Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Stop Spiraling!
Episode Date: December 29, 2025The start of a new year is a natural moment to set goals for ourselves. But doing so can also be a little daunting. Today, we kick off a series designed to help you understand and grapple with the men...tal obstacles that can keep you from charting a new path. We talk with psychologist Greg Walton, who studies how our minds get trapped in negative thought spirals — and how we can begin to break free. Then, in the latest installment of our segment "Your Questions Answered," psychologist and neuroscientist Abigail Marsh answers listener questions about the minds of extremely kind and generous people.If you enjoyed our conversation with Greg Walton, don't miss our companion conversation about the emotional tools we can use to help someone who's spiraling. You can listen to that episode with a free seven-day trial to our podcast subscription, Hidden Brain+. To sign up, go to support.hiddenbrain.org. Or if you're using an Apple device, you can go to apple.co/hiddenbrain. Thanks, and Happy New Year!Episode illustration by Getty Images for Unsplash+ Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In 1971, a 17-year-old girl won the Miss Black Tennessee Beauty Pageant.
It set in motion a chain of events that would transform not just her life,
but the lives of millions of other people.
Born into poverty to a teenage mother in rural Mississippi,
Oprah Winfrey had endured a difficult childhood.
She bounced between relatives, experienced abuse, and left home at 13.
The pageant became the first domino in a series of extraordinary events.
Her win caught the attention of WVOL, a local radio station.
It offered her a part-time news position.
At 19, Oprah became Nashville's first female African-American news anchor.
She then moved to Baltimore for television news and eventually to Chicago,
where she transformed a struggling morning show into the Oprah Winfrey show.
I'm Oprah Winfrey, and that's what we're talking about.
Then came a production company, a magazine, a book club, and eventually her own television network.
Oprah Winfrey became a billionaire, a household name.
For millions of people, she was the American dream made real.
Can you see how each opportunity created momentum for the next?
How each win opened doors that were previously closed.
As the saying goes, nothing succeeds like success.
But if good things can build on one another, if success can lead to more success,
can the same thing happen the other way around?
Can setback lead to setback, failure to failure?
Can one door that is close to you turn into an endless series of obstacles?
Perhaps you know people who have experienced such downward spirals.
Perhaps you have experienced this yourself.
The cost of downward spirals are felt most acutely by the people who experience them.
But all of us are made poorer by them.
How many operas do we not have today because some domino in the distant past took a spill in the wrong direction?
This week on Hidden Brain and in a companion story on Hidden Brain Plus,
we explore the psychology of downward spirals and how our minds can set us up for
failure or success.
It's the kick-off to a month-long series about the mental obstacles we face when we try
to achieve a goal or start a new chapter in our lives.
Perhaps you have a New Year's resolution for yourself.
Maybe you're struggling to keep your momentum on a work or personal project.
Whatever your goal, we're going to examine why we derail our best laid plans and how to stay on track.
When it rains, it pours.
One bad thing is often followed by another.
Your cat jumps up on the breakfast table and spills your coffee on your lap.
In a bad mood as you drive to work, you end up having a fender bender.
Stressed out and distracted, you now tune out during an important meeting,
which hurts your chances of getting that big promotion.
The world seems to be conspiring against you.
Sometimes, these downward spirals are just a bad day.
But other times, they can grow bigger, much bigger.
You can find yourself in a relationship that grows toxic or a job you hate.
Addiction, depression, and financial trouble can follow.
At Stanford University, Greg Walton studies the mental factors that set us up for failure
and wise psychological interventions that can turn us towards success.
Greg Walton, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for having me.
Greg, I want to start by talking about self-fulfilling prophecies.
When you were a kid growing up in Michigan,
you and your family would often go canoeing.
Now, I understand that you spent quite a bit of time in boats
and you were a fairly skilled paddler?
Yes, it was like one of the big family activities we did.
Almost every summer we would go on a lot of.
canoe trip often in far northern Ontario and on big rivers. It was something that I love to do
and I love to do as part of our family. I understand that you once took a canoe trip with your
father on the Sturgeon River. I don't think I have ever visited. What is this river like?
Yeah, so this is a story that he loves to tell because I am the one who am the victim of it.
this is a small river in the northern part of the lower peninsula of Michigan. It's a fast and
windy river, a small quick river. And the outfitter tells you when you're renting the canoes
from them that most people flip the boat on the river at one time or another. And the river is quick.
It turns quickly. There's lots of overhanging branches, lots of overhanging, lots of trees
that have fallen in the river that you have to dodge. The water goes through those rushes very fast. And if you hit them in
the wrong way, the boat can turn sideways and you can fill the boat. And there you are
having an unplanned swim. So the outfitter who was walking you through this described something
called sweepers. I'm not much of a paddler myself. Can you describe what a sweeper is, Greg?
Yeah. So if you imagine a river that's making a turn and the water is rushing through the outside
part of that turn, and then a tree is overhanging that outside part of the turn. So the branches
come all the way down to the water.
The river can sweep through very quickly, but the boat can't.
The boat will get caught in the branches.
So if you're in the main flow of the current and you're in that outside flow and you hit the tree,
then you are held up, but the water keeps going.
And that's a recipe for disaster.
So the outfitter has basically warned you about the river.
It has these sharp turns with these sweepers.
And your family is setting out.
I understand that you're in the boat with your.
our dad. And did you exchange any notes before you set out on this journey? Yeah, our goal was to avoid
the sweepers, right? So when we see the current sweeping around through the left side and these
branches hanging down, we're going to stay to the inside of those curves so that we don't get caught
in the branches. And as we went down the river, we saw boat after boat, you know, caught, caught in those
branches. And what happened? Did you get caught as well? We missed every sweeper. I felt very proud of
myself. I was 10 years old, and I felt like I was an accomplished canoeist.
So you're sitting at the front of the boat. Your dad is sitting at the back. You've made it through
most of these sweepers. You must be feeling pretty triumphant at this point. I'm feeling great.
And then we get to this little normal curve with no branches in sight, not even especially
fast water, and the boat is moving to the right, and I feel a little jostle to the left.
And the words of the outfitter came to my mind, 80% of people take an unplanned swim.
And so I kind of put those two parts together and I was like, we're going down.
I'm getting out of the way.
So I decided to jump out of the boat to get out of the way as the boat capsized.
And of course, that's what flipped the boat.
Wait, so now you're in the water.
Did your dad go in the water as well?
I'm in the water.
my dad's into water, our stuff is all floating downstream, my dad is sputtering at me, very upset.
We end up losing like a life jacket and a spare paddle.
We spend 45 minutes retrieving our stuff and drying out.
Everybody's laughing at me.
Years later, after Greg became a psychologist, it became clear to him what happened that day.
The problem was not the river.
The problem was inside his own.
head. So I had the idea planted in my mind that things were going to go wrong. And then I was
looking out for the moment when they might go wrong. And as soon as I saw that moment, I was like,
is going wrong? And I acted. And of course, the acting is what made it go wrong.
So this reminds me of that classic study by the great psychologist Daniel Wagner called
the White Bear Experiment. Describe what this study was, Greg. Yeah. But, um,
But Professor Wagner did was ask people not to think about a white bear and then write down
their thoughts in a kind of stream of consciousness, like what they're thinking about for several
minutes.
And he finds that almost everybody references a white bear, even though that's the one thing
that they're specifically not supposed to be thinking about, that the act of suppressing
it, trying to not think about it, actually calls it to mind.
I mean, even as we are talking right now, I feel like I can see a ton of white bears walking
across my mindscape right now. Exactly, right? Don't think about it. And then there it is. You can't
help but think about it. So sometimes the boat flips because the current is too strong or we're
not skilled enough, but sometimes our own minds can set us up for failure. Make the connection for me
between your story in the boat and the white bear study. Yeah. So I hear the message that most
people flip. And I could be trying to suppress that the whole time. We're not going to flip. We're not
going to flip. It's not going to happen to us. We're good. We're better canoeists than these other
people. I know the J-stroke. My father knows the J-stroke. We're not going to flip. But the very
active trying to suppress that thought keeps it active in your mind. It makes it available. It doesn't
mean that it's going to get acted upon. But then when the boat moved in a direction I didn't expect,
it became a way to understand that movement.
What's happening here?
Oh, we're about to flip like I was worried we might.
And then I take action and response.
And so I think often in life, the things that are preoccupying us,
the things that we might be trying to suppress are these negative contingencies,
the relationship that doesn't go the way that you want,
the test that doesn't go the way that you want,
the failure that might happen.
So in some ways what you're saying is that as we have these worries in our heads, our minds are preoccupied with these worries, but then we also become vulnerable to seeing evidence that the worry might actually be real when we look at evidence that might or might not actually be real.
Yeah. So it's like the worry is a kind of hypothesis, a kind of fearful hypothesis about how the world might be. It might be like this. Maybe this person doesn't really love me. Maybe I'm not.
not good at this. Maybe I don't belong here. And those are leading questions that we use to
interrogate our experience, that we read the world through the lens of. And I think it happens
to all of us. I think it happens all the time. And I think it's partly a consequence of our
kind of default response of trying to suppress these thoughts and not to contend with
them in an honest way.
When we come back, habits of mind that can set us on the path of downward spirals
and how we can pull ourselves out.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Sometimes, when we expect the worst, the worst is exactly what we get.
We tell ourselves a story, I'm not good enough, I'm not smart enough,
and then we go looking for evidence to back up our beliefs.
Sure enough, we find what we are looking for.
But self-fulfilling prophecies are not the only reason we get in our own way.
At Stanford University, psychologist Greg Walton says a number of factors can lead to downward spirals.
Greg, the psychologist Sandra Murray once ran a study that looked at how couples can get into relationship trouble.
The study had a very clever design. Can you describe it for me?
I can. Yeah, this is one of my favorite all-time studies.
So Sandra Murray brought couples into a lab. These are dating couples.
and she gave them a situation where she has them at separate desks in the same room,
and she asks them each to write about all of the things about their partner that they dislike.
And in the first condition, both people do this.
Both people write for 30 seconds or a minute or a minute and a half, both finish,
and then they're all done, and everybody's okay.
But in the second condition, one member of the couple is going through that task.
they're writing all the things that they don't like about their partner, but their partners
asked, unbeknownst to the first person, to do something different. The partners ask to list
all of the objects that are in their apartment or house. So imagine you're the first person.
You jot down a couple of annoyances you have with your partner, but your partner is writing
on and on as if one thought automatically leads to the next and you can't stop like this,
that, oh my God, it's like never going to end. Like what are they writing?
of course, because they're listing all the objects in their house, that list is going to go on
much, much longer than the first person's list, which is just describing the things that they dislike.
It's infinite, right? There's an infinite number of things, it seems your partner has a problem
with you about. What was the effect on the couples of doing this study, Greg?
So what Murray was interested in was how self-esteem functions in relationships. And so self-esteem
is like, how much do you like yourself? How good of a person do you think you are? How worthy do you think
you are. And lots of research shows that when people have lower self-esteem, they can wonder whether
they're truly admirable, whether their partner could truly respect them, truly, truly love
them. And so they have a kind of uncertainty about their partner's regard. And what Murray finds
is that for people who have low self-esteem who go through this situation, it triggers them in a
variety of ways. And they end up responding by kind of derogating their partner. They feel less
close to them, and they start to distance themselves from the partner. It's the start of a kind of
downward relationship spiral. So in other words, if you and I were a couple, and I see you
writing endlessly about me, and I think you're writing about all the reasons that you dislike me,
you're saying that if I have low self-esteem, I now react negatively towards you. I start to
derogate you and think less of you?
Yeah, it's a self-defense
mechanism. You're trying to protect yourself
by derogating this partner
who seems to be derogating you.
So low self-esteem can lead us
to come to conclusions about how others
perceive us, and this can have a negative effect
on the relationship itself.
I'm curious how this shows up in other domains.
You've studied a concept called
belonging uncertainty. What is belonging uncertainty, Greg?
Yeah, belonging uncertainty is a persistent worry or unsettledness about your belonging in an
important space, like a school space or a workspace. And all of us can have this kind of feeling.
All of us can wonder whether we belong in a new school environment, for example. But those
worries can be particularly pervasive and profound when we're going into a setting where your
group is underrepresented, where it hasn't been welcome in the past, where maybe there's a
history of exclusion or discrimination. So, for example, if you think about a woman going into a
male-dominated profession, if you think about a student of color going into a university
setting that hasn't historically welcomed large numbers of students of color, where it seems like
the institution is built for and of other people, other kinds of people, then it's very easy
to wonder, do I belong here? Could people like me belong here?
Hmm. So if I feel like I'm an outsider in my workplace or my school, does it make it easier for me to jump to conclusion? So if a co-worker forgets to copy me on an email, for example, is it possible that I then assume that they think I'm not important or not competent or not welcome?
Yeah. So it's a lot like the self-esteem study where there's an ambiguous event. In this case, you don't know what your partner is writing, but they seem to be writing on and on. You know, in a school setting, for example,
students might reach out to a professor and maybe they don't get a response from the
professor. Maybe they ask a question in class and they don't like how it's received. Maybe they
get a poor grade on an early assignment. Maybe they try to join a student group and the student
group doesn't want them there. Maybe friends in their dorm go out and don't invite them to that
social outing. So there's all sorts of events that happen on a daily basis in a school
environment, high school environment, a college environment, and also in work environments.
And people are reading those events from the perspective of the question, do people like me
belong here? And when that question is on the mind, it seems like every event might be further
evidence of a negative conclusion. So it's almost like there's a referendum taking place
on that anxiety in your mind. And you say, my coworker didn't copy me on this email or my
friends in my dorm didn't invite me out, that confirms my belief that, in fact, they don't want
me here. Yeah, and ironically, it's particularly powerful in settings that people value, right? So,
you go to a company, maybe you get a job at a company that you've long admired, that does
work that you think is really important, and you're so honored and proud to be part of that
company, but you're also worried about whether you and maybe people like you could belong there.
And then these cues kind of build up over time.
And every cue, you're reading from the perspective of, do I really belong here?
Do people like me really belong here?
Are you really going to be welcome and able to contribute and valued?
And when that's the lens that you're taking on all these daily events, it can feel like the evidence is building.
So in some ways, what we're doing is we are drawing.
drawing more meaning than we should from a very small amount of information. You've come up with a
shorthand for our tendency to overreact to minuscule pieces of information. You call it a tiff bit.
What is a tiff bit, Greg, and what's the origin of the phrase?
Yeah, the tiff bit is a tiny fact with a big theory. And my experience on the canoe, where the boat
shifted left, that was a tiny fact that I had a big theory about. But the phrase itself, it actually
was developed by my brother and me. It came from a story my brother had. He was a musician
for most of his 20s. He lived in New York City. And at one point, he started a relationship with
a woman. And the relationship seemed to be going very well. It was going on for some months.
And then after some time, they break up to his surprise, my brother's surprise. And he didn't
see this coming. And so they're having the breakup conversation. So my brother asks her,
you know, like what happened here? Like what, why is this? Why is this? Why is this?
going down this way. And she says, do you remember that time we went to Macy's? And my brother
remembers an uneventful trip to Macy's. He says, yeah, I remember we went to Macy's. And she said,
I had to tell you to tuck your shirt in. I can't be with you. She breaks up with him
because his shirt was not tucked in? Yeah, she breaks up with him because his shirt was not
And like, the question is, what does that represent for her? Like, what was the meaning that
that had for her about who he was, who she was, what their relationship was, what its trajectory
was? That was entirely a mystery. But, you know, we called that a tiff bit, a tiny fact,
a big theory. There's something tiny, but you have a big theory about it. And I don't want to
tell that story in a way that makes fun of the woman in the story. I want to tell that story because
I want to encourage all of us to attend to the circumstances where you or the people around you seem to be drawing a large meaning from something that's objectively small.
When we do that, it's a clue that there's something big under the surface, something big psychological, something big about who you are or who you can be or who another person is.
And if you can use that TIFBit to interrogate that and to understand that and to surface,
that question that's on the table, you're going to be able to function much more effectively.
So you had an experience in your own life, Greg, where you didn't interrogate your own TIFPIT.
I understand that you were in college and you came to a rather sweeping conclusion about a famous
fast food chain? Yeah, it wasn't really about the fast food chain so much as it's patrons.
So I was brought up in Michigan, and I went to college in California at Stanford.
And the first year of college and the first quarter at Stanford, somehow an in-and-out truck, a truck from the chain in-and-out, showed up on campus.
And there was this long line of students, and I assumed that they were all from Southern California, all in line, all eager to get a burger, all very happy.
And I look at these people as I'm coming back from class, and I think, I'm not standing in line for it.
burger, like, screw that, and I like march off to the dining hall and I eat my lunch alone.
And it took me many years to understand like what it was that was actually going through my mind
at that time. But what I came to understand was that I was just profoundly homesick. I was really
far from home. It felt like a really different place. These people from Southern California
seemed so different. I felt excluded from the burger party and I felt excluded from like,
the social scene, like maybe I didn't belong with these kinds of people. And I had no real
awareness of that at the time. I didn't understand that. I didn't understand that those feelings
of belonging uncertainty were normal, that everybody would experience them, that probably the people
from Southern California were having their own version of that experience too. And if I'd had
that awareness, I could have been much more effective. I could have gotten in line. I could ask some kid
maybe from Irvine, hey, like, what's in and out? And I'm sure,
he would have said, in and out, I love it and out. I went to in and out all the time. And you got to get it with animal style. And I'd say, what's animal style? And he'd tell me what animal style is. And I would have had a good interaction. And I would have felt connected to somebody who was different for me and coming from a different place. And that would have been a sort of belonging supportive experience. But I was unable to do that because I was unaware of my own feelings. And I was unaware of my own feelings. And I was unaware.
of how normal those feelings were.
So then I just kind of fled.
You know, what's striking here is that as you saw this long line of people at this burger
truck, I mean, this is completely innocuous.
Obviously, the people standing in line are not trying to exclude you from the school.
They're not thinking of you.
They're not even aware that you are there.
you are reading all of this into the fact that there's this long line of people,
and you don't know why there's this long line of people in front of the truck.
And as you point out, the tiny fact is magnified because it's tapping into your underlying doubts and insecurities.
And so in some ways, we are gathering a bunch of these tiny facts and then weave them into these larger stories.
So perhaps one day it's, you know, nobody's inviting me to the in-and-out burger truck.
The next day, it's something else.
Psychologists sometimes call this mental calcification.
What does this idea mean, Greg?
Yeah, so it's like when you go from a question to a belief to an almost axiom.
So there's a question of belonging.
Like, am I going to belong here?
Will people like me belong here?
Will I fit in with these people who are from this different background to a belief that I don't,
to the kind of axiomatic version of that belief?
And it's not just a mental calcification.
It's a calcification in behavior and in patterns of relationships.
So, you know, if I don't engage with the in-and-out truck and then I don't have a positive interaction,
if you magnify that across all the different spaces, for example, of a college experience,
I'm not having positive social interactions with peers.
I'm not having positive social interactions with professors.
I'm not engaging in the kinds of relationships that ultimately everybody needs to have a good experience in school
and to grow in school.
If you have a date and the date doesn't go well
and you think, I'm not lovable,
and then you take that mindset to your next date
and the next date goes terrible,
like you've built a pattern of relationships,
a pattern of interactions with other people
that gets fixed.
Almost like there's almost a,
sometimes I think about it with an analogy with pottery,
like with clay, clay is very malleable.
It's very malleable early on.
You can shape it this way.
You can shape it that way.
But when you fire it,
it gets fixed and it gets harder to change.
Why do you think we extrapolate so much from small facts, Greg?
Why is it that we have these small things happen to us?
And we know in the past and we know from the lives of the people around us.
We know when they exaggerate, you know,
we know when our friends or partners,
when they basically, you know, they dive off the deep end over something trivial.
And we can see that they are over-interpreting sometimes.
detail. It's much harder for us to see this in ourselves. Why do you think that is?
I mean, there's lots of small facts that we don't overinterpret. But the ones that we do over
interpret are the ones that are probing existential questions for a person. Like, can I belong
in college? Or can I build, like, you fail a math test and you think, I'm dumb at math. I'll
never be able to pursue my goal of going to medical school. These are existential questions.
They define the course of your life, like whether you're going to be able to be and do
who you want to be and do.
And so then that's when we're really attuned, when we're really paying attention.
That's when the small things seem to mean a lot.
I remember when I was in middle school or high school, I was doing badly at math.
And after a couple of tests where I did badly, the moment I encountered a problem that was
difficult on the next math test, my mind said, well, of course, you're not going to
to be able to solve this problem. You're not good at math. And in some ways, it's exactly the
same pattern that you're just describing. Yeah, exactly. But it's worth noting that things like
fixed mindset ideas about intelligence are literally taught in our culture. Like there's a whole
history, a whole sociocultural history of how the idea that there's this quality called
intelligence, that it differs very widely between different people, between different groups,
that it can be assessed with short tests, that it can be determinative of a person's life
Of course, this idea is deeply rooted within Western culture.
It's reflected in many institutional practices and many interpersonal practices, like
praise, like, oh, you're so smart.
And what that does is it sets people up for the kind of thought process that you're describing,
where when you encounter some challenge, when you encounter some difficulty, you don't think,
oh, like, I haven't got this yet, or maybe I need a different tact into this to understand this,
or how else can I approach this?
Instead, you think, my mind doesn't work that way.
I'm not able to do this, and you check out.
So at one level, you can call this self-sabotage,
but in some ways it's actually sadder than that
because the person is not trying to sabotage themselves.
They're trying, in fact, to fit in.
They want to fit in.
They want to do well at math.
They want to be a good parent.
They want to be healthy.
But in some ways, their minds are undermining what they want to do.
Yeah, their minds are undermining what they want to do.
and they're doing so often in a very reasonable way that comes from the social context itself.
So, like, in the canoe story, the canoe outfitter said, most people take an unplanned dip.
Like, that was actually, like, on their materials, right?
You have a student who goes to gifted and talented programs, a student who's praised their whole life,
that they're so smart, and then they have your experience in math, they get to seventh grade,
they get to eighth grade, they get to 12th grade, whatever it is,
and they counter something that's challenging, and they think, oh, maybe I don't have that
magic ingredient that seems to be necessary for somebody to do this.
Like, that idea was taught to people.
Or if you want to think about belonging in college, like, there is a very literal history
of racial, ethnic, and social class exclusion from higher education in this country.
And so if you're an African-American student, you're a Latino student, you're a first-generation
college student or you're a woman going into a male-dominated engineering field, for
example, it's very reasonable for you to ask, can people like me belong here? That's literally
coming from the context. So the mind is kind of mediating this, and it's kind of producing this
consequence, but it's coming from contexts that have a reality to them.
Sometimes a series of negative events is simply a coincidence, bad luck.
But when unpleasant experiences cascade into a whirlpool of negativity,
it might be because of unconscious thought patterns
that are deeply rooted in how we respond to stress and setback.
The good news is there are ways to interrupt these cycles.
When we come back, how to stop a downward spiral before it takes over your life.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Have you had the experience of being stuck in a downward spiral where one bad thing led to the next?
Have you found ways to pull yourself out of a negative spiral?
If you have a story, a question, or a comment that you would like to show,
share with the Hidden Brain audience, please record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us
at Feedback at Hiddenbrain.org. Use the subject line, failure. Again, that's Feedback at
Hiddenbrain.org. Often in life, we take a wrong turn without realizing it. It's easy to keep
walking that path and find ourselves lost in cycles of struggle, self-dive, and self-dive, and
and social isolation.
Psychologist Greg Walton is the author of Ordinary Magic,
the science of how we can achieve big change with small acts.
He has spent many years studying how wise interventions at crucial moments
can keep us from spiraling downward.
Greg, we talked earlier about belonging uncertainty
and how it can lead us to jump to negative conclusions that can confirm our fears.
One of your studies that has long been a favorite of mine
looked at a social belonging intervention
among college students who are members of a minority group.
Can you describe the challenge that you were trying to address
and the intervention that you designed?
Sure. So these were African-American students
attending a predominantly white selective university.
And what we did was to create an experience for the students
where we shared stories from a diversity of older students
about the experience of going to college
and the worries about belonging,
that come up in that experience.
So there were stories from white students
and Asian students and African-American students
and Latino students.
There were stories of academic struggles
and feeling like you were behind academically.
There were stories of being excluded from social events.
There were stories of having lots of friends,
but then maybe not having the close friends
that you really want.
And we told the participating students
who were in the first year of going to college
that they were experts in the transition to college.
And we wanted to know,
their thoughts about why belonging worries are common as students come to college and how they can get
better with time. And we wanted to share their advice with future students so that future students
could learn from them. And so we gave students the stories, then we gave them lots of space to tell
their own story, to describe why these worries about belonging are normal, how they've experienced
them, how they've changed over time. And the whole, the point of all of this was that the goal was
that then when students experienced those day-to-day challenges, when you got excluded from a social
event, when you just had a bad day, when maybe you got a disappointing mark on a test,
that you would be able to say, that was unfortunate, that was problematic. I didn't love that,
but it doesn't have to mean I don't belong in general in school. It doesn't have to mean
that people like me don't belong in general in school. That's the kind of thing that you go through
as you go to college. So in some ways, by putting the students in the role of advisors,
where they're basically potentially advising future students who come to the college.
And they're basically saying, look, you know, I experienced these setbacks in my first few months
of being a freshman in college, but it turned out that they were transient.
What you're doing is you're helping the students themselves see that many of these setbacks,
in fact, are transient, that they should not be drawing sweeping conclusions from small amounts of data.
Yeah, like when I went to college and I had the in-and-out experience and I felt homesick,
I had no idea that maybe the kid from Irvine, too, might be worried about their belonging.
Like, I was just all caught up in my head. And the whole process of the transition to college was all
about the excitement of going to college. It was all about the opportunities of college.
It was all about what an awesome institution it was. There was no allowance for the fact that this is
kind of our modern coming of age ritual, that you would have experiences of homesickness,
that you would have times that you don't feel so great. You would have times,
you don't feel so connected. There is no allowance that that was normal and that was okay
and that that could get better over time. And it's really important to talk about that and to
say that and to say that in lots of different ways and have lots of different people say that
so that everybody knows when they're going through their own personal journey of that process,
that they know that that's normal and that's part of the process and that they can work
through that. It doesn't become a TIFBIT.
What was the effect on the students of this intervention, Greg?
Well, the first thing we did is we looked at their daily diary responses over the next week.
We asked them every day what good or bad things happened to them.
And we also asked them how much they felt like they belonged in school.
And what we found is that the intervention didn't change the kinds of daily experiences that students had,
but it prevented bad days from having bad meanings.
So when African-American students had a worse day over the course of a week,
with the belonging intervention, they maintained a sense of belonging.
Their sense of belonging didn't drop over that period.
And then we found that it translated into behavior.
They were emailing professors more, going to office hours more.
They were actually studying more every night.
And then we found that it shifted their grades.
So their grades got better over time.
We tracked students' grades through the end of college
and found that the intervention actually reduced the black-white achievement gap
by 50% over that three-year period.
And the effect was largest senior year.
where there is a reduction of 80%.
And then there were lots of downstream outcomes that were important.
People were happier.
They were healthier.
They're going to the doctor less.
And there were benefits that emerged even in adult life.
At the average age of 27, people reported higher levels of life satisfaction,
higher levels of career success.
And they reported greater embeddedness in social networks and important relationships.
Like they were more likely to have mentors.
And those mentors had supported.
those changes over time. That's what we call an upward spiral. So it started with the psychology.
How do you make sense of this little daily event? It then transfers into a behavior. Okay,
that event was bad, but it doesn't mean I have to, I don't belong here in general. I'm going to
go join a different club. I'm going to go talk to that professor again. And then you have a
relationship where you start to have a community and you have a relationship in a community and
that becomes really consequential.
So there's another kind of wise intervention that you call reframing, and there's a story you used to read to your daughter Lucy called One Morning in Maine.
Tell me the plot of One Morning in Maine and how it relates to this idea of reframing.
Yeah, One Morning in Maine is the classic story from Robert McCloskey, and it's a story of Sal, who's a young child, and she is very eager to go with her father to Buck's Harbor for the day, but she wakes up with a loose tooth.
And so she wails to her mama, mama, mama, I have a loose tooth. I have a loose tooth. I'm not going to be able to go to Buck's Harbor with daddy. And her mother then reframes it. She says, oh, when you have a loose tooth, that's when you've become a big girl. And the whole first half of the book or maybe two-thirds of the book is about Sal kind of playing with that idea. So she thinks she asks her mother, did you have a loose tooth when you were a little girl?
And her mother says yes.
She asks, does baby sisters, Jane's, or her tooth, will she have loose teeth too?
And her mother says, not for a long time.
She's still a baby now.
And then she goes to walk on the beach and she wonders whether the birds have loose teeth,
whether the seal has loose teeth.
And she gets to her father who's digging clams.
And she proclaims, I have a loose tooth.
I'm becoming a big girl.
And her father affirms that interpretation of the event.
And then in the sense, the denouement of the story is going to Bucks Harbor and having a great day with her father.
So one morning before school, your daughter, Lucy, sprained her ankle, and she was wailing and didn't want to go to school.
I understand that you thought of one morning in Maine as you tried to reframe the situation.
Yeah.
I mean, we said everybody gets a sprained ankle, and it's not going to be a permanent disability.
and it's definitely not a reason not to go to school.
I told her stories of my own sprained ankles.
My wife, Lisa, told stories of her sprained ankles.
And we helped her to see that it was normal.
It was part of being human.
And it didn't have to mean anything big.
It didn't have to mean that you couldn't engage in the activities
and participate in the spaces that you want to participate in.
So in some ways, I think what this is doing is it's asking people to reconsider the possibility
that the setbacks that they're experiencing
are just setbacks and not catastrophes?
Yeah, so all the time, I think,
that we have these challenges that we face.
And when we have a question that's on our mind,
those challenges can become catastrophes.
So you're struggling with a baby,
your baby is colicky,
and you're wondering,
am I going to be a good parent?
And it seems like everything you do
with this colicky baby is not helpful.
maybe makes them cry even more, and it seems to confirm in your mind this fear that you might
be a bad parent. And that fear is just as toxic as the thought, like, maybe I'm a bad kid,
is to a kid.
One of the other wise interventions you talk about is the power of surfacing emotions. I understand
that you were once visiting a museum in San Jose with your son Oliver.
when you had an opportunity to demonstrate this wise intervention.
Tell me the story of what happened.
Yeah, it was, the museum was tech interactive,
and we had gone through the whole museum.
It's a great place, and we had just left,
but Oliver was looking at an exhibit just inside the doorway.
So the rest of us had just walked outside of the door,
and he was still inside looking at this exhibit,
and we were waiting for him.
And then he burst out, and the tears were streaming down his face,
and he was crying, and I picked him up, and I hugged him, and then I thought of this word
surfacing. I thought to just try to say what it was that I thought he was feeling. So I said,
you were scared, you'd be left behind, right? And I could feel him, he nodded, and then I could
just feel his body start to relax. It was a way to kind of put the question on the table to say,
I see the worry that you have. It's a reasonable worry.
worry. And now that we both see it, we can start to let it go.
We talked earlier about how negative spirals can become entrenched in our thinking.
We develop fears about ourselves and then consciously or maybe unconsciously seek out evidence
that confirms those fears. These spirals then become false stories that we tell ourselves.
You found that having a strong personal narrative can serve as a powerful antidote to this pattern.
You have a family story involving your grandmother that gives you a sense of identity.
What is this story, Greg?
Yeah, my grandmother is someone, this is my father's mother who is very close with.
Her name is Vendla.
And in retirement in Tucson, Arizona, she wrote and self-published a couple of books,
like memoirs of her life, which was quite extraordinary.
And she tells the story of how when she was 13 years old, in 1922,
she moved with her family from Minnesota to Arizona in a Model T. Ford,
how they camped along the way, how they fixed blowouts on the tire,
how they homesteaded in eastern Arizona, how they joined the ranching community there.
She went to high school, a boarding school in Los Angeles, and then to college and became a teacher, how she taught in one room schoolhouses in Sedona and elsewhere in Arizona, how she met and fell in love with my grandfather, how they settled in Kansas and fought through the dust storms of the Great Depression.
It's stories of strength and agency and grit.
It's stories of goodness and community and support and neighborliness.
And there are stories that she wrote down in these memoirs.
And then there are also stories that she told to me personally.
And there are stories that are like built into the environment.
So in that old homestead land in Arizona, she as a gift and my grandfather received a small amount of land from the old family ranch.
And they hand-built a cabin out of Adobe.
It's a cabin with no electricity, no running water.
But it's become a place of family virtue.
treats and family gatherings, and to me, it represents that strength and that agency and that
identity that she has.
Can you talk about how you once had a tough time in college and on Thanksgiving break you
went to visit your grandmother in Tucson?
What happened during that holiday, Greg?
Yeah, I mean, college was, you know, discombobulating for me.
It felt very far from home, very detached.
And so there were several times I took the chance to,
instead of going all the way home to Michigan,
to go to Arizona and spend time with her in her retirement home,
I would sleep on her, pull out sofa.
And she would tell me stories of her experiences
when she was my age,
stories from when she was a boarding school student,
and stories from the cabin.
And it was a way to reconnect with those,
identities. I could see her story and I could see her agency as she took on the challenges
as she lived through the Great Depression. And as a young person hearing those stories, I couldn't
help but hear them from the perspective of the challenges that I faced. And to think that's how
she did it, how could I do it? What's the way that I could do it? How can I be persistent? How can I be
kind. How can I reflect those values that are family values? They're not just her values. They're not
just my values. There are our values. They're who we are and who we want to be. Here's how she did it.
How is it that I could do it? Times have changed. We're not building, you know, complicated train
ticket arrangements to get from Kansas to the East Coast anymore. We have airplanes. We have different
affordances. But what are the values that are guiding us and how can we use those to navigate our lives today?
In addition to the techniques we've discussed today,
there's a set of emotional tools that can make a profound difference in helping someone who's spiraling.
We talk with Greg about these tools in our companion episode, exclusively on Hidden Brain Plus.
If you're a parent or a teacher, or perhaps have a friend or partner caught in a negative thought spiral,
you'll definitely want to check it out.
If you're already a subscriber to Hidden Brain Plus,
that episode is available right now in this podcast feed.
It's titled The Best Version of You.
If you're not yet subscribed, please go to support.hiddenbrain.org.
If you're using an Apple device, go to apple.com slash hidden brain.
You can get a free seven-day trial in both places.
Again, that's support.
com.hiddenbrain.org or apple.com slash hidden brain.
Brain.
Greg Walton is a psychologist at Stanford University.
He's the author of Ordinary Magic, the science of how we can achieve big change with
small acts.
Greg, I wanted you to come on the show for many years now.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you very much, Shankar.
I really appreciate it.
It's been a wonderful conversation.
Have you had the experience of being stuck in a downward spiral where one bad thing led to the next?
Have you found ways to pull yourself out of a negative spiral?
If you have a personal story or a question or comment that you would like to share with the Hidden Brain audience,
please record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us at Feedback at Hiddenbrain.org.
Use the subject line, failure.
Again, that's feedback at hiddenbrain.org.
When we come back, your questions answered.
Listeners share incredible stories of kindness
and researcher Abigail Marsh returns to the show
to answer your questions about her work on extreme altruism.
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant.
When I went to journalism school, many years ago now, I noticed a certain bias in myself and many of my classmates.
We wanted to do hard-hitting work, investigations.
Some of us were keen to go to war zones and report from the front lines of conflict.
All of us lived in dread of being relegated to so-called puff pieces.
A lot of stories fell into the puffpiece purgatory.
Stories about cute animals.
Stories about insignificant local events.
Stories featuring do-gooders and happy endings.
It's this last category that will be the focus of the rest of today's show.
One thing I've learned since going to journalism school
is that do-gooders and happy endings actually make for great stories.
People who are extremely kind and generous can, in fact, be as fascinating as people who are extremely bad.
And in a time when so much of the news is disturbing,
these stories remind us that kindness and decency are also to be found everywhere.
We talked about the heroes who walk amongst us recently with Abigail Marsh.
She's a psychologist and neuroscientist at Georgetown University, and she studies extreme altruists.
If you missed our first conversation with her, you can find it in this podcast feed.
It's the episode titled Radical Kindness.
Abigail Marsh joins us again for our latest installment of our segment, Your Questions Answered.
Abigail Marsh, welcome back to Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for having me back.
Abby, one of the groups of extreme altruists that you studied in your research
are people who decide to donate a kidney to a stranger.
And I'd like to start with a message we received after our episode aired.
It comes from listener Lucia Lloyd.
I really like the things that the episode was saying about how we all want to become more altruistic.
And I was particularly affected by the person who,
said that he believed that God put us on this earth to help people and wanted to do what God
wanted in helping other people. And I thought that's what I believe too. And maybe the obvious answer
to how can I be more like the people who donate their kidney to a stranger is for me to donate my
kidney to a stranger. So I got online and started looking for how I could donate my kidney to a stranger. So I got online
and started looking for how I could donate my kidney where I live and this morning made an appointment
with my doctor to get the blood test that are required to find out my blood type and have a record
of that. And so I am already getting started on the process. And it's too soon to know whether I will
be accepted to the program, but I hope so. And I wanted to let you know what a positive impact
this has had on my life in motivating me, who had never considered donating a kidney before
to go ahead and get started in the donation process, and that I might very easily be ending
up to save somebody's life because of your episode.
So that's an incredible story, Abby. I had tears in my eyes when I listened to Lucia's message.
I hope she's able to move forward with her donation, and Lucia, please keep us posted if you do.
Abby, in your work studying kidney donors, you talked with a woman who was the first known case
of what is known as a non-directed donation.
What is a non-directed donation, and who was this woman, Abby?
First of all, I just want to take a moment to thank Lucia for calling in and telling us her story,
and I'm incredibly moved and touched to hear about the effect that hearing about kidney donations had on her.
Going back to the very first person that we know of who for sure wanted to donate a kidney to a stranger, her name was Sanyana Graff, or I should say her name is Sanyana Graf. She's still alive.
And she had a very unusual story because unlike most of the altruistic kidney donors that I have worked with, whose decisions in part were a response to finding out about somebody else donating, which I think,
illustrates the incredible ripple effects that altruism has.
She decided to donate, having never known anybody who had done it before.
She simply knew that there was a need for kidneys, that it was possible to donate to somebody
who was unrelated to you, and she was a mom and a Buddhist religious leader at the time
who didn't have a lot of extra time or a lot of extra money to donate.
And she thought, you know, I'm somebody who believes helping is an incredibly important part.
of a good life. This is a way that I can help. And to her great credit, she was very persistent
in tracking down a transplant facility that would actually do the transplant because at the time
most transplant facilities actually refused to let people donate a kidney to a stranger.
So most people are much less generous towards strangers than they are toward close friends
and family. And this is a bias that's known as social discounting. But people who engage in
extraordinary real-world altruism, like the altruistic kidney donors we've been talking about,
showed dramatically reduced social discounting. In your research, you explored various
explanations for reduced social discounting among these altruists. What explanation did you rule out,
and which one did you settle on, Abby? So in our initial research with altruistic kidney donors,
we discovered that they are, unlike most people, very generous to people who they don't
well who are very different from themselves, who were even strangers. And that makes sense.
If you're willing to give a kidney to a stranger, it makes sense that you don't discount the
welfare of very distant others more. The question is why. And I will say there's a lot we still
don't understand about why this happens, but there seem to be a couple things in mind.
First, at the most sort of simple mechanistic level, it's clear that altruistic kidney donors
genuinely place more value on the welfare of other people, all other people, and that the value that
they place on others' welfare just doesn't drop off as those people become more socially distant from
them, meaning they genuinely believe that what happens to other people matters, regardless of who
those other people are. It's possible that you could get an effect like that from people getting
better and better at overriding the desire to be selfish as the desire to be selfish grows. And so maybe
it could be the case that altruistic kidney donors are just very good at overriding the bias to be
selfish when it comes to sharing with strangers. But the brain imaging research we did showed no
evidence of that at all. When we asked altruistic kidney donors and typical adults to make decisions
whether to be selfish or to share with increasingly distant others during fMRI brain scanning,
we found no evidence of activation in any of the brain regions that are associated with overcoming internal biases, including the bias to be selfish.
Instead, we found patterns of activation in regions like the amygdala and the rostral anterior anterior cingulate cortex that mapped on to the value that the altruists were placing on increasingly distant strangers welfare.
Lucia mentioned in her message to us that she believes that God put us on earth to help other people.
This brings us to a question that many people raised.
Here's a message we received from listener Bob Dean.
Hello, my name is Father Bob Dean from Holy Family Church in Duxbury, Massachusetts.
And I'm calling to ask the question, is there any correlation between religiosity and one's altruism?
What do you think, Abby?
The relationship between religiosity and altruism is complex.
There's no question that most major.
religious faiths place a lot of value on helping strangers with the parable of the Good Samaritan
potentially being the most obvious example. Jesus makes it extremely clear in his teachings
that all of us have the obligation to care for our neighbor and that neighbor could be anybody
including people from groups that we traditionally don't like or even in conflict with.
And many other religions have very similar teachings. Buddhism is one, Judaism, Islam, etc. However,
However, if you look at altruistic behavior across groups of people, you don't see as strong a relationship as you might expect between either religiosity and altruism or a specific religious faith and engaging in altruistic behaviors, with some exceptions.
So, for example, in a faith like Islam where there are certain times of year, where giving to others is sort of the tradition during that time period, you absolutely see big increases in giving.
But over the course of the year, the differences are not that huge.
And to the degree that any community creates a division between those who are like us and those
who are not like us, that can actually suppress altruism and generosity.
And so, unfortunately, there is a tendency in some religious communities, and this applies
to many faiths, to make it clear that the people whose outcomes really,
matter are the people who follow the same beliefs and traditions we do, and people who don't
don't matter. And so that actually suppresses altruism. And so I think there's a lot of sort of competing
forces that play into that relationship. My sense is to the degree that your specific religious
views are consistent with the idea that there is inherent goodness in people and that the average
person is worth helping, even if you don't know much about them, then that could create a relationship
between religiosity and altruism.
One of the messages that you shared with our audience in our initial conversation
is that we can all train ourselves to be more altruistic.
A listener named Susie had a question that touches on whether the opposite might also be true.
Here, Susie.
I was in a situation working as a nurse driving home at 3.30 in the morning
and found a woman in the middle of the road, February,
in Denver, Colorado, freezing outside, naked, beaten, and bloody, pulled over, helped her
to the side of the road, wrapped her in a warm sleeping bag I had in my car, waited for the ambulance.
I was 27 at the time when that happened.
Now I'm 60, and I wonder if your migula changes over time.
Does the size change?
Does experience change that response?
Not saying I wouldn't do the same thing today,
just wondering if life experience, exposure to fear,
changes your reaction over time.
Thank you.
So Abby, Susie referenced the part of the brain known as the amygdala.
In our earlier conversation,
we talked about your research finding
that people who are unusually caring,
and highly altruistic, have larger amygdala's on average,
and this might be why they are better able to recognize the distress of other people.
What do you think of Susie's question?
Can experiencing fear make you more risk-averse?
Interestingly, no.
There is really cool data, especially from the pandemic,
that states of acute stress seem to make people even more likely to help others,
which I think is sort of a really wonderful moral,
Because I do think compelling works of fiction, like for example, the Lord of the Flies, paint a picture of people just sort of teetering on the brink of civility. And the moment things start to go south and we're all experiencing a lot of fear and stress, we're going to turn on each other. But the reality doesn't seem to bear that out. In fact, there has been a case study of a real Lord of the Flies situation in which a group of boys, I think from Australia, but it was certainly somewhere in the same.
South Pacific were cast away, lost on a deserted island. And what actually happened in that
situation is they formed a little mini civilization. They took care of each other. They collectively
found out ways to get food. And they 100% supported one another until help came for them.
And so that's much more similar to what we see in many other real world situations in which
groups are under threat is it seems to create a powerful incentive to band together and support one
another, not universally, right? And I study the full spectrum of what I call the caring continuum
from people who are unusually generous on the one end to people who are unusually callous
and even psychopathic on the others. There are always going to be exceptions and people who
will take advantage of and exploit people in situations of danger or stress, but that luckily
is not the norm. As to Susie's other question about whether people change over time in response
to life experiences, absolutely. Our life experiences 100% change us. In particular,
if we've had experiences of stress or fear in which we have been unable to help ourselves,
in which, you know, we feel less self-afficacy as a result, you know, we've been helpless in those
situations. This is sort of speculating based on a number of lines of evidence, but that might
cause people to be less likely to want to pitch in when other people are in danger. But in
general, when people are in traumatic situations and they pull through, they, they, they
come out the other side and they actually were able to survive and they were able to
withstand more danger and stress than they would have imagined, it increases their sense
of self-efficacy and it actually makes them more likely to help others in the future.
When we come back, how culture affects our likelihood to be generous, particularly with
regard to strangers. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedant.
Kindness is contagious. Pass it on. You've probably heard that phrase. It's the kind of sentiment
you might see on a bumper sticker while in traffic or on a poster in your kids' classroom.
But is it true? When we witness kind and generous behavior, does it actually
make us more inclined to be kind and generous ourselves?
As you think about that question, listen to the story we received from listener Adam.
He tells about the day his daughter had just had open heart surgery.
Adam was on his way home to take care of the family cats while his wife stayed with their daughter.
He was driving down Interstate 95 when he hit a pothole and got a flat tire.
Here's Adam with the rest of the story.
I started to attempt to remove the nuts from the tire only to find that the short wrench I was given with the car was not capable of cracking the nut.
I tried and tried, and as I was trying, it suddenly started to rain.
That was the final straw for me.
I snapped and I had a meltdown in the middle of this highway, regardless of the danger I was in with the car speeding by me at very high speeds.
I must have been a sight because I was jumping up and down and yelling at my car.
within the next minute a white truck pulled up behind me a gentleman got out of the truck who reminded me a lot of the basketball player dennis rodman he was covered in tattoos multiple piercings and bright orange hair he said it looks like you could use some help that is when i unloaded on him about how my daughter had just had open heart surgery and i just wanted to get home and take care of the animals and then all of this happened he told me to take a breath and he came over
and tried to help me crack the nut.
He realized that the wrench was too short as well,
and that's when he said,
this looks like a job for Betty.
I looked at him and I asked, who's Betty?
He replied,
Betty is my pipe wrench.
Betty proceeded to remove that stubborn nut with no problem at all.
When we finished, I started thanking him profusely,
and he only shook his head and waved his hand to dismiss me.
And as he walked away, he said,
your daughter is going to be okay.
Just keep it together.
She's going to need you.
I'll never forget that act of kindness and bravery.
I wish I knew this man's name so I could thank him properly.
The best I can do now is thank Betty for her strength and determination.
So Abby, we feature stories like this every week on our sister podcast, My Unsung Hero.
So we know anecdotally from listeners that they find these stories to be very uplifting and very moving.
but do we know from a scientific and neurological perspective about how stories like this affect us?
Absolutely.
And that is one of the best stories I've ever heard.
Oh, my gosh.
I just wish I had been able to see it myself.
And I really appreciate Adam calling to tell us about what happened to him.
And it really resonates with me because of the experience I had when I was younger being rescued from a highway accident by a stranger
who's opening words to me were also what looks like you could use some help. It really takes me
back. So what we know scientifically about this kind of experience is that they have a number of
positive effects. One of them is gratitude, right? If you experience gratitude after somebody
having helped you, that absolutely increases your likelihood of behaving prosocially in the future.
It also can result in a state called moral elevation, which is exactly what it sounds like.
it's the sense of sort of kind of positive energy and inspiration by the moral good deeds of another
person that also has been linked to increase pro-social behavior.
And finally, every time you experience or even just see somebody do something kind for another
person, it changes your sense of what the social norms are, right?
That somebody would do that makes you think, oh, this is something that people do.
And perceptions of what our social norms are in the societies we live in,
are one of the best predictors we have of every kind of behavior, including pro-social behavior.
One of the things that you have noticed in your conversations with extreme altruists
is that they don't have a sort of justice system that many of us do as we are walking around.
So many of us, I think, evaluate people and ask, you know, is this a good person?
Is this a bad person?
And we sort of meet out our generosity and compassion based on our judgments of these people.
You found that extraordinary altruists often believe that others deserve help regardless of their moral shortcomings.
Can you talk about this idea, Abby?
Absolutely. When we've interviewed both altruistic kidney donors and controls about decisions to donate, people who are not altruistic kidney donors, when we ask why they haven't made a decision to donate to a stranger, knowing that there are people out there whose lives would be saved by the donation of a kidney, they are.
often we'll talk about things like being afraid of surgery or, you know, not having the time
in their lives. But another thing that comes up a lot is that they're worried that the person
on the other end of the donation might not be a good person, might not be a person who really
deserves a kidney from a stranger. And A, that never comes up among the altruistic kidney donors
that we've worked with. They never say, well, I was a little worried that the person who got
my kidney wasn't going to be a good person. And in fact, when we probe them on this top
We ask, well, were you ever worried about who might get your kidney?
The general consensus is that there's nobody who is so bad that they don't deserve to live,
or who are they to decide whether somebody is a good person or a bad person,
which I think is in keeping with their overall humility,
which is one of the qualities we found very altruistic people share.
They don't believe themselves to be in the position of determining who is such a bad person
that they don't deserve to live.
We talk a lot on Hidden Brain about social norms and how they shape who we are and how we behave.
Here's a message we received from listener Anna, who says she comes from an extremely altruistic family.
So first of all, my entire life, my family has gone out of their way, my mom and my sister, my brother and I, to help other people,
whether that be pulling over to help strangers jump their car or the time that I took home a girl that I found crying outside of a bar.
And then I live in New Orleans, Louisiana, which is full of altruistic people.
And I'm not sure if it's because of, you know, the disasters that have happened here.
Like Katrina, of course, but more recently Ida, where the city really had to depend on each other and work together.
But all the time, I see people helping strangers.
And when I listen to your podcast about altruistic people, and it just kind of blew my mind that not everyone is this way.
So I wonder if it is because of my amygdala.
Maybe I come from a long line of big amygdalas.
Anyway, I love your podcast.
Thank you.
I have to say that the big amygdala sounds like a great name for a rock band, Abby.
So Anna's message raises lots of questions about nature versus nurture
and the role that other people play in shaping our behavior.
What is the science have to say about the extent to which altruistic behavior?
is shaped by the behavior and norms of the people around us?
Or is it all about just coming from a family of big amygdala?
I wish we had better data to answer this question, but we do have a little bit.
First of all, we know that in general,
personality traits are shaped by both our genetics and our environments.
There was a huge study published in Nature Review genetics several years ago
that looked at all human personality traits and all human other biomedical traits.
and when it came to personality traits, on average, they were shaped about half by genes and about
half by environmental forces. And, you know, that's really not that surprising. That's certainly
what we see for traits at the other end of the carrying spectrum. So people who were psychopathic
or children who were very callous, we see that about half of that variation is also accounted
for by genetics and the other by environmental forces. So to the best of our knowledge, that's probably
also true for being very altruistic. The size of the amygdala, interestingly, is also about
50% accounted for by genetic factors. So variation across people's amygdala is about half genetic.
So if you come from a family of very altruistic people, you probably did get some altruistic genes
from them. However, it's very hard to tease that apart from the fact that you were also raised
in an environment where you probably observe people helping others a lot and it would change your
perception of social norms. You had many opportunities to help people.
and discover how reinforcing that is.
And so if you don't have opportunities
to help other people early in life
and learn all the rewards that come from helping other people,
that kind of behavior and that kind of motivation
will become as ingrained
as if you do have those kinds of opportunities.
I'd like to talk about historical patterns
and how our attitudes about generosity and kindness,
particularly to what strangers have evolved.
Here's a message we received about that
from a listener named Deborah.
I am a baby boomer.
My generation, we saw the expansion of civil rights and international human rights.
The incredible help that the U.S. gave to our former enemies, Japan and Germany, after World War II.
The expansion of non-profits and philanthropy, legal advocacy for all kinds of.
of people and problems and animal rights and even the rights of plants and the environment,
altruism towards our planet in a general way.
So Deborah goes on to say that she thinks that there has been a reversal of this trend
in the United States.
Is there evidence that groups can become more or less kind over time, Abby?
Certainly.
there are definitely generational differences generally not as big as people think it's very hard to tease apart what are called you know cohort differences so a particular group of people is different across their whole lifespan from age related differences right and we do know that people become more altruistic and generous in middle age relative to when they are younger and that's pretty consistent and so partly what may seem like an effect of the boomer generation being altruistic and generous is the fact that the
they are currently late middle age, let's say, which is in general, especially when people are
remaining good health, an unusually altruistic point in the lifespan. The thing that does
concern me is that we are seeing declining levels of interpersonal trust, generalized trust,
again, a belief in the trustworthiness of people in general across cohorts in the United States
with a current group of 20-somethings having the lowest levels of interpersonal trust that have been
recorded, I believe, in the last multiple decades. Now, interestingly, the boomers were not the
most trusting generation. The generations before them had even higher levels of interpersonal trust,
but the levels do seem to be going down. And people have been debating, you know, why this is,
obviously. It's an issue of a huge amount of concern because having trust in the other people
around you is the basis of a good society without question. I should also mention one other
paper that I absolutely love that was published in nature, I believe, two years ago, called
the illusion of moral decline. This is a universal all around the world cohort-wide perception
that things are worse now than they were when we personally were young. Everybody believes
that this is true. It doesn't matter what the actual data show. It seems to be completely untethered
to actual trends. And the reasons are probably due to basic cognitive biases, right? There
are certain kinds of memories that stick easily in minds. We as people were different when we were
young, right? We have different brains that cause different kinds of memories to stick, including
really positive memories from our childhood. It's why we all tend to think that the music and the
movies that came out when we personally were 14 or 15 years old are the best. Were they the best?
Maybe, maybe not. But they were the best to us because of who we were. And so people everywhere
all around the world of every age believe that people are worse now, that.
that morals had declined relative to when they were young.
And so it's possible that Deborah's perception
is really just related to a much broader sort of cognitive tendency
that people have.
When we come back, extreme altruism versus people-pleasing.
We explore the limits of generous behavior
and ways to become more altruistic
without being taken advantage off by other people.
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
All of us know people in our lives who are going to try and take as much as they can get from us.
Give them an inch and they'll take a mile as the saying goes.
When you're naturally kind-hearted,
and generous, it's easy to get taken advantage of.
And each time we get exploited, we might add a brick to the walls we slowly build around
ourselves.
We say that salespeople cannot be trusted because we once got burned buying a car.
We meet a jerk on a dating app and tell ourselves that love is for suckers.
We have one bad experience with a boss and come to believe that all bosses are charlatans.
Brick by brick, our walls grow bigger.
and taller.
While this response might be natural, it pretty much guarantees future unhappiness.
So how can we remain open-hearted and generous with the people around us
while protecting ourselves from the few who would do us harm?
Psychologist and neuroscientist Abigail Marsh studies altruism at Georgetown University.
She's the author of The Fear Factor, how one emotion connects altruists,
psychopaths, and everyone in between.
Abby, I'd like to play you a message we received
from a listener named Francisco.
I wanted to tell the story of my neighbor.
Her name is Janice.
She's probably close to her 70s,
but she's the most active person I know.
She's a bricklayer by trade,
and she works in construction.
And she is the most generous person I know.
She uses her time, spare or not, to make sure everyone's lawn is moaned on a regular basis.
She pulls out trash cans for pretty much every neighbor in our street.
She keeps checking on you and is always offering to help.
And I always tell her she's the best thing that came with our house.
At this point, she's pretty much become a member of her family
and we'll be eternally grateful for her generosity.
So Abby, Janice is clearly extraordinary,
but is it possible that unscrupulous people
might take advantage of her generosity?
Have you heard stories of extreme altruists being exploited by other people?
Not as many as you might imagine.
I've heard a few.
There have been a couple instances where people who do, right,
because if you are more altruistic, you do tend to have a generally more positive view of
human nature and an assumption that most other people are trustworthy. And when you start out
trusting people, sometimes other people are going to exploit your trust. But interestingly,
it doesn't seem to be that very altruistic people are less sensitive to being exploited by other
people. And they're just as likely to respond by withdrawing trust from that person or even
retaliating in socially acceptable ways, it's not like their pushovers or dormats. And I think
that that's a really important distinction to draw. And some of the very altruistic people I've
worked with have worked for law enforcement. They've, you know, been decorated military veterans.
They're often very tough people. They work in business. They're positions, you know,
where they really have to understand human nature accurately. But I think the difference is the
lessons they draw from individual instances of exploitation. If you have a tendency towards cynicism or
anxiety, you might be too quick to learn from one instance of somebody exploiting you or maybe just
not reciprocating your generosity that, oh, you can't trust people as a rule. And I think it's
generally a good thing not to be too quick to learn that. Because yes, look, there are exploitative
people out there. There's no question about it. In my work, we find that, you know, a couple
percent of the population has clinical levels of psychopathy. And unfortunately, the reason
psychopathy is so hard to detect is because people with these traits tend to mask. They
tend to act like really, really nice people so that you don't know who they are. And that can
lead some people to feel just generally anxious and untrustworthy around people as a rule.
However, not being a trusting person, we know from decades of research on paradigms like the
prisoner's dilemma. If you're unwilling to extend trust to other people, in general, you
find you lose in the long term because you have fewer opportunities to cooperate and expand
the pie. One of the questions we received from several listeners is how we can recognize the
boundary between healthy generosity and unhealthy people-pleasing. Here's listener Montserra.
I am one of those people who cannot say no and always helps everyone. And I have let people walk
all over me several times. Until now, I always thought that I was just a good person and it did not
bother me much when someone took advantage of my generosity. I basically like myself like that.
Lately, though, the discourse has changed and people pleasers like me are analyzed as having some
kind of codependency or lack of healthy self-esteem due to some childhood trauma or circumstance.
Being too good a person has become a sort of pathological condition.
I think my self-esteem is healthy now,
although I recognize that I did have a lack of self-esteem when I was younger.
So, Abby, the idea of boundaries and how to set healthy boundaries for yourself
is something that's in the zeitgeist a lot these days.
How can people show generosity to others while maintaining the boundaries
that keep them from being exploited?
Great questions.
First of all, this does have a bit of the ring of TikTok and Instagram psychology, which is the scourge of all academic psychologists these days.
It's just so hard to stamp out all the bad memes out there.
And, you know, unfortunately, the kind of psychological wisdom in deep, ironic quotes, that gets perpetrated on social media, you know, would have every disagreeable person being a narcissist and every employee.
pleasant experience being a trauma and every disagreement being gaslighting. And it's, you know,
I think it's important to remember that a lot of people who were influencers in the psychology
space online may not actually have that much deep knowledge about the topics they're talking
about. And this people pleaser concept, I think, sounds a little bit like that vein of thinking.
The idea that people who were kind and generous to other people must be doing it because
they're people pleasers. It's the worst possible spin that you could put on this kind of behavior,
which is in keeping with a lot of the psychology you here touted on social media.
I will say that there's a difference between the kinds of traits that typify altruists
and the kinds of traits that do typify people who are nice for reasons other than altruism.
And we know from assessments of personality that there's sort of two kinds of pro-social traits
that are different in the way that they manifest. And you may have heard of the big five personality
traits. Most people are familiar with them, conscientiousness, extroversion, openness,
negative emotionality, and agreeableness. Agreeableness is much more closely associated with being
conflict-averse, right? You don't like to make waves. You don't like to upset people. And that is a
trait that can be associated with people-pleasing, especially if it's derived from, for example,
having a poor self-image or just being very uncomfortable with people being mad at you.
That's not particularly a trait that is consistent with true altruism.
Very altruistic people are much more likely to be high in the sixth, the major personality
trait, which is much less well known, called honesty, humility.
And honesty, humility is associated with just like it sounds being humble, which is not
low self-esteem.
Humble is having an accurate perception of oneself and being less affected sort of by other people's
anger or emotions. Your sense of self is a little bit more stable when you're a humble
person. And honesty, humility is also associated with genuinely caring more about others' welfare
relative to your own. And so when people who are high in honesty, humility help people,
it's because they genuinely value their welfare, not because of how they think helping will
affect them personally. When helping as a result of high agreeableness, it may be deriving from
a fear of people not liking you or not wanting people to be mad at you. And the helping
behavior is good either way, but I think it would be helpful for people to think, well,
am I helping people because I genuinely care about them and how it affects me personally
is just not what I'm thinking about? Or am I helping people out of a fear that they won't like
me or they might get angry? And that is a different thing. Some of our listeners asked about
the risk of burnout as a consequence of extreme altruism.
we receive this message from listener Erin.
I'm curious about altruists, compassion, and compassion fatigue in ongoing situations without an easy fix.
I am a teacher and often have students in a variety of less than ideal home and family situations.
When I stop to consider any of these, it crushes me.
It completely overwhelms me, so I compartmentalize this and try not to think about it.
That leaves me feeling callous and uncaring.
What does altruistic behavior look like?
like when others are in ongoing, heartbreaking situations that really don't have a solution.
So, Abby, how do people like Erin who are in situations without a quick or easy fix
maintain that compassion without feeling burned out?
It's hard.
The altruist I work with, one of their many fortunate qualities, is that they have been able to
help somebody else, right?
They identified a person that was in need, something they could do about it.
they did help the person. In the overwhelming majority of cases, the donation goes well,
and they get to feel this incredible vicarious joy and pleasure of having made such a meaningful
impact on another person's life. There are a lot of cases of people in need where the fix is not
that straightforward, right? Maybe we can't help at all, or the ways that we can help are small.
And this can lead people to experience a lot of distress when they really care about the people
who are suffering, and they understandably feel a strong sense of empathic distress when they're
witnessing them in distress day after day. So I'm not going to pretend that there's some sort of easy
fix to that sort of situation. But what most people recommend in cases like that is to try
your best to focus on the things that you can do, right, to not let yourself get swamped and
drown in the enormity of the number of problems in the world that you can't solve, right? Any
of us can succumb to that any time. And in fact, I think it's one of the real dangers.
of social media bringing the entire world's problems onto our computer screens or our phone screens
day after day, right? There's no problem in the world that we can't understand and find out about
and feel a sense of vicarious suffering about it. And the human brain was just not meant to do that.
And so I think it's important for all of us to have a sense of humility that we cannot fix the world's
problems. Not any one of us can. But what we can do is find tractable local problems and we can find
situations where we can help and try to focus our best on those. And that's usually what I recommend
doing. Don't think about all the ways you can't help. And I know it's easy to say. But, you know,
this is basic clinical psychology when it comes to helping people with anxiety as well. It's like,
yes, there's an innumerable number of potential problems out there. And if that's what you're
focusing on, you will be anxious all the time. And you just have to train yourself to get in a habit
of focusing on the things that you can fix and the things that you can be a little bit more
confident about. And I think that's probably the best advice in this situation, too.
You know, the ancient Greeks had different words for love, Abby. You know, there's a love that we might
feel for a partner or for a child. And there's also, you know, the unconditional, selfless love
that we might feel for people in general. They called it agape. And as you're talking about
the extraordinary altruists that you've studied, it strikes me that that might be a very good word to
describe the kind of love that they experience for humankind as a whole?
I think it's the exact right word to describe the love that they feel for human kinds.
I do believe that truly altruistic people love on some deep level, all people.
And I know that sounds a little bit fanciful or maybe a little bit treakly to say,
but I genuinely believe that to care about the welfare of somebody that you've never met
before is a very deep and profound form of love. And it's not something that only saints or
superheroes are able to attain, but I think ordinary people are actually able to achieve that state.
Abigail Marsh is a psychologist and neuroscientist at Georgetown University. She's the author of
the Fear Factor, how one emotion connects altruists, psychopaths, and everyone in between.
Abby, thank you so much for coming back to Hidden Brain
to engage with the ideas and questions from our listeners.
It's been a pleasure.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Annie Murphy-Paul,
Kristen Wong, Laura Querell, Ryan Katz,
Autumn Barnes, Andrew Chadwick, and Nick Woodbury.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
If our conversation about extreme altruism was inspiring to you,
be sure to check out our sister podcast, My Unsung Hero.
You can find it in most podcast apps or on our website at hiddenbrain.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam, and if you like this episode, please share it with a few friends.
Word of mouth recommendations are how most listeners find our show.
Thanks and see you soon.
