Hidden Brain - No Hard Feelings
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Holding a grudge can feel like a form of justice, a way of punishing those who have wronged us. But psychologist Fred Luskin says that more often than not, grudges don't hurt the targets of our anger.... Instead, they only hurt us. This week, we explore the lingering effects of long-standing animosities, and how to let them go.If you enjoyed today's conversation, be sure to check out these classic Hidden Brain episodes about apologies and forgiveness:The Power of MercyHealing 2.0: The Power of ApologiesHow to Make Amends
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This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
It was a cold day in Appalachia on January 7th, 1865.
A Union soldier named Esa McCoy was on his way home, wounded from fighting in the Civil War.
As he neared his cabin in Kentucky, Esa was given a message,
Don't return home or you will be killed.
A local group of Confederate militia, known as the Logan Wildcats, planned to kill Asa.
The Wildcats were led by a member of the Hatfields, a family living in West Virginia who had strong
ties to the Confederate army. Asa hid out in a cave near Peter Creek, Kentucky. But it
was no use. He was eventually tracked down and shot dead.
The incident is said to have sparked a famous feud
between the Hatfields and the McCoys.
It lasted decades.
In 1873, a McCoy family member,
perhaps still seething from Asa's death,
accused Floyd Hatfield of stealing his pig.a's death, accused Floyd Hatfield of stealing
his pig. A trial followed and Floyd Hatfield was acquitted. A few years later, one of the
trial witnesses was killed by two McCoys.
In 1882, on election day in Kentucky, some McCoy brothers drunkenly fought and killed
Ellison Hatfield, stabbing him multiple times in the back.
In retaliation, the Hatfields killed all three McCoy brothers.
The feud continued into a cycle of violence that reached its peak in 1888,
during what came to be known as the New Year's Night Massacre.
Several members of the Hatfield gang set fire to a McCoy cabin and killed two children.
History is full of incidents that have sparked long-standing grudges, sometimes with consequences
that last decades. But there also are smaller, more personal grievances that we all harbor.
Perhaps you still remember some slight you experienced years ago at the hands of a friend
or family member?
Today we explore the psychology of grudges, how long-standing animosities affect our lives,
and what to do about them.
This week on Hidden Brain.
Don't let people live rent-free in your head. That's a way of saying you shouldn't allow people who have wronged you to take up too
much of your attention.
Sounds nice, but is it realistic?
We are social creatures after all, and our interactions and relationships with others
matter.
When someone is kind to us, it has the power to alter our day, maybe even change the course of our lives.
When someone wrongs us, it can also have large effects.
At Stanford University, Fred Luskin has spent a quarter century studying what happens when we hold on to grudges.
Fred Luskin, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Hey, thank you so much.
Fred, some years ago you met a woman named Debbie.
She was having issues with her husband.
And when I say issues, this was not merely conflicts about who takes out the garbage.
No.
I mean, issues, that's a nice way of putting it.
Her husband was a serial adulterer.
She had found him cheating numerous times.
He said, I'm sorry.
She said, okay, I'll take you back.
He did it again.
The cycle repeated itself over and over.
One day, Debbie came home early from work.
She discovered her husband on the couch with another woman.
It was the last straw.
Something snapped in her.
She said, no more, you'll never treat me like this again.
She threw him out.
She filed for divorce.
But when we met her, this guy owned her brain, and her conversation was just so dominated
by him, him, him, him, him.
So many people have been in similar situations where they have been betrayed by a romantic
partner and people really struggle with it.
How was Debbie's account of what happened to her
affecting her life, Fred?
Oh, there's a sadness or a poignancy sometimes
when you see people who are hurt like that.
Her conversation is about my ex and the lost marriage
and what a bad person he was, but it shrouded in failure.
It's, this didn't work, I couldn't make it happen.
I did my best, there were obstacles too big for me.
And that has implications for her entire life.
I understand that it was important for her to let everyone else know what
allows her husband was and how much pain he had caused her.
That that is true for her.
It's like, let me tell you now, let me tell you now, let me tell you again.
Now, let me call up grandma and tell her.
The real suffering is when that failure and that loss become part of their identity.
And so for somebody like Debbie, when we had encountered her, it was, hi, I'm Debbie, a woman with a lousy ex-husband and a failed marriage.
So that had meant that it was now integrated into her self-concept.
In the course of your work and research, you came by another person named Jill, and she
confided in you about her troubled relationship with her mother.
But unlike in the case of Debbie's ex, Jill's mother was dead?
So she was, my mom didn't love me.
I never got the kind of affection that I would hope for. I felt rejected and unwanted,
and I grew up with this sense of not being good enough
and not having enough value in this world.
And no matter what I said to mom,
I couldn't get through to her.
Like, mom, notice me, mom, I'm around. Notice, I'm mad at her.
Mom was impenetrable.
And so Jill brought that sense of frustration
and invisibleness to the way she talked about what
it was that had occurred 20 years ago when her mother had
died.
You could just feel the angst.
You know, what is striking about both these stories you've just told me, Fred, is that
in both Debbie's case and in Jill's case, the source of their pain is in their past,
but it's almost as if this person, this other person, is standing with them, walking with them, living with them inside their
heads all the time. Precisely. And what you articulated is one of the
unanticipated consequences of keeping a grievance alive.
And they don't realize how integrated that wound or problem has become in their self-identity.
And that link, that integration,
makes it seem really hard to imagine
what would I be without this.
So you're a scholar, you're a teacher, you're a therapist, but you're also a human being,
and you yourself are not invulnerable to holding on to a grievance. I want you to tell me the story
of your friend Sam, and what happened to you and Sam, and maybe you to tell me the story of your friend Sam and what happened
to you and Sam, and maybe start with how close you were to Sam for many years of your life.
Sam was my closest friend for probably a decade.
Somebody I considered almost a brother and a very, very dear friend of my wife and I.
I assumed that Sam would always hold that place in my life.
So what happened or what transpired was he met someone
who was for whatever reason, uncomfortable with the relationship that Sam had with me
and my wife.
This is a romantic partner?
Yeah.
And he just disappeared.
We're best friends and now, poof.
And I couldn't connect with him and the word ghosted did not exist then, but I was ghosted.
And inside of me, I fell apart.
I became bitter as my trust was shattered and I developed a bit of like an agitated depression.
I understand that at one point Fred you heard that Sam was to be married and you did not
hear about this from Sam but from someone else. When a mutual friend came to my house and said, Oh, by the way, you know, he's getting
married.
I had absolutely no ability to integrate that information.
It hit me like bricks in my face.
And I just I crumbled.
So you were not invited to the wedding.
This is someone whom you consider to be,
as you said, your best friend, nearly a brother.
How did that change your outlook and behavior?
I understand that the people around you
started to notice that you were different.
My wife turned to me one day and said,
Fred, I still love you.
I just don't like you as much.
Wow.
So I was, to put it kindly, crabby.
I understand that at one point during the saga, Fred, you found yourself in a very unusual
place to have an epiphany, the supermarket.
Tell me what happened at the supermarket that day.
So my wife told me to go to the supermarket.
And I told her I wanted to go to supermarket A because it was closer.
She said, go to supermarket B, Safeway.
It has what I want.
I walked out of the door muttering, poor me.
I get to Safeway muttering all the time, you know,
people don't understand me and all the, really, like, bitter.
I walk to the place with the item
that my wife is going to send me to Safeway for,
and it's not there. And my self-pity is overwhelming.
I could have gone to Albertsons and why am I here? And nobody loves me and my self-pity went to a kind of overdrive
But if there was a moment
Where it broke just one moment I turned away from the
Shelf where the item was supposed to be and I noticed for the first time I'm in Safeway big
supermarket But I literally said to myself,
holy sh** Fred, look what you're missing. You're missing abundance. This store has
everything. You're missing apples and oranges and diapers and that you
have the money to pay for this.
So I had a voice almost in me that said, pay attention Fred, pay attention.
I walked out of that supermarket and I was different.
For better and worse, people we are close to can affect us in profound ways. Sometimes these effects are fleeting, and sometimes they last for years.
When we come back, the physiological and psychological effects of holding a grudge.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. When someone wrongs us, holding a grudge against
them almost feels like a form of justice. But psychologist Fred Luskin says that more often than not, grudges don't hurt the targets of our anger.
They hurt us.
Fred, we've discussed a few ways in which people can hurt us, but sometimes it's a process that hurts us.
One person you worked with was upset she did not get a job promotion.
Can you tell me Dana's story and what went through her mind?
a job promotion. Can you tell me Dana's story and what went through her mind? Dana is one of the people that even after a decade or more, I still remember. Her issue
was that she was a great worker for a local Silicon Valley company who worked above and beyond what anybody could expect from an employee.
She came in early. She also was ambitious.
And so she had an expectation that that best effort would lead to a promotion. So after a number of years of getting promoted appropriately,
there was a bigger job right ahead of her
that she just knew she was the right person for the job
and had earned it.
And when she found out that she didn't get that job, she became furious.
I mean, hell hath no fury.
I mean, because she had checked all the boxes.
So if I understand correctly, Fred, Dana's reaction to not being promoted was the sense
that she had wasted 10 years of her life, that all this time and effort she had spent
at the company going above and beyond, all of it was wasted effort.
Wasted effort and that she was an idiot for putting in all that effort. It was a
multi-pronged attack towards both her employer and towards herself. Let's look
at one aspect of the story you just told me. So this was an employee who did not
get a promotion. Another way of looking at this is to say the company has a
number of different priorities. Maybe I don't fully understand all the priorities of the company.
They've picked somebody else, but it's actually not about me.
It's just about what the company needed to do at this time.
Exactly.
The not getting the promotion.
Dana heard that, that it's about Dana.
She took it personally. It's my company, my job. I
did all this work. I made all this effort. She took the no, the rejection as a personal
affront.
Now in some ways it's worth pointing out of course that not getting
that promotion did indeed have personal effects on Dana. It might have affected
her life, her finances, maybe even her retirement plan. So it had consequences
in her personal life, Fred. Absolutely. So there's no denying that Dana's body and mind were affected by not getting the job.
What there is room to negotiate is how much of that effect had to do with Dana's expectations,
not just the not getting the job.
I want to talk about another component of grudges, Fred.
You walked with a man named Alan, whose wife cheated on him.
Can you tell me his story and the thoughts
that constantly circled around in his mind?
So, Alan had a wife who cheated on him,
like, and she didn't, like, try to hide it.
You know, it was like, we're married,
but you don't satisfy me, so, you know, I have an affair.
And she shut him down if he started to complain But you don't satisfy me. So, you know, I have an affair and
She shut him down if he started to complain or articulate his needs
So Alan just had one of those like doozies of a story. It's all
her fault
the blame is the second piece of a three-part sequence.
It starts with taking it too personally, which you covered.
When we take things too personally, our mind and body react in a very harsh
physically disruptive and emotionally
suffering way and
Then we have to talk to ourselves about what happened
So all three of those end up as this quality of blame
You you did it to me. I'm not responsible for how bad I feel, and I'm going to talk to myself that solidifies this as a blaming story.
I can see in some ways how, at least on a short-term basis, this can make you feel better.
If you're feeling very upset, if you're feeling very hurt, it does make you feel better to
say, I know what the cause of my hurt is.
It's this other person.
This other person did this terrible thing and that's why I'm feeling terrible.
It's her fault. You're spot on with that because when people are devastated, it's appropriate to be disrupted,
dysregulated, confused, angry, lost, scared and short term, it's really helpful to have
somebody to blame besides you. So we've talked about the role that taking things personally and the blame
game plays in the development of a grudge. These often lead to what you call the
final stage in the grievance process, the construction of a grievance story. What do you mean by this, Fred?
When something happens, we have a choice of how we talk about it.
And so we can talk about it as a normal life event, a catastrophe, something to cope with, you know, something I'm here to learn from, or a sign
that the world is an unfair, unsafe place.
What we lose when we get too deep into a grievance story is one, we have a choice. So that story of, hey, I got a really crappy deal with this wife and she messed up my life
for six months, that's a healthy story for a month or so.
You know, it's like that's how your brain rebalances and reorganizes itself from the
disruption and it can go directly to,
oh, let's think about this.
I didn't make a good choice in marriage.
She gave me lots of clues.
I didn't do X.
You can't reorganize coherently right away,
so she's a terrible human being is a wonderful way to reorganize.
The Grieving Story is a practice for how it is we're going to explain to ourselves what happened
and what's an appropriate response for us to deal with it.
and what's an appropriate response for us to deal with it. The practice of it is very useful short term and destructive long term.
I'm curious why some wrongdoings become grudges and others don't.
You talk about a very powerful concept, the violation of unenforceable rules.
What does this mean, Fred?
When Dana wanted a promotion, she turned what she wanted into an expectation. I want to be promoted, she turned it into I
have to be promoted. When somebody gets married they have a hope, you know, I want
my partner to be faithful, but they change it into they have to be faithful.
That is a rule for somebody else's behavior that you actually don't have power to enforce.
If you wake up in the morning and you say, hey, I got a big day today, it has to be sunny,
and it's pouring, most normal people recognize
they don't control the weather.
But when an adult person does something that you don't want,
we bypass that.
Well, a normal adult person doesn't have to do what I want.
But when we create unenforceable rules,
we start thinking an adult separate from me
has to do what I want.
They have to give me a promotion.
They have to stay my friend, they have to be faithful, or also they
have to talk to me. Those unenforceable rules are rigid like substrates in our thinking that when they're broken, cause us to have all sorts of exaggerated distress.
I want to talk about one unenforceable rule
that you had in your life, Fred.
When your mother-in-law was alive,
you and your family would often go and visit her in Connecticut.
I understand that she wasn't very nice to you.
You could say that.
And let's just say it was a relationship challenge.
But yes, there was one situation where she demanded
that I do something in her home and it was absolutely trivial.
It was something along the lines of, don't put this back here.
You have to put it back here.
And she was yelling at me because I had put it back in the wrong place.
So she had an unenforceable, like, sons-in-law can't put things back where I don't want them
put back.
And then I had an unenforceable, like, moms-in-law can't talk to me like this.
I heard myself saying it in my mind you
can't talk to me like this and I ran out the front door. I literally ran out the
front door ran away from my wife and her family literally took a run because
my unenforceable role was shouting at me, she can't do this. How dare
she do this? Who is she to do this? I was gone for like an hour. My wife thought I was
crazy enough to have gone back to California. She wondered, but, and I'm not blaming one shred of this
on my mother-in-law.
I'm saying my rule, she broke my rule so strongly
that I could only react that way because of the rule,
not the reality of what she did.
that way because of the rule, not the reality of what she did. So after this fight, I understand that you called a friend to complain about
your mother-in-law. You wanted to tell someone else your grievance story. What
did you say and what did your friend tell you? So either during that run or
later, I went to the payphone. I didn't want to do it in the house,
and I called up really close friends,
and I started to complain about my mother-in-law.
And I got about 10 seconds in, and the friend said,
Fred, every time you go there, you call me to complain.
And I looked at myself, and I looked at him and said,
but this one's serious.
And he said, I'm sure it's serious, but every single time you go there,
you call us to complain about her and you want us to agree with you.
So complain and we'll agree with you.
But understand you do this every time.
A light bulb went off. Wow, this woman owns me. She owns my nervous system. She owns my mind.
She owns my mind. She owns my feet.
They take me to the phone.
She owns me.
We've talked about the anatomy of grudges
and how they form.
Let's spend a moment talking about some of the consequences
of holding on to our past grievances.
Many studies have examined the relationship
between resentment and mental health issues. One study for example found that holding a grudge
could lead to lower self-esteem. I mean there's lots of information about how
hostile thoughts, resentment and blame are all negatives for long-term physical well-being.
One of the studies that I liked when I was doing a lot of this was there was a linear
relationship between blame and all cause like physical well-being.
There is a good degree of evidence that hostile people have greater heart disease.
I feel like I can remember times in my own life, Fred, when I've been up at 3.45 in the morning,
upset about what someone said to me or what someone did to me,
and I'm lying in bed tossing and turning, I can't sleep, I'm angry.
And of course, it seems like the effects on sleep
must be one of the effects of resentment and grievance.
Yeah, and there was a recent study that linked
the what you're calling perseveration and anger,
both were linked to sleep quality.
Why is it that grievance and grudges cause these
physiological effects? What is happening physiologically to us that cause an
effect on sleep, that cause an effect on the heart, that cause an effect on high
blood pressure? Well I mean the clearest and simplest link is with the stress response.
So when you're angry or when you're pissed off or when you're blaming, you have an internalized
sense of threat.
Someone out there has hurt you or disappointed you or left you and you're not okay. So that sense of not okay, you know, leads the brain and it signals to the adrenals and
all sorts of changes to prepare you to, you know, run away.
And run away doesn't have to be physically run away.
It could be I'll never talk to them again.
That's a form of flight or fight them, be hostile.
But the more you're angry and the more you're blaming,
the more you arouse that system,
the more you trigger an adrenalized response, the more you train your body to accommodate
cortisol, the more your brain gets used to that pathway of reaction, it develops practice
effects. It becomes easier to do because the templates become laid down more succinctly.
The immediacy of arousal of anything that's a threat to us is the reason why long-term
grievances are so dangerous.
So the irony here, Fred, is that grudges can make us feel better in the short term.
They make us feel like we're getting back at the people who've hurt us.
But the people they hurt the most might be us.
There's a distinction made between constructive and destructive anger.
So when our arousal and our physiology and our threats say we need to protect ourselves,
anger can be a really good response.
So if somebody is hurting your kid, get angry.
It's really helpful. If you see an injustice,
get angry. Notice it and recognize you want this to change. The destructive anger is when anger
does not lead to useful action. When it just becomes perseverative and in a grievance, it actually becomes a substitute for action.
In a chronic anger situation, there's a little bit of dopamine that you get, that pleasure chemical,
ah, I'm doing something about it. When actually you're doing nothing constructive about it.
The dopamine is a response to an anticipated value,
but in anger you never get that anticipated value
unless you actually do something and change.
When we come back, strategies for letting go of the past.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
In the late 1960s, tensions were exploding in Northern Ireland. Riots were breaking out in cities like Belfast and Derry.
People were sharply divided on whether to remain part of the United Kingdom
or to join the Republic of Ireland. Catholic nationalists wanted unity with Ireland and
Protestant Unionists wanted the country to stay within the United Kingdom. Decades of
hostility and turmoil led to what became known as the Troubles, a violent conflict that involved bombings, shootings, and the
killing of many people. More than 3,500 people were killed in the conflict, the majority
of them civilians. Many people were left grieving over horrific losses.
In another part of the world at the time, Fred Luskin was at Stanford University in
California studying the role of forgiveness in people's lives.
A man named Byron Bland reached out to Fred after reading newspaper articles about his
work at Stanford.
Byron asked, was Fred willing to try his forgiveness training with mothers who had lost their children
to the troubles?
Their stories were unimaginably painful.
One woman's son had been kidnapped on the way to work,
then ushered into a shallow grave where he was shot,
his body hidden for 21 years.
Another woman's son had been working at a restaurant
when a gunman walked up to the takeout window
and shot him seven times.
He died on the spot.
A third woman said her Protestant son was hanging out
with his Catholic friend at a pub
when a loyalist rushed in and shot both men dead.
The stories went on.
When the women were flown to California
to share their stories,
Fred found himself overwhelmed with horror.
But he listened and he began the training. It overwhelmed with horror. But he listened, and he began the training.
It started with intake.
He asked them to fill out questionnaires about their mental state.
Then, slowly and carefully, he took them through the steps he had developed.
One was along the lines of his own epiphany at Safeway.
When you are deeply upset about something,
take a moment to notice things you are not upset about.
So one time we brought them to the window of the fifth floor of the building.
On Stanford's campus, we opened the blinds and said, literally, let the sun in, that this murder is a horror, but it's in your past, and you want to make sure that this murder doesn't serve as like a full solar eclipse,
and it doesn't mean that this didn't happen, but you can open back up to goodness. goodness, and we gave them some practice in changing the story that they tell, the
grievance story, not just to talk about how terrible it was, but what are some
possibilities for moving forward. I'm wondering whether you heard from these
women or you hear from other people you work with, Fred,
a sense of anger directed toward you
because these are people who are saying,
I've been through something terrible
and the person who did this terrible thing to me,
really it's unforgivable.
And here's Fred Luskin coming in
and telling me to forgive and forget.
I mean, do you get people angry with you
because in some ways it can feel, even though that's not what you're doing, but it can feel
like you're taking the side of the transgressor.
I never tell people to forgive and forget. I tell to them that forgiveness is not condoning, it's saving
your life. I remind them that forgiveness has nothing to do with seeking justice.
Forgiveness is inner healing and making peace with the life you had, not endlessly
arguing with what you didn't get.
The other thing is the whole orientation is a profound empathy
There is a profound empathy for how much someone has suffered and a plea for them to not continue parts of this suffering that are under your control by fighting hard against what actually
happened.
So there's an empathic plea.
They stole so much from you. Don't let them steal more.
What was the effect of these ideas on the women who went through the program, Fred?
It was mixed. They themselves, on the whole, reported improvement in mood and a dimming of the symptoms of stress.
When they went back to Northern Ireland, it became much more dicey
because their communities didn't want to hear about forgiveness. They themselves didn't give me grief,
but their communities were not interested in going
to fancy California and learning to do this.
So that was one obstacle that we learned about.
The most satisfying moment of this in a very difficult experience was the second time we
brought these women back plus family members, not all of them.
And one of the women's daughters, a middle-aged woman, came to us and said, thank you for
giving us our mother back.
She was just grief-stricken.
And, you know, we couldn't get through to her.
And you reminded her you can be grief-stricken
and still in the present, try to love and hold what's still good in your life.
It's interesting, you know, the word forgiveness itself I think points our
mind toward the person who has done us harm, the person who has done us wrong.
You know, when I think I forgive you, I'm thinking that my
forgiveness is directed toward you. But everything that I'm hearing from you, Fred, it's that really
forgiveness, in fact, is not about the other person at all. It's about ourselves.
It can be for the other person in an important intimate relationship.
in an important intimate relationship. So if your partner cheats, you can forgive both to free you and them. But it's an unenforceable rule thinking that if I forgive them, like they're going to change or they forgive me, we don't have control
over the other. Part of the problem of unforgiveness is our lack of control of what happened makes
us feel so vulnerable and threatened that if we don't come up with a strategy that puts some of the control back in our hands,
we can feel lost and scared for a long time. The simplest example is an intimate partnership.
If your partner is a schnook and cheats on you and you don't let that go, then you sometimes bring that
to the next relationship.
You're going to cheat on me.
I can't trust you.
If you forgive it, it's not necessarily to help the past partner, but you open back up
to a kind of trust so the next partner doesn't have to deal with your woundedness.
We talked earlier about your mother-in-law and how she would often make rude and critical
comments about you.
And some of this might have been because she was, you know, you could say an exceptionally
tidy person or you could say an obsessively tidy person,
depending on your point of view.
But at one point you asked yourself a question with her that also made a very big difference
in the way you responded to her.
What was this question, Fred?
When I got off the phone with those friends and I had already started the forgiveness project, but it wasn't finished.
I realized I need a new story.
I can't keep on telling everybody how terrible my mother-in-law is and how helpless I am.
I came up with a new story, which is I asked myself, Fred, why are you here?
Why are you visiting her?
And I said, because I want to support my partner, my wife,
and I want my kids to know their grandma.
So I said, why don't you act like it?
You show up and you're a bear.
You're not helping your wife.
You're not helping your kids.
If you can't do it, don't go.
I wasn't there to get along with my mother-in-law.
I was there to really support my wife. It changed my behavior 180 degrees, changed me
inside, and it transformed the Forgiveness Project into something really useful. Positive intention. What do you want? Why are you there? What positive thing can you move forward on
so that the grievance is in the rear-view mirror and not out your front windshield?
I understand that at one point toward the end of her life, your mother-in-law had a
chat with you about the way she may have treated you.
Tell me about that story and what happened, Fred.
That was one of the most poignant experiences of my life.
When my wife died, which is now about 13 years ago, I continued to visit her parents.
And I showed up at their home
and I knocked at the door and she comes out.
I mean, we had made a peace together,
but we hadn't like healed.
And this was a woman who was suffering from some dementia.
And she comes out and she looks at me and says,
I don't think I was that nice to you sometimes, was I? And this was a woman
who was suffering from some dementia. And I said, no, at times you really weren't.
And she said, I'm sorry. And I said, of course, fully accepted.
The piece that completely ends this is,
I went back home, thought about that,
and here I am, a big shot forgiveness teacher,
and an older woman makes the first step.
That doesn't look good.
And the next time I went and visited them,
I knocked on her door and I said, remember when you told me that you were sorry for treating me
a certain way? I said, well, I'm here to apologize to you. I'm sorry for all the ways that I may not
have been a good son-in-law and just made your life harder.
I'm deeply sorry for that.
And I think we both hurt your daughter.
So please accept my apology.
She smiled a little, she was, you know, not fully there.
Forgiveness wrapped it up in a bow, we're both clean,
and it's as if it never happened.
When we come back, Fred offers more techniques to get us moving when we find ourselves stuck
on a grudge.
Plus, we take a look at some of the physiological benefits of forgiveness.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Many of us want to be rid of our grudges, but we find that the grievance keeps rearing its head.
Pay attention to me, it tells us.
Forgiveness is for suckers.
We find ourselves drawn irresistibly to rehashing the events that caused us pain.
We may go back to complaining to others about how we have been wronged. Fred Luskin sometimes tells the people he is trying to help about a psychological experiment.
It was a piece of research where they experimented with giving people scenarios and asking them
to assume the role of different people in scenarios. So one of
the scenarios that I remember was a bicycle accident where a car was driving
and it hit a bicycle. It was not a terrible accident, nobody was killed, but
they asked people to assume the role of car driver.
So in their stories, the bike drivers weaving
all over the place and they're honking their horn
and slowing down and skillfully trying to get around them.
When they're in the role of bicyclists,
it's this lunatic speeding driver came up behind me without any warning and scared the
crap out of me.
I know from the show you do that you know about the negativity bias, the profound effect
of our brain of finding things wrong and looking for problems.
And I know because of the work you do that you know about the confirmation bias, you know,
our meaning-making apparatus are so biased, but they are biased mostly in the direction of threat.
they are biased mostly in the direction of threat.
Since threat, that negativity bias is there to protect us,
so many of the responses that we consider innate are actually off kilter because of our need
and desperate biological necessity
to deal with danger and threat.
So in an accident, you're gonna distort this
to keep your ego intact to deal with the threat.
Fred and other researchers have also found
that once we are down the path of
constructing a grievance story, our minds reach for more and more evidence that
our state of mind is justified. Our memories are state dependent so that
when you're unhappy that gives greater access in your brain to other times when you were unhappy.
When you're angry, you have greater access to stories and times when you were angry.
That is to allow us to draw upon the past as to how to solve the issue that we're dealing with now.
So it would do no good if you're angry now and your memory is accessed to lying on the beach in Hawaii.
You're not going to get much information.
So when we have a habit of
creating grievin stories around life. Not only are we reacting to the current
experience, but we get access to a pattern of creating grievin stories that makes the
current story seem more real and the response to it seem more usual.
Hmm, you know, I'm thinking back to the moment you went to the grocery store, you know against your wishes
to get something your wife wanted and of course you're thinking about your friend Sam and you're thinking about
the way in which he had hurt your feelings
and the way in which you know
it was unfair that he treated you the way he treated you.
And then you show up at the grocery store and now the thing that you wanted is not in the
grocery store.
Now that's yet another piece of evidence that the universe in fact is unfair against you,
Fred, and you can see how these different stories now are circling around one another
and forming a braid.
And it allowed me to tell my wife that she was unfair sending me to the supermarket that I didn't want to go to.
One technique that you teach is to ask people to be mindful about the interventions they have tried in the past and the effectiveness of those interventions.
You worked with a woman named Alice who did not get along with her in-laws.
Tell me how she tried to fix the problem and how you helped her.
I mean, Alice, like everybody, tries usually what the fight or flight brain gives it.
So if you don't like your in-laws, you go, well, I'm not going to talk to them, or I
am going to tell them how I feel, or I'm going to stew, or I'm going to tell my husband to
stop.
Or sometimes you say, well, none of that worked, so I won't talk to them, or I'll make the
conversation short, or when they visit, I won't talk to them or I'll make the conversation short or when they visit I won't be here
and
the really handy thing is
instead of continuing
Strategies that don't help you
Take 15 minutes and write them down
So we asked Alice. What do you do when you in-laws are not what you want them to be?
She wrote down six things.
We said, did they work?
She said, no.
We said, don't do them again.
And so we saved Alice a lot of grief because if like being snarky to your in-laws is not helpful, at least don't
be snarky. Say to yourself, I know what doesn't work, let me see if I can
experiment to find out what does work. And of course the point that you're
making here is that very often when we're carrying grievances around, we try
the same thing over and over and over and over again. We come back to the same
strategy over and over again. It doesn't work, but we say, okay, next time I'm
really gonna tell this person off and next time they're gonna come to their
senses and realize how much they've wronged me. But that's the direct result
of anger on the brain. Anger reduces blood flow to the prefrontal
cortex. Your thinking capacities and your creativity are dimmed. If you can
soothe that anger in the moment, then you get your blood flow and your brain back
and you get a chance to think of some
different strategies and that is the simplest description of how forgiveness
is helpful.
Fred walked me through a mental practice he calls positive emotion refocusing
technique or PIRT for short. Just take two slow deep breaths into and out of your belly.
Slow and deep. Just take two slow deep breaths into and out of your belly.
And when your belly inhales, allow it to expand.
And now bring to your mind's eye a picture of someone you love.
Just bring to your mind's eye a picture
of someone you really, really, really love.
And try to feel that love in your body.
Try to almost feel it open your eyes.
What we taught Alice and all the women from Northern Ireland is, when you get a picture or a thought
about your mother-in-law or the murder, practice this.
Don't allow your nervous system to be hijacked by stress.
Practice this immediately.
We told the women in Northern Ireland,
you may have to practice this 50 times before it has an impact,
but then you're starting to counter condition your stress response. With Alice, it wasn't quite that
tough, you know, it was so maybe after eight practices we'd say, okay, you got your mind back,
we'd say, okay, you got your mind back. Now what can you do? What might be a strategy to use with either your husband or your in-laws that doesn't bring back stress for you? And that becomes the
inner guidepost. So she said, well, I guess I could just take a deep breath when they upset me.
And I'd say, beautiful, try that.
Or instead of giving your husband grief, ask for his help.
You can't come up with any of those solutions as long as fight or flight is active.
So PERT is just a simple practice to shut that down.
The Old Saying
Fred says there is lots of evidence that reducing hostility is good for our mental and physical health.
The old saying is true.
Anger does the most harm to the vessel that stores it.
One analysis found that far from soothing our pain,
grudges have a way of increasing our experience of chronic suffering as seen in conditions like fibromyalgia.
It's a study that reviewed all the research and suggested pathways
for how forgiveness could reduce the rumination and anger that are so constant companions to fibromyalgia. And they now know that the pain pathways of the physical parts and amplifies it.
So when you reduce your anger and rumination, you reduce the experience of pain.
When anger becomes chronic, that appears to amplify those pain pathways. When anger is soothed, that piece of it can go away from the pain pathway.
You also conducted a study that looked at the effects of forgiveness on workplace productivity
and well-being. Tell me about that, Fred. Well, we taught people about positive emotional intelligence centered on forgiveness. We
took about a hundred people in different work sites and we led them through this
process of a little bit of coaching and a workshop and stuff like that. And then
we evaluated the end of like six months and it led people to be
less stressed, less angry, you know, fewer symptoms of stress, but it also helped
be more productive at work. That was the the piece. Now this is an uncontrolled
study. We really didn't have a great control group,
and it's one group, but it's the kind of study that suggests there might be more here than we
acknowledge. We talked earlier about unenforceable rules, the rules we want others to follow, but we
cannot make them follow. Let's return to the story of you and your best friend Sam. So you emailed him at the height of your grudge
and told him how you felt. What did you say and how did he respond, Fred?
I wrote a blame letter about that. You know, here's all the things you did to
ruin my life, so to speak. And it didn't give me what I want, but he wrote me back something that in retrospect
wasn't as bad as I received it as, but because I had practiced arousal so much, I'm reading
his letter and my blood pressure is like 200 over 120 and my mind's going ballistic and I have all these thoughts of
anger and revenge and this was the third learning point for me. I said to myself nobody will ever
get this control over my nervous system again long term. So I took a deep breath and I
stepped away. I pushed the letter away. I took a deep breath and I pushed myself
away and I said calm down, calm down. Then I started reading a bit and came up with Pert, but his letter triggered every response that I had practiced for the last six months or a year.
He fit right in with a stream going full.
I had an unenforceable rule. He has to respond the way I want I had an unenforceable rule
He has to be my friend as long as I want him to be my friend
I have an unenforceable rule he can't take time off from the relationship. I
Then started to untangle those unenforceable rules
How did that change your relationship with Sam?
Well, after that blame letter, we didn't have contact.
But I worked on myself.
This is how I developed the forgiveness project.
I started trying out my new story with my wife.
I created a story that looked forward, not backward.
And I got hope again.
And then I don't remember who contacted who,
but we met for dinner.
And I showed up in front of him.
And I sat down, and I realized that I had forgiven him. And I sat down and I realized that I had forgiven him. But I also realized that all the
work I had done for myself, I recognized that I was half the problem. That had I known how to handle
this, it never would have escalated the way it did. So inside of myself, I said,
I forgive you.
I didn't say anything to him.
Within about a half an hour,
we were the best of friends again,
and nothing, there's not even been a blip in decades.
Fred Luskin is a psychologist and director
of the Stanford University Forgiveness Project.
He is the author of Forgive for Good, a proven prescription for health and happiness, and
Forgive for Love, the missing ingredient for a healthy and lasting relationship.
Fred Luskin, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Hey, this was a delight.
Again, thank you for helping me publicize forgiveness.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy-Paul,
Kristen Wong, Laura Quirell, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brains executive editor.
Do you have follow-up questions about grudges and forgiveness for Fred Luskin? If you'd
be comfortable sharing your question with a Hidden Brain audience, please record a voice
memo on your phone and email it to us at ideas at hiddenbrain.org. Use the subject line grudge.
That email address again is ideas at hiddenbrain.org. I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon. you