields, differences become irreconcilable, and empathy feels impossible.
Nearly everyone has felt this, but what if there was a path back to mutual understanding, or at
least coexisting from a place of dignity and respect for each other's humanity? What if there
were ways to rediscover the art of discourse in a way that might rekindle the ties now fraying
between us? And what if we relearned how to truly listen and relate and influence? Today, I am joined by three inspiring
guides, lighting the path back to mutual understanding. Deep thinker and facilitator
Priya Parker reveals how to create spaces where we bear witness to each other's humanity. Anand
Giridharadas takes us to the front lines of persuasive conversation, exploring how
minds and hearts can change. And Jonah Berger uncovers the hidden language of influence,
equipping us to choose words that connect rather than divide. And through their stories and prompts
and guidance and wisdom and insight, we uncover simple, powerful tools and ideas designed to help
us reconnect, begin to see each other on a more human level,
and start the work of healing relationships at the heart of our hurting world.
So excited to share these conversations with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project. The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch,
getting you 8 hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series 10.
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Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die. Don't shoot him. We need him. Y'all need a pilot.
Flight Risk.
So our first guest is sought after facilitator Priya Parker, author of The Art of Gathering,
How We Meet and Why It Matters, which is a book that just completely changed the way that I imagine
bringing people together. She illuminates why gathering well matters now more than ever. She
knows the challenges that we face in bridging divides, yet remains unflinchingly hopeful.
Priya has decades of experience guiding diverse groups through fraught conversations and everything
from race to politics and trauma. She reveals how we can structure dialogue to build
trust and bear witness to each other's full humanity. And her wisdom left me inspired that
the permanent disagreeable conversation at the heart of what is going on these days can be
renewed through the art of gathering. So how can we rediscover the power of coming together? So let
Priya be your guide as we explore the transformative power of coming together? So let Priya be your guide as we explore the
transformative power of true listening. Here's Priya. It feels like we live in a world where
we want answers fast. We don't have tolerance for slow and complex. And increasingly, we don't see
the gray, which is 98.9% of everything. We just immediately want it to be a yes or no. We want it to be this
or that. We want the answers to be very crystal clear. And in that heated context, and then you
pile on the speed and the acceleration of anything through technology and social media and
hyperconnectivity, anything that happens becomes amplified profoundly
in the blink of an eye.
And while that can be incredibly useful to get information out and to get news out and
to protect people and to start conversations, it can also be incredibly destructive to the
sort of intelligent, deliberate, intentional processing of the emotion and the pain and what's
going on. And then figuring out how do we come to the table? How do we come to our own individual
tables to figure out, okay, like, what is my role in this? And how do I find my way through it?
And then how do we come to the collective table when that table is now seating millions and
millions of people in real time? when actually it's very good for very specific conversations. So as you said, getting information
out or spreading an idea quickly, some of the darker parts are sort of mob justice that you
see on Twitter, people kind of attacking one person all of a sudden. But Twitter is not a
place for deeper processing. It's not a place for deeper listening and deeper complicated
conversations, in part because it wasn't designed
to be that. We don't know how to come to tables in a collective way when there has been so much
pain created. And we want to kind of just push these terrible parts of our life away, but we
don't actually have the tools to look at the darker parts of our communities and figure out how do we actually
first acknowledge and see what happened and see the truth of the darkness. So one of the reasons
why this lynching memorial in Alabama is so powerful is because Bryan Stevenson has created
this entire and his team and that entire organization has created this incredible
monument to witnessing a dark part
of our past before you do anything else to go back to that word of witness, to see what
happened, to own what happened, and to face what happened, whether it's campus sexual
assault or whether it's lynching, and to not avoid it.
And facing it doesn't mean minimizing it.
It actually makes it a little bit bigger because we have to see what we have done to each other and then begin to figure out how do you actually restore a community. relationships because of the gathering, but also that helps them often face the taboo or the
important conversations in their kind of communal life, in part, because that's where the heat is.
That's where our values lie. That's where our identity is there. Many of the conversations
we're not always sure how to have are the conversations with the most meaning.
What is it that stops conversations from getting there, the gatherings from getting there?
Because like you said, most people, when they come together, even if it's with the intention
of doing some work, don't come close to hitting the potential of what is possible.
Why not?
Some of it is pretty simple stuff.
I think one of the, frankly, travesties of our kind of language you know, language around gathering is that we tend to
focus on stuff rather than people. So we tend to outsource our knowledge and our wisdom about how
to gather, you know, I mean, no offense here, but to the Martha Stewart's of the world. And part of
that generation of gathering is focused on table settings and floral arrangements and the kind of
three steps of how to actually make a crudité
stay fresh over three days as you prepare for the gathering. And not that they necessarily intended
this, but hosting became over the last, you know, 40 years or so with the equivalent of entertaining.
And entertaining is a problematic word when you're bringing people together, because it basically
means you're putting on a show. And most of the ways that we think about gathering and by proxy, think about creating meaningful
moments is focused on the physical environment. So, you know, flowers and lighting, and not that
that doesn't create a context, but it doesn't end there. And then the second thing is focusing on
food. And, you know, I, my husband will be the first person to say that I'm not a good cook. And I think some of the best gatherings of my life have, you know, been around pizza and takeout. And I think in part, one of the reasons why we never get to the conversation is because we're not paying attention to it. We've focused most of our attention on the things of gathering rather than the technology of conversation. So the first thing I would just say is, you know, don't worry so much and don't spend so much time on the food
or preparing kind of the things of the gathering, focus on preparing the people and think about how
you want to structure the conversation to get to much more meaningful conversation. You know,
one of the things I think also prevents us from having powerful conversations is frankly,
kind of embarrassment that we, to admitting that we want to have those conversations. And, you know,
rather than talking about like, what's happening at work, or what's happening kind of, I don't know,
in politics, though, that's, you know, very interesting conversation itself. And I think
a lot of hosts, you know, myself included, and I write about this in the book, once people are
actually in the room, it feels a little bit embarrassing or awkward to kind of feel like you care too much or that you want to actually impose a question on people or that you're not chill. And so I think a lot of the reasons we tend to not connect is because we're embarrassed to admit among the millennial generation desire to have more meaning and depth in our common culture and community is because of the shrinking role of traditional institutions of meaning.
So the church, the temple, the mosque, and the assumption trust institution declines, the desire for meaningful conversation doesn't decline.
It just moves elsewhere.
Yeah, we don't have those same places to have it anymore.
Exactly, exactly. And so I think the, you know, for better or for worse, and we could talk about
this for a while, the kind of the priests and the shamans and the kind of the people who used to
kind of hold this space are now self selected, and kind of decide like, hey, I'd like to do a
dinner on this because because why not? And so at some level, it's kind of decide like, hey, I'd like to do a dinner on this because why not?
And so at some level, it's kind of been open sourced. That's both beautiful, but it's also
dangerous because a lot of these conversations need to be held and with care. And so when you
don't have seminary, you don't have a priesthood, you don't have the equivalent of medical school
for the people who are training to have these conversations, social workers or rabbis.
It is also possible to get in over your head or to have conversations that aren't grounded
in any common text.
And so there's also, you know, there's as much opportunity as there is danger in the
fact that we're now just kind of making it up.
Yeah, I mean, that's the first thing that came to mind when you're talking about this. I do agree that the need and the desire and I think the willingness to have these conversations
has never been higher.
And yet all the places that we used to feel safe having them and we used to trust somebody
to create the safety in the context to go where we need to go to actually have a real
conversation that either don't exist anymore or we're fleeing them.
You know, that the fastest growing group in spirituality are the nuns, you know,
the people who are non-affiliated, yet they consider themselves spiritual and want to have
the conversations. And your point about to get that real in a conversation can be dangerous,
emotionally dangerous, and potentially physically dangerous if it elevates.
And if you don't have somebody who
understands how to create the safety, how to plant the provocations in a way where real things,
real conversations can be had, and people can be vulnerable, and people can tell their truths,
and it not turn really ugly and really combative. And instead of having some sort of constructive intentional end,
ending up in just outright brutality. So how do you go there and be okay?
Absolutely. Whenever a community is deciding to intentionally create a gathering,
one of the things that is important to begin with is a set of,
explicitly, is a set of common values and ground rules. And different communities do this in
different ways. And you can have some amount of porousness in your boundary to allow different
things that you didn't expect to come in. But you need to have some non-negotiables so people know
who they are and who you're, you know, who do you want to belong here?
That's another way to think about it.
Yeah, that makes so much sense.
To me, the most powerful gatherings are ones where people take risks, share stories,
show a part of themselves that they may not be used to showing or perhaps have in the past even
feared showing, and that the people
around them are willing to allow that to be. And by doing so, they are witnessing a moment that
because it is witnessed and lasts in multiple people's memories, it exists.
When I use the word witness, I mean the ability to see another person, the ability to observe
and to consciously pay attention to somebody else's experience.
So it's almost like they play a role in making it real.
Deeply. And so in part, I think the power of a witness in a lot of different parts of your life
is somebody who can see all of the different parts of you and still want to be there.
I just want to linger on that for a moment because I think it's really important.
So, you know, when we look at the way the world is right now and the need to gather,
need to have conversations and the need to do this, not online, but in person,
in a room or in a hall or in a, you know, like wherever it may be,
and it doesn't have to be big. Maybe it's just dinner with a handful of people. How do we begin that? I mean, if somebody
listening to this right now is like, yeah, I get it. I buy into it. This is important. I don't know
where to start or how to begin. Like, how do I take the first step?
Think about the people in your community that you would like to invite. So
here's a challenge for your listeners. Within the next month, host a dinner, ideally in your home,
ask people to bring things or have takeout. Don't spend a lot of time on the food in advance,
but spend time thinking about what it is you want to talk about. And I would encourage you
to have some structure. So some of my favorite questions, actually, there's a New York Times list of 51 questions
to fall in love with anybody.
Many of those questions are beautiful questions to ask in groups.
And choose a question or a series of questions that you want to explore together over the
course of an evening that would be meaningful to you.
So a couple of questions that I love, some of these are from Theodore Zeldin of the Menu
of Conversations Project in the UK.
One is, what have you rebelled against in the past? And what are you rebelling
against now? That's a question that I love because there's so many different ways the
conversation can take. Another suggestion is in this book, The Art of Gathering, I write about
a process that I developed with a colleague, Tim Lebrecht, called 15 Toasts. It's a lovely,
I love structure because I think structure, just the right amount
of structure, I shouldn't feel like you're being beaten over the head with it, but just the right
amount of structure allows a group to organize and have a common focus. And so you could hold
a 15 Toasts dinner, which is you choose a theme that's interesting to you. The theme could be
everything from fear to risk, to community, to borders, to what does it mean to be American, to goodness, to evil, to anything.
And you gather together and 15 people. And at the beginning of the night, you introduce a theme or
you could send it in advance. And you basically at some point in the night, some everybody has
to kind of ding their glass old school style, stand up and give a toast to that theme. And
their toast needs to be a story or an experience,
something in their life,
a moment in their life that they can speak to that relates to the theme and
then to,
to toast,
you know,
based on that story.
And the only rule is that the last person has to sing their toast.
And so the night ends in song.
And at least in the U S context,
most people don't like to sing.
And so it's make sure,
you know,
you'd rather it's,
it's making the toast less scary than singing.
Right.
And it also makes people want to get up sooner because they don't want to be the last person.
Exactly.
And friends of mine, and I've done this with different companies and organizations, it's a beautiful process that's just a little bit of structure that gets people's stories out in ways that you would never otherwise hear.
It's one conversation.
And you hear the most amazing stories from people that you wouldn't
otherwise hear. And the other thing that we found is when the theme has a little bit of darkness in
it or a little bit of complication in it, it's a much more interesting night. So themes like fear,
risk, we did a dinner to a stranger, however you want to interpret that, tend to bring out stories
that people don't often hear. And you can talk, you know, after the toast and ask people questions.
But sometimes we actually need a little bit of structure to bring out some of the stories
that we don't always get to in everyday conversation.
I love that.
I'm going to try that now too.
So this feels like a good place for us to start to come full circle.
So I always wrap with the same question for everybody.
So context of this is a good life project. If I offer up the phrase to live a good
life, what comes up? To come full circle, to live a good life to me is to bear witness to others
and to be witnessed, to see and to be seen. And to do that consciously in all parts of one's life
to me is a good life.
Thank you.
Thank you.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever, making it even more comfortable on your wrist,
whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series 10.
Available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required.
Charge time and actual results will vary.
Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is? You're gonna die.
Don't shoot him! We need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
Supriya's insights on structuring meaningful dialogue really reignite my faith that we can bear witness to shared humanity,
even across divides. Our next guest is Anand Giridharadas, New York Times bestselling author
of The Persuaders, at the front lines of the fight for hearts, minds, and democracy. And Anand
takes us to the front lines of persuasion, profiling the activists and organizers who
still see complexity in their opponents or those that
they perceive as opponents. And through vivid stories, Anand shares how we can reimagine civil
discourse without sacrificing our values. He leaves us with hope that the permanent
rolling conversation that can bridge divides and bring us back together can prevail.
So how can we restore faith in the language, the art of not just conversation,
but persuasion, but persuasion in a way that allows everyone to feel seen, heard, and acknowledged?
How do we avoid despair about bridging divides? So Anand helps us reignite that belief that
with empathy and moral courage, the forces of light can still triumph. Here's Anand.
So as we have this conversation, the world is an interesting place. It seems like there is The forces of light can still triumph. Here's Anand. centering a topic that is fascinating to me on so many levels that I've studied from a perspective of marketing, of social impact, of movements. And it's interesting in that you tee up this notion
that you describe a crisis of faith in persuasion, which I thought was a really interesting way to
frame it because I'm thinking of crisis of faith in shared humanity, in kindness, in belonging.
I get all of those.
Walk me through the way that you view the state of persuasion as a crisis.
Yeah, I think we probably have crises of all those things you just mentioned.
At the risk of sounding grandiose about it, I think if you step back and look at the history of humanity,
there have been broadly two theories about how we make decisions about the future,
right? There's no alternative to making decisions about the future. Like inevitably in any society,
hunter gatherers, agricultural societies, modern information society, things come up
and we got to decide, do we ban that fertilizer or do we not ban that fertilizer?
Do we let those people into the village or do we not let those people into the village?
And broadly speaking, throughout human history, when societies, communities confronted with those decisions,
for most of history, the theory about how you resolve them is that they're too complicated for all of us to weigh in on.
So let's just get one guy to just
decide for us. And it's hard to remember if you're born in the modern era, that was the dominant
theory. And that most people bought into that, even the people who are not that guy, because
almost all people were not that guy, bought into the idea that it's kind of easier for that guy to just handle it for all of us. And then in the last few hundred years, this incredibly powerful
alternative idea arose, which is that actually maybe we should all weigh in and decide this
together. Maybe through the incredibly complicated act of talking things through the way you and I
are talking things through on a scale of whole nations, debating, arguing, newspapers, letters to the editor, VFW halls, schools,
we should have this permanent roiling conversation and then weigh in through voting,
knock on each other's doors. And maybe that's actually a better way. This is the
most radical idea in the history of the world, that it is in fact better for 5 million or 10
million or 350 million people to have a loud, messy, permanently disagreeable conversation
about how to make the future and that this is a better way. But it has been vindicated
in the last few centuries as not only a more just and humane
way to do it, but more effective.
Democracies make better decisions.
They're better at not going to war.
They're better at improving living standards for people, right?
Democracies are based on the idea of talking, of conversation, and at some essential level of me trying to change your
mind and you trying to change mine. And essentially, if we get to a place where the dominant
view, and I think we're now there, the dominant view among many people is it is useless to try
to change Jonathan's mind. It is useless.
He is who he is.
He's of this identity, therefore he thinks this.
He lives in that place, therefore he thinks that.
He said this once, therefore he thinks that.
He refuses to get that.
Once you say people aren't worth it,
people are never gonna change, they are who they are.
And by the way, I have said that myself
in these last many years a lot.
I think all of us have.
Once you get to the place where your fundamental view is, the pursuit of a changed
mind in your fellow citizens is futile work. It's a futile pursuit. I think you are essentially,
in a way you may not be realizing, asking the king, asking that one guy to come back.
You are opening the door to tyranny. You're opening the door to political violence,
which is trying to get your way by hurting people instead of changing their mind.
I think the road to civil war and the road to tyranny is paved by this increasingly popular
view that trying to change people's minds is futile. And I started to check myself and realize what I am saying,
what I am feeling is actually inconsistent with democratic life.
And so I decided to hedge against myself in a way in my own limitations
by starting to spend time in conversation with a group of people
who refuse to write people off, who are organizers,
activists, people in politics, others, most of them, I think, in the book with a kind of
organizer's sensibility more than any other sensibility. And people who are deeply committed
to certain ideals, morally grounded and confident and standing for something real, not blowing in the
wind. But unlike too many of us out there right now, people who were interested in reaching out
to the other side, whatever the other side may be on a given issue, and persuading people whose view
of those on the other side of them is that they are complicated, always complicated,
no matter what they are for or against, and that there's something there to work with,
not in everyone, but certainly in plenty of people to make a meaningful difference
in the trajectory of our communities. And so I started with this kind of fear that the crisis
of persuasion, the loss of faith in persuasion, was in a way, one of the
major things leading to the breakdown of democracy, not just coups and insurrections, but a belief in
so many of us, that this whole thing basically doesn't really work. And through the reporting
in the book and writing the book, I ended up getting to a place of profound optimism,
that it is possible still to persuade,
that it is possible to try to change minds. It's possible to build a bigger we, but it's going to
require a whole new set of habits than the ones that have come to dominate the pro-democracy side
in which I count myself in recent years. And I want to make a distinction between,
I think it is totally fine to be angry in politics. This is not a book about being gentle with each other.
The problem for me very specifically is when you begin to say it is futile, it is not worth it to endeavor to change minds.
That is different from saying I'm mad at those people.
I think those people are X, Y, Z.
Say that all you want. But when you start to believe
that people are unchangeable, you're actually just dooming your own movement.
And I want there to be space for folks on the pro-democracy side to be able to be angry and
be fierce and champion a specific and sharp view of the future, and to view every single person who is
not with them there yet as possibly someone who could come in. And not actually, but a significant
number of fraction of those people as people who are actually gettable. And I think we need to find
a better way to combine being strident and being clear and being demanding and being ambitious with being
magnanimous and welcoming and inviting and not having movements that want all the right things,
but make people feel like they can't belong, that they're like a club that you have to
kind of know someone to get into. Underlying all of that, like where my brain is going is where does what I see as a wave of dehumanizing the other
fit into this? What I see happening, which is terrifying to me, is us looking at the other
and not only saying it's not worth it to try and convince them, but actually saying, and not only
do they have a different point of view, not only are they like the convince them, but actually saying, and not only do they have a different
point of view, not only are they like the other person, but like literally saying like,
if you don't see the world the way that I see it, I don't see your humanity anymore.
You are not worth my time to persuade, not just because I believe you're unpersuadable,
but I don't see you as being human anymore.
And that's the reason that I don't care about trying to actually have
a legitimate conversation with you. What's your take on that? I think it's very prevalent. I think
you're absolutely right. And I think it is incredibly self-defeating. And what I mean by
that is I may not persuade someone listening to this, that refraining from that kind of dehumanizing
is bad because it's dehumanizing and it's bad for
a bad way of looking at your fellow citizens. I may not even persuade them that it's a kind of
bad way of looking at things because it's factually incorrect. People are complicated,
much more complicated than that kind of simple story. But let me persuade you by saying if you
find yourself feeling that or thinking that it's incredibly self-defeating because what you are really saying is that your ideas are quite limited in their power to spread
and take hold. If you really feel like the kind of political values you hold,
powerful or meaningful, would make the society better, you should be profoundly optimistic
about the ability of those values to conquer all kinds of communities and all kinds of moral frames.
I think an idea, whether it's a policy idea like universal health care, or whether it's an idea like we should respect immigrants, regardless of where they come from, or whether it's a kind of notion of we should be open to the world and engage with the world rather
than close ourselves off, any of these kind of political values. I believe these ideas are all
powerful enough that all kinds of people could be brought along. And what I learned in the book
from all these different types of persuaders, messaging consultant, a cult deep programmer,
race educators, activists, politicians, very different people.
I tried to think at the end of the process, what do they all have in common? What do they
all believe in common? And I would say the thing they pretty much all believe in common
that most of us, I think, do not believe is that people on the other side of the divide from you
are, as you would say, human. But I think the way I would frame it
is complicated. People are complicated. And here's the thing. We all know we are complicated,
right? Maybe we even, I would say, know this about the people we love. We grant them complexity too.
But the dehumanization you're talking about, the specific way it shows up in politics and in this conversation about persuasion now, is that we look at people on the other side of certain divides, and we just think they're not complicated, the way we know ourselves to be.
They are just monoliths of that view.
They are dyed-in-the- the wool committed to whatever it is.
And the problem with this view is just empirically, it's not true. The simple evidence for
this is like people swing around in politics a lot. That happens all the time in politics. People
are complicated. And it's so obvious when you think of yourself. But if we start to regard others, people we are on the opposite end
of, as also having that complexity, it's certainly granting them more humanity and not dehumanizing
them. But it's really also just makes you much more effective. Because people who don't like
immigration and think our border is a mess and that people should not be coming here illegally,
they also think other things, right? They also think that families are sacred, or they also
think that America is the most humane country in the world, or they also think that they're
good people. They have other things in there. Right now, in that moment, if they're obsessed
with the alien invasion on the border that those other values are not
winning the battle for their heart right now we're all at war with ourselves they are at war with
themselves and if you see them as a monolith you got nothing to work with if you see them as a
site of a contest then you say wow i gotta arm the rebels in their heart that feel a different way
those rebels are losing an argument about
immigration right now, but it's not inevitable. And I'm not talking about winning everybody back,
but in this country, three, four, 5% of people shifting their view about something fundamental
is the difference between like heaven and hell, right? So all we are talking about is
refusing to get into this thing where you say anybody who's committed to any particular thing is just irrevocably that or anyone of a particular race just thinks this way. It's just self-defeating. It's not true. the ground today and every day showing how you do it, showing how you walk into communities,
talk to people, listen to people, elicit the formal stance they have, elicit some of the B-side
stuff that's not so processed, and maybe start building some of that stuff up so that it starts
competing within them.
You're not implanting something on them, imposing something on them.
You're building up a doubt, a questioning, a counter story within them.
And more often than not, it works.
And I sincerely believe we have to stop believing that we can defeat this kind of fascist threat the country now faces by investigating our way out of it, prosecuting our way out of it, condemning our way out of it, being rageful to get out of it, shaking our fists at MSNBC as a way of getting out of it.
We need to organize a better, more magnanimous, more fiery, more angry, more humane, more loving movement, all these things in one,
if we have a chance of saving the country. A lot of this conversation has been in the
larger context of politics, but I often bring this down to me and my neighborhood, me and my family,
me and the person who is in my life on a regular basis, me and the few people that I work with, I can't imagine a scenario where even
if you can have a successful conversation in the moment, where that becomes sustainable change in
belief and behavior, if you're not also creating a community for somebody to step into at the same
time, because fundamentally you're not just asking people to change their minds. You're asking them to actively say, I am willing to ostracize myself from the
community, which may have provided so much, maybe for generations. And maybe that's even my family.
I mean, that is a huge ask. So I think part of what we need to understand when we're
asking somebody to change a belief is if that belief is baked into, if it is a core tenant
of a community to which that person holds dear and to which there is their primary source of
belonging, unless we provide a community that invites them in, then just nothing's ever going
to happen. But it gets really complicated. And you talk about this in your book, right? Because what if that person also
has done or is perceived as currently doing harm to what that new community would be, right?
So maybe you have a conversation where somebody can actually, and these are some of the people
you describe in your book say, I'm going to actually step into this conversation. Even
though I don't like this person, I don't believe in them, and I see them as doing harm.
They're part of the problem.
But I'm going to have the conversation.
And it leads to some astonishing outcome with the profound shift in beliefs.
And yet at the same time, if there's a dynamic where that community perceives this individual as having been part of the problem, are they even welcomed into that community?
Is that even a realistic possibility?
Yeah, I think you're absolutely right.
It's a perfect way to put it that the,
what we are asking when we ask someone to change their mind
or come along with a particular idea,
I think we sometimes don't understand the nature of what we're asking.
We are asking you to kind of leave a family for another family
or leave a certainty for another certainty.
You got to sell it. If it only feels like a loss, if it only feels like something's being
taken away from you, you can't say this, you can't say that. I mean, we're not selling it properly.
We need to make the world we want, the movements we have seem more fun because they are more
exuberant, more joyful, more life-giving. I think about
this with climate change. Climate change is important. It's maybe the only truly important
issue because there will be no other issues if there's no habitable planet. But there is a general
aspect to the climate change conversation that feels dour, that feels like homework, broccoli. There's no reason
that it has to have that aspect. The battle for the planet could be one of the great life-giving
undertakings of our time. It doesn't have to be subjectively experienced as like things being
taken away from you. I mean, we talk to very serious people who think about this. Climate
change may be the biggest opportunity we've had to rectify racial injustice in the past historical legacies, because the sheer amount of money
and social engineering power you'll have with it, you'll be able to solve other problems like
racial injustice legacies, you'll be able to address things like gender, you'll be able to
improve education, right, just through such a massive project of public commitment.
And so why wasn't the climate change movement framed as one of opportunity and can do and like,
holy shit, this is going to be so fun to live in this new way. Is that the vibe anyone gets
from any climate change conversation? I think it should be. I think
this could be the most exuberant, life-giving, purpose-giving thing of our time. So it's not
always to blame the people who are dragging their heels and don't want to do these things.
I think it's also to be a little hard on ourselves. Why is it that our causes are not appealing to people? And is some of the blame on us for not empathetically, strategically,
shrewdly approaching people with the kind of pitch that would hook them
based on who they are, what their actual experience is,
what their actual concerns are,
and summon them into the belief that the world we're offering them is far superior to anything
that they might be clinging to. We're going to get there if we can invite people into a future
that just frankly feels more fun, more true, more exuberant, more life-giving. And I think that has
to become the goal of the kind of pro-democracy, pro-human rights, pro-justice side of the country.
Definitely powerful.
It's worth remembering that persuasion is a tool and it can be used for good ends and
bad ends.
And I think part of my frustration that motivated writing The Persuaders is that this is a tool
that right now is being better deployed by people who wish our society ill
than people who wish it well. And I want the people who wish it well, people who want all
of us to have a voice, all of us to have a vote, all of us to be included, all of us to be loved
and have the right to love whoever we want. Those of us who want everyone's kids to have a shot, not just the kids of people who are lucky.
If we continue to treat winning other people over as something that is either futile or just kind
of happens on its own, if we pursue the right policies and our heart is in the right place,
that fantasy is going to be our undoing. And we have to have on the political left
a revolution of persuasion. We need to become persuaders in a way that can actually beat back
the authoritarian menace, this kind of fascist uprising. It is the job of every single person
who does not want that to be our future, our common future, to, I think,
become a persuader and insist on leaders becoming persuaders. I have hope that a better path is
possible. I think this is a neck and neck fight right now, a kind of dead heat between the forces
of darkness and the forces of light, in part because the forces of light are kind of half asleep. And my hope is that if they wake up a little bit and get their act together, they can
kind of bury this awful politics of hatred and dehumanization of the last many years,
bury it in the garbage dump of history where it belongs.
Feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well.
So in this container of a good life project,
if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
I think on the intimate scale,
I think it means to me to be a good parent,
a good partner, to have friends, real friends,
even through adulthood when it becomes harder because
of the aforementioned partners and kids, and to really be surrounded by love in a way that
sometimes hard when life gets busy and fragmented and to have space in your life for love and
connection. And at the more societal level, I think to live a good life
is to engage yourself in the affairs of your community in whatever way is appropriate for you
in whatever way you're called to do. And not just tend to family life and tend to your personal
garden, but to make sure that you are engaged in a struggle for a better world, that you
are saying the things that need to be said, organizing what needs to be organized, participating
in projects of merit, so that you hold yourself responsible for the quality of the commons
that you leave behind.
And I certainly, when I think of that phrase,
I think about it both very much in a kind of intimate,
in the intimate realm, because if you don't have that,
the other thing can be quite hollow.
But I think if you only have the personal,
you could end up with a happy family in a burning world. And that doesn't really work either.
Thank you.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
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It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
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whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest-charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just
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The Apple Watch Series 10, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
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results will vary.
Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun. January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing. Mark Wahlberg. I love how Anon really compels us to renew faith in the power of persuasion and redefines and
reimagines that word
itself, persuasion, and reconnects it to dignity with such bold optimism. And bringing it home
today is Jonah Brigger, professor and internationally best-selling author of the book Magic Words.
So as a world-renowned expert on influence, Jonah reveals the science behind how language
shapes behavior. Through really fascinating research, he uncovers the rhetorical
techniques to really understand influence through the magic of words, and he illuminates how to
inspire action, spark creativity, and strengthen connections. So if you're ready to harness those
magic hidden and in plain sight words with everyday speech, Jonah takes us into the
extraordinary power that language holds in bringing us together.
Here's Jonah. The general phrase influence or persuasion, it can come with all sorts of baggage,
all sorts of ethical badges. It's not okay to either understand, invest in, or certainly
apply tools or wisdom or insights or strategies when it comes to,
quote, influencing or persuading others. Talk to me a little bit more about the psychology.
I would say a few things. So, you know, first of all, we don't like seeing ourselves as influenced.
I've done a bit of work in this space and one, because it seems like it's a bad thing. We want
to see in particular in American culture, like where we choose our own things, right? I have autonomy and agency and I make my own choices. But also we don't like influence
because we're not always aware that it's happening, right? We're not always aware that
influence is occurring. I think the other thing is influence can have a very negative connotation,
right? If you said, hey, I'm going to influence people to eat food that's not good for them and
make decisions that are bad for the environment or get someone to do something they don't want to do. Well, that sounds pretty bad.
What I think is interesting though, is influence by itself is just a tool, right? If I told you I
was going to use influence to get people to eat more fruits and vegetables, why I was going to
use influence to get them to care more about the environment, we'd all say that's fantastic. That's
a really great goal. And so it's not that influence by itself is positive or negative.
Influence is just a tool.
It's like a hammer, right?
A hammer is not positive or negative.
You can use a hammer to bang in a nail.
You could use a hammer to hurt someone.
And so influence itself is just a tool.
And I think the better we understand that tool, the more we can both take advantage
of its power and defend against it, decide we don't want to be influenced or choose our
influence.
And so I think understanding how influence works has a lot of benefits.
I completely agree with that. I see it as inert, just as it's the container and it's
the intention behind it and how it's actually used. I can either make it like functional or
dysfunctional, constructive or destructive, not entirely unlike AI, which is the buzzword
these days. But when it comes to it though, your point about like
a lot of us feel like we don't want to be influenced. I almost can't imagine an interaction
that you have from the moment you open your eyes and the moment you lay your head down at night,
when you're in some sort of relationship with anybody where there isn't some level of influence
happening. And this could be just brushing your teeth in the morning.
You're doing that because at some point along the way,
somebody in a position of authority or social pressure or whatever it is,
made you feel like this is an important thing for me to do.
Like we don't emerge from the womb saying time to brush my teeth.
Yeah.
So there are so many just rote behaviors that we take for granted that we do because at
some point there was an influence process and we're really glad that we do them. Yes. But my
sense is it's when we feel like we're being influenced in a way which is against our interest,
that's where like the hair in the back of our necks risen a little bit. Yeah. But I also think
that is very often the popular assumption. That's what
influencer persuasion is. It's the art of getting somebody else to do something that they wouldn't
organically want to do and maybe is not in their best interest, but is in your best interest.
And that's where so many of us really just have friction with it.
Yeah. I actually thought a lot about this. This isn't just an influence book, right? There are
parts of this book which are about how to use language to be more creative. There are whole sections of the book, 50 pages, which are
about how to deepen social connection using language. There is a whole section of the book
about how to use language to better understand others and understand sexism and racism in
society. And so it's not just an influence book. That's certainly one thing the book talks about,
but it's not the only thing it talks about. Yeah. No, for sure. You use the word magic words. It's literally the name of your new book. Magic
in what way? Why that word? A few years ago, our first child was born. His name is Jasper.
And this is actually the opening story to the book, but I think it's a good one to illustrate
the idea. And so like many kids, he got older. Eventually he started getting language. So he'd
say words for things he wanted. He'd say yo, if he wanted yogurt or brow bear, if he wanted brown bear.
But what's interesting is he started using the word peas and he didn't mean peas. He meant please,
but he didn't have his L's yet. So he couldn't actually say please. So he would say peas.
And what he would do is he'd use it in a very particular way. So he'd say something he wanted,
like yo, try saying it once. If nothing happened, he'd try saying again, yo. And if nothing happened, then a third time he would go, yo,
peace. And he was basically saying, look, if you're not getting what I want right away,
I'm going to add this thing on the end because I know that it'll make you more likely to do.
Now Jasper is five, almost six years old. He has a lot more language. A couple of days ago,
he was like, dad, you're not being specific enough. When I asked him to do something, I was like, thanks.
Where did you learn the word specific from? But P's was to me was really interesting,
really fascinating because it was the first time I think he realized that words had power,
right? That if you used a certain word, it could make the likelihood of something happening
different. And this idea of magic words has been around forever, right? Abracadabra,
Alakazam, whatever it is. But I think why I find this concept interesting is they're not magic.
It's actually science. It's not magic. There are words we can use that will increase our impact.
Adding a certain word to requests can make people up to 50% more likely to say yes.
We found in our own work that saying I recommend something rather than I like something makes
people about a third more likely to do it. And in everything from the language you might use in the
emails we send at the office to the language you might use in a loan application provides insight
into who we are and what we're going to do in the future. And so to me, this idea of words having
power is really important. And given those words, what are they and how can we harness those powers?
How by understanding the power of magic words, can we they? And how can we harness those powers? How by understanding the
power of magic words, can we use them to increase our own impact? Whether it's to persuade others,
to motivate, to be more creative or to deepen social connections.
Yeah. I love that. And I'm such a believer in that as well, that language matters so much
and so much more than I think a lot of people really realize.
I think as communicators, as writers, as speakers,
we are constantly using language in all contexts, whether we're talking to bosses or colleagues or
clients or family members. And while we think a lot about what we want to talk about, the ideas
we want to communicate, okay, I want to talk about our plans for dinner Friday night, or okay,
I want to pitch my new idea, or okay, I want to get the client to agree to do something.
We think a lot about top-level ideas we want to communicate. We think a lot less about
the words we want to communicate them. And as you just said, that's a big mistake because there's a
big opportunity in the language that we use. And I think what's most exciting to me is this is not
the first book out there on language, right? There are lots of articles online that say,
these are five words you shouldn't use in resumes or the six things you should say when doing this and that. And I love anecdotes just as
much as other people do. And I think anecdotes can be a good way to illustrate ideas. But
for anecdotes to be useful, there has to be some science underneath them. And so I think what's
exciting is in the past decade, and even more so, we've uncovered some amazing insights from
language that are not just opinion,
they're statistical outcomes, right? We can change this if we do that.
And so it's been a nice opportunity to share those insights and showcase how we can use
them.
We often think about language as conveying information, provides information to others
or collects information.
Language also suggests what it means to engage in a particular action or who it suggests
you are and who has agency or control. So I'll give you a fun example. There's a study done a number of
years ago at Stanford university where they went to a local preschool and they asked students for
help cleaning up. So he's like four or five year old kids. Kids are asked to clean up a mess on
the floor, their blocks, crayons, books, whatever it is. And for some of the kids, the scientists ask them, hey, can you help clean up using the verb help to encourage
them to take action? For other kids, they use a similar word with just a couple of letters
different. They say, hey, can you be a helper? Rather than can you help clean up, can you be
a helper? Now, the difference between help and helper is quite small, two letters. Yet that
difference leads to a 30% increase in students' likelihood of helping.
Just two additional letters saying being a helper.
And it's not just students in classrooms.
Same idea has been shown with adults and more important behaviors like voting.
So researchers looked at getting people to vote.
Some people were asked, hey, can you go vote?
Others were asked, can you be a voter?
Again, the difference between vote and voter is
extremely small, just a letter. But when people were asked to be a voter, they were much more
likely to take that action, about 15% more likely to go vote. And so what gives, right? Why did
helper matter more than help and voter matter more than vote? And the reason is by turning actions
into identities, we can make people more likely to take those actions, right? Voting, helping,
I know those are things I should do, but I'm busy. I might not want to do them. What I care more about
than actions or identities. I want to feel like I'm a good person, like I'm intelligent, smart,
knowledgeable, competent, all those different things. And if actions are opportunities to show
myself and others that I hold desired identities, well, now I'm much more likely to take those
actions because they're not just actions, right? They're actions that give me an
opportunity to claim a desired identity. Voting, yeah, that's fine. But being a voter, well,
now I'm more likely to vote if it gives me that opportunity. Same thing is true on the negative
side, right? Losing is bad. Being a loser is worse. Cheating on a test is bad. Being labeled
a cheater would be even worse. And so researchers show that when cheating on a test would make you a cheater, well, now people are less likely to do
it because they don't want to engage in an action that would lead them to claim an undesirable
identity. It's like that old don't litter campaign, which they eventually switched to don't be a
litter bug. Littering, yeah, I know it's bad, but oh, being a litter bug, well, now I really don't
want to do it. And so by framing actions as identities, we can make people more or less likely to change
those actions. That in particular, that whole concept is so fascinating to me.
By way of summary, you identify six categories of words that you say really make a difference.
Activating identity and agency, conveying confidence, asking the right questions,
leveraging concreteness, employing emotion, and harnessing similarity and difference. One of the things that I think,
and there are a couple of other topics that you really dive into in the book, but one of the
things I want to tease out a bit with you is this notion of similarity and difference, because this
is not just about language. It's not just about persuasion or influence. There's certainly broad
societal contexts here that really matter in the way
that we relate to other human beings. I think language is a great way to connect with others.
There's a variety of research that speaks to this. There's some work that shows that
the more similar the language we use to somebody else, the more likely we are to become friends.
And the more likely if we interact, the better those interactions go. If two people on a first
date, for example, use more similar language, they're more likely to go on a second date.
Similarly, the language we use can help predict how well we're going to do at the office.
If we're able to enculturate to whatever company we join and use language in a more similar way
to our colleagues at work, it ends up we're more likely to get promoted or at least have the
opportunity to stick around at the firm. And so I think it's not just about one word versus the other. And the book is
architected starting with simpler approaches. So say could rather than should, and it will lead to
this impact. The language of similarity is more complicated, right? Because being similar to
someone else's language involves a lot of different dimensions, but being similar and by being similar
can lead to a lot of positive downstream outcomes.
There are also benefits to being different.
We've shown in creative industries, for example, like song lyrics, songs whose lyrics are more
different from their genres end up being more popular.
Their songs end up going higher on the billboard chart because they're more different from
what people are used to, which is novel and stimulating and leads people to like them
more.
And so it's another category of language that it's important to understand.
Yeah. And that makes a lot of sense to me. It's interesting. I recently was listening to an
interview with Rick Rubin, a legendary music producer, who really was describing the fact
that all he knows is his taste, what he likes and what he doesn't like, his absolute confidence in
it. And very often what he really likes is stuff which is counterculture or not mainstream. But within a matter of years, and sometimes because he's now stepped into it
and helped bring it to the world, it becomes the culture. It moves things forward. So it's almost
like the ability to see difference before others see it and then get behind it. There's an
interesting lever to be pulled there to move culture,
taste, ideas forward if you're open to doing that.
Yeah.
Feels like a good place for us to come full circle in our conversation as well.
So as I always wrap in these conversations with the same question in this container of
Good Life Project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up?
I think curiosity is such a powerful thing.
And having kids has only reaffirmed this belief.
Seeing something through a kid's eyes, everything is interesting, right?
Everything is exciting and new and worth understanding.
And I think as we get older, sometimes we lose that curiosity, right?
We see things and we're like, I already know what that is.
And I remember somebody once said this really interesting thing to me. They said, every
six months to a year, I move the paintings or wall coverings, art, whatever I have on the walls of my
house around. And I do that because if I leave them in the same spots, I don't see them anymore.
But if I move them around, I start to see them differently, right? I see them again. They're
no longer in the same spot. So I can really see them.
And I think that idea is a really interesting one for our lives more generally,
not just about our wall hangings,
but how we see people, how we see relationships,
how we see the world.
I think if we can remind ourselves
that things aren't as simple as we might think
or as obvious as we often feel they are,
we can see things in some new and powerful ways.
Love that. Thank you.
I love how Jonah really dives into the astonishing power of language within our everyday life. I'm so
grateful to Priya, Anand, and Jonah for lighting the way forward with hope. Their wisdom on
gathering, persuading, and the magic of words left me inspired that we can renew faith in our shared humanity and
reconnect through discourse centered indignity. Though the path ahead is challenging,
their remarkable insights really reveal how we can foster mutual understanding through conversation.
And if you love this episode, be sure to catch the full conversations with all of today's guests.
You can find a link to those episodes in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers,
Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields,
editing help by Alejandro Ramirez,
Christopher Carter, Crafted Era Theme Music,
and special thanks to Shelley Dell
for her research on this episode.
And of course, if you haven't already done so,
please go ahead and follow Good Life Project
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Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project. Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were going to be fun. On January 24th. Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
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The Apple Watch Series X, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
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