Hidden Brain - You 2.0: The Practice of Patience

Episode Date: January 19, 2026

Patience can sometimes feel like a lost art, particularly in a culture that prizes competition and the idea of "failing fast." But psychologist Sarah Schnitker says patience is a vital skill for succe...ss in both our personal and professional lives. We talk with Sarah about the difference between patience and passivity, and how to train ourselves to be more patient. Then, in our latest installment of "Your Questions Answered," Jennifer Tosti-Kharas responds to listeners' questions about how to find a calling, and how to set one aside if it's no longer serving you well. In this episode, you'll learn:*Why our brains dislike uncertainty so much, and how this can lead to impatience and hasty decisions.*The three different types of patience that researchers have identified — and how each one can affect your life.*How to strengthen your own ability to practice patience. *The relationship between purpose and patience.*How impatience affects our mental and physical health. Episode illustration by Gustopo Galang 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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Starting point is 00:00:02 Hidden Brain visited 16 cities with our perceptions tour in 2025, and we're excited to visit even more communities across the U.S. this year. We'll have more announcements about tour stops in the months to come. For now, I want to make sure you know about two live shows that are coming up soon. I'll be in Philadelphia at the Miller Theater on March 21st and at the town hall in New York City on March 25th. For tickets to either show, go to Hiddenbrain.org slash tour. That's hiddenbrain.org slash tour.
Starting point is 00:00:39 I hope to see you there. Okay, here's today's show. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. In a famous Chinese parable, a man frustrated with all of his failures exiles himself to the woods. There, he meets a hermit with whom he shares his frustrations. Give me one good reason not to quit, the man tells the hermit. The hermit points to a tall patch of foliage.
Starting point is 00:01:12 You see this bamboo? he asks. I nurtured it for a year and it did not grow as much as an inch. But the hermit did not give up. The second year, he waters and nurtures the plot again. Nothing. A third year goes by. Again nothing. year four the same by the fifth year the hermit says a tiny sprout emerged from the earth and within six months the tree grew a hundred feet tall
Starting point is 00:01:45 during all those years when it appeared that nothing was happening the bamboo was growing underground hidden from view it had been rapidly spreading roots all the time you had been struggling the hermit told the man you were growing strong roots in the Parable, the man learns his lesson and the value of persistence. He goes back to his life and continues his pursuits. It's beautiful, isn't it? This idea that we think we're getting nowhere, but our efforts might be paying off in ways we cannot see. Yet, it also raises an uncomfortable problem. How can you tell the difference between growing roots underground
Starting point is 00:02:29 and when you're simply watering and nurturing a dead plot of land? Today on the show, we explore the conundrum of people. patience when it makes sense to persist even when you can't see what's happening below the surface and when we should be impatient. Also, practical ways we can learn to be more patient, even in trying circumstances. Learning to wait this week on Hidden Brain. From a young age, we are taught to be patient. Sit still. Wait quietly. Hold off eating one marshmallow in order to enjoy two later on. When we become adults, with more power over how many marshmallows we can have, patience often falls by the wayside.
Starting point is 00:03:39 At Baylor University, psychologist Sarah Schnitker studies the science of patients. She says that being patient may be a lost skill for many of us, but it's also one that's frequently misunderstood. Sarah Schnitker, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thank you so much for having me today. Sarah, in 2012, a quarterback for the Washington, D.C. football team, team was injured during a game against the Baltimore Ravens. What happened to Robert Griffin III, or RG3, as he was called?
Starting point is 00:04:09 Yes, RG3, Baylor's hometown hero. What happened in that game is that he was tackled, and they took him off the field, said, no, we're not going to play the rest of the game. They brought in Kirk Cousins, able to actually win the game. But RG3 really sustained this tough injury. RG3. Now it looks like he's hurt his right leg. I mean, this would be devastating. You can watch his right leg. He's going to get... Oh, that didn't look good. So the next day was confirmed that he had a sprain, and RG3 was asked to sit out the next game to heal.
Starting point is 00:04:45 But the team's head coach reported that the star quarterback had been medically cleared to play. So he came back in that game to success. But all was not well with his knee, was it? No, all was not well. And the team did. doctor who had supposedly medically cleared him has since then said, no, I did not clear him. He should not have been playing. And I think there was just this immense pressure for our G3 to move back in. He was the superstar. He was this rookie sensation. The Heisman Trophy winner. He was all this energy behind him. And the coach and team just wanted him out there. The fans wanted him out there as well. I remember reading the newspapers in Washington, D.C. at the time.
Starting point is 00:05:34 And, you know, there was incredible excitement about R.G.3 coming to town. The Washington football team had not been a good team for a long time. And the belief was that he was going to turn everything around. And, you know, everywhere he went, he was treated like the, you know, like the second coming of the Messiah. Indeed. Indeed, he was. And I think in the United States and especially in our sports stories, we love. recovery story that someone gets injured and they show this amazing grit and push through and come out of it.
Starting point is 00:06:07 And so I think this narrative of this superstar, almost superhuman, who can instantly recover, was pushing RG3 to come back. So he came back that same season to some success. But later on this season, during a wild card game in January of the following year, things took a turn for the worst. What happened, Sarah? Yes, things took a turn for the worst indeed. And he was tackled again, and he re-injured his LCL. And he also tore a reconstructed ACL. And this is pretty devastating.
Starting point is 00:06:53 I actually remember the fans at the time just being so sad that this rookie quarterback who was seen kind of as the Messiah of the team was injured. again and had to sit out that season. So he ended up getting reconstructive surgery in the off-season. But of course, a few months later, the new season began. RG3 was encouraged to rush back into his starting role. Even though he had not played a single game in the preseason, Adidas even got behind his return with a campaign all in for week one.
Starting point is 00:07:33 It's wild to me how intense this became. And I mean, I think in many ways it's unheard of to have. your first game back be on week one and not do any preseason. And what you saw on that game was exactly what you'd expect that this person was not ready. They were getting tackled a lot. That there was not that speed and agility. The RG3 needed more time to recover and needed more time to practice before going out into a real live game. And you saw them throughout that year, never really got back to his condition that he was in when he began as a rookie the year before. And in many ways, this is a tragic story, Sarah, because again, RG3 entered the football league
Starting point is 00:08:33 with just such incredible promise and hype. What became of his career? Well, you know, he He never really performed the way that was hoped. And on social media, said he regrets his decision to go back so quickly and wishes he had taken the time because he might have had a different career. I know I shouldn't have played that year. But when you're a player and you're in fight or flight mode, you're always going to choose to fight. Sometimes we want something so bad that we're willing to hurt ourselves for it.
Starting point is 00:09:05 But there's a difference between doing something because you love it. and doing the smart thing. Let's go from the world of sports to politics. In 2003, Howard Dean, a former governor of Vermont, announced his bid to become the Democratic presidential nominee for the 2004 election. He was an early critic of the U.S. war in Iraq at a time when the war was still popular.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Talk about how he wrote a wave of anti-war sentiment among Democratic Party voters, especially younger voters, Sarah. He got this huge, incredible, early lead from this energy and really had such a grassroots up swelling that people were excited, they were eager. He just went into Iowa with all this energy and excitement. There was a U.S. Senator who called Dean the Harry Truman of our time, the kind of plain spoken Democrat that we need. So he had a lot of enthusiasm behind him. What happened in that Iowa caucus? Oh, the Iowa caucus, it did not go so well for him. His main rivals, John Kerry, John Edwards, they really outperformed him. He came out third, and he might have been able to recover from that. But there is this infamous speech he gave that night after coming in third that many say may have doomed him.
Starting point is 00:10:50 So this was on January 19, 2004. Dean and his supporters gathered at the Val Air Ballroom in West Des Moines, Iowa. And what he was looking to do was not just to concede Iowa, but to quickly reignite the enthusiasm of his supporters. What happened, Sarah? Well, his supporters were really enthusiastic at this speech. So he started yelling louder and louder. Now, unfortunately,
Starting point is 00:11:20 The TV viewers who are watching this could not actually hear just how loud the crowd was. And so as he begins to shout over these cheers and get louder and louder, he starts to sound a little bit unhinged. And he ends with this full-throated kind of scream. We're going to Washington, D.C. to take back the White House. To me, it sounds like a dying goat. And this final, yeah, became known as the Dean scream or the I Have a Scream speech. But this was just replayed over and over on the news and really undermine kind of the seriousness of his candidacy. I think he was trying very quickly to get his supporters turned around after this defeat.
Starting point is 00:12:20 And I think part of the problem was a mismatch between how urgent he felt the situation, was and how urgent the situation actually was. Indeed. And, you know, sometimes when you have a loss or defeat, it's actually okay to take a few moments and lick your wounds to just take the time, heal a little bit. But you see when you watch this video that he just wanted everyone to be pumped up and have that same energy that he had a week before Iowa. And instead of kind of letting that loss take its course and then come back,
Starting point is 00:12:56 He just wanted instantly to push back into that energy and excitement and that kind of winning celebration mode. But he wasn't there. And so the scream just encapsulates that. I want to talk about one other case of impatience that had serious consequences, Sarah. We've all heard the phrase fail fast. Companies are often encouraged to rush their products to market and to fix problems later on. In 2016, Samsung rushed to release their new phone. the Galaxy Note 7, they wanted to beat Apple's release of the iPhone 7.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Here's a clip from a news report about what happened next. It shows a Galaxy Note 7 apparently smoking, yeah, on fire, it would appear, at a fast food restaurant. A one-store employee, as you can see there, actually used her oven mittens to grab the device. That is not a good thing when one is trying to sell those devices to consumers. What happened to the Apple Samsung race, Sarah? So Samsung had seen that they might have an opportunity. Apple iPhone 7 was going to be coming out that year, and everyone had heard, oh, it's going to be kind of a dull update.
Starting point is 00:14:22 And Samsung thought this could be a great opportunity to deliver their new splashy product with the Galaxy Note 7. And so they were rushing. to this deadline. However, as we heard in that clip, things did not go well. In their rush, they had some fatal flaws to those batteries. And this was creating all kinds of issues worldwide. And I think most ominously on airplanes, that the devices were overheating. And there was serious fear that this could cause a fire on a plane that would be really catastrophic. And so people were afraid to travel with their devices. There were warnings that came out. It was not good. I mean, I understand
Starting point is 00:15:10 that Samsung eventually had to issue a recall. You know, regulators started banning the phone from various locations. This is not what you want when you're trying to sell a device to consumers. This is not what you want. And I was actually a Samsung owner at the time. And I remember like, oh, no, should I still be having this Samsung? I hadn't upgraded. It led to some serious loss of confidence. in the brand. And so instead of doing the thing of actually capturing this new market by releasing before Apple, they actually were losing customers and losing profits because of that rush. In a world where we are encouraged to fail fast and make overnight recoveries from illness, injury and setbacks, patients can seem like a lost art. When we come back, the psychology of
Starting point is 00:16:10 patients and techniques to master the art of waiting. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. As a rule, human beings are not inclined toward patients. It's hard to sit quietly in traffic, to deal with a small screaming child in the seat behind you on a plane, to go through a global pandemic where many sources of avocation and entertainment are cut off. At Baylor University, Sarah Schnittker studies the psychology of patients.
Starting point is 00:16:58 Sarah, let's go back to the height of the COVID pandemic. The world was scrambling to find answers to so many questions, including how to treat this rapidly spreading virus. In our fear and in our panic and our desire to get this behind us as quickly as possible, people reached for all manner of outlandish interventions. Here's one news clip that described the moment. The Poison Center is again warning you. Drinking bleach will not prevent catching COVID-19.
Starting point is 00:17:28 Center says 46 North Texans drank bleach since the start of August. Sarah, you say that our brains are wired for certainty. What do you mean by this? Yes, human beings want to have answers. We want to have a predictable world where we know when I do X, I get Y. And so we really struggle in situations like the global pandemic when we don't know what's going on. We don't know what to do. And you see people resorting to really dangerous behaviors like drinking bleach because someone told them this is a way to fix it, said it with certainty. And so we rush forward toward that certainty, even though it might actually harm us. And in some ways, when you see a story like this, you know, with a compassionate lens,
Starting point is 00:18:30 the people who are doing this are doing this because they're afraid. They're doing this because they're worried. They're doing this because they're scared. They don't know what's going to happen and they're trying to protect themselves. Exactly. And I think this is not just kind of a minor fear. It's a global pandemic. And I'm afraid I'm going to die or my loved ones are going to die.
Starting point is 00:18:50 And our minds just latch on to something that sounds certain and take action. And that feels better and helps reduce. that uncertainty. I'm wondering if you can talk a moment about why our brains despise uncertainty as much as they do, Sarah. What is the, what is the origin for this, do you think? Well, if you think about kind of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, uncertainty often means a threat that when things are certain, even if there's something
Starting point is 00:19:24 bad happening, you know at least what to expect and what to do. But when things are uncertain, it's just such an aversy. state for people. And we have to not only prepare for threat, but we don't know what the solution is. And it really is tough. It takes a lot of effort to persist in that uncertainty. And it just doesn't feel good. I understand that you had a moment when you were a kid, when you had to decide whether to invest in basketball. And in some ways, this was an example of your capacity. to sit with uncertainty. Tell me that story. What were you like as a kid and what was your basketball story? I grew up very tall, very quickly. So by the age 12, I was at my current height,
Starting point is 00:20:21 which is 5 foot 11, which is quite tall for a woman in the United States. So everyone when I was young was telling me, oh, you must be so great at sports, you must be an athlete, you must play basketball or volleyball. And so when I joined the basketball team in fourth grade, I could not meet these expectations that I wasn't actually that great. I was new to it. The work arts were hard. I ended up crying at every single game we had. I know. It was so sad. And I remember my mother who played basketball in college was just like, what? Why can't my daughter? figure this out. What's wrong with her?
Starting point is 00:21:08 At the end of that fourth grade season, I said, you know what? I'm not athletic. That felt much safer and more certain and secure rather than saying, oh, maybe I stick with this for a couple years and try it out. And maybe I actually can be good. I just need more practice. And, you know, it's kind of one of those things. When I got to college, I started working out.
Starting point is 00:21:33 just because my friends were. And I actually realized, I'm not bad at this. I can actually be somewhat athletic and strong and good at things related to sports. And so it's one of those things you look back on and say, oh, maybe I missed out from all the benefits of kind of a team sport that we see for female athletes in particular. Just because it didn't come quickly and I was afraid maybe I couldn't be good. So we've talked about how aversive it is to feel uncertainty, how miserable it can feel to wait. Can you talk about the role of boredom in driving impatient, Sarah? Yes, especially in the United States, but I think in plenty of cultures around the world, we really hate to be bored.
Starting point is 00:22:28 I just think of myself as a child and now my own child when you go on a road trip. It's just the constant, are we there yet? are we there yet? Like, you asked me five minutes ago. No, we are not there. We just, we hate to be bored. And part of that boredom, too, is that I want this situation to be different. And yet I'm stuck in it. And it's uncertain when it will end. That's why kids are constantly asking, are we there yet? But we're just stuck in it. We talked earlier about RG3, the football player who was rushed back to the sport after, a set of serious injuries. You say that athletes are often discouraged from taking time off to heal because we want them back quickly. And I understand this played out with the Olympic gymnast, Simone Biles.
Starting point is 00:23:23 So Simone Biles, she had been at the Olympics in Tokyo and was finding herself on her twists and turns, losing kind of that sense of equilibrium in the air, and decided that she was not going to finish the competition, was going to take a break, take care of her mental health. She withdrew from the all-around and several finals and said, I've got to prioritize my well-being. I'm afraid I'm going to injure myself. I don't feel safe. I'm stopping. And took that step back. People did not like this at the time. Some people plotted her, but others said she was letting down her teammates. Pierce Morgan, I remember said she's letting down her teammates, her fans,
Starting point is 00:24:13 and even her country that, how dare she do this? And she should have pushed through and had that story of grit like RG3. But what we actually see is that Simone Biles took all the time she needed and comes back to Paris in 2024 and absolutely killed it at the next Olympic. became really the most decorated Olympic gymnast ever. So you see that she was able to actually be patient and wait. And instead of pushing to come back to competition too early, really listened to herself and prioritized her body and her mind
Starting point is 00:24:56 and what it needed instead of pushing forward. You know, I recall when she withdrew from the Tokyo Olympics because she actually was with her teammates in Tokyo. Tokyo, and she had been selected, she was representing the country. And there was a sense, I think, among some commentators, that she was being selfish, that she had taken a spot on the national team and now was pulling out and, in fact, had deprived somebody else of the opportunity of competing in the Olympics. And of course, there was this trope of Simone Biles as a selfish person for not putting herself out there, no matter the cost. But of course, in the long run, it was not just the right decision for Simone Biles. It was the right decision for, you know, Jim gymnastics in general and certainly for the United States in particular. Yes, she needed that time. And, I mean, she just dominated later in 2024. And so I think it's a short-sighted perspective in general in our culture.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Instead of saying things take time and we have to be patient, we want instant results. I mean, I'm truly amazed that Simone Biles had the strength to not cave into that pressure. I just thought it was incredibly courageous and patient what she did. I'm curious, Sarah, about the potential limits of patience. In his famous letter from Birmingham jail, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., expressed his frustration with hearing the word, wait, time and time again, when it came to civil rights. In another speech he made on the subject, he actually makes a case for the virtues of impatience.
Starting point is 00:26:45 Here he is. We have also come to. this hallowed spot to remind America of the fierce urgency of now. This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilizing drug of gradualism. Is patience always a virtue, Sarah? I think what we might say is that virtuous patience, good patience, is always a virtue. But there is a vice of what might be called too much patience. So you can be reckless and move forward
Starting point is 00:27:28 with violence and recklessness to your goal, which we often think about as impatience. But you can also fall prey to passivity or in action or in waiting too long. And so to truly be doing patience well, we have to find that real sweet spot, that golden mean between recklessness and passivity. And so you see that MLK is calling out in this speech that, no, we should not be waiting any longer. We demand rights and equality. And MLK is just a really interesting example for patients because it takes immense patience to practice civil disobedience. And yet he knew that patients had its limits and that just waiting around. is not going to get you there towards a just and good society.
Starting point is 00:28:26 And so you see this real tension of patience and action that people have to work out in their daily lives and in these historic events as well. How do we tell when we are at that sweet spot of patients where we're not waiting too much, but we're not being reckless either? You know, one of the things that we've shown in our research is that a great indicator is that we should see that we're acting both with courage and patience. If you're only practicing patience and you don't see instances of courage, you might be coming too passive. So really, instead of thinking about patience just by itself and as the only thing you should be trying to do, also thinking about am I being. courageous? And am I pursuing things even when I might be afraid or feel under threat? And balancing those two really seems to help to ensure that you're not becoming too patient and passive. And of course, we see that certainly in MLK's life. We see abundant patients, but also abundant
Starting point is 00:29:35 courage. Exactly. We, in one of our studies, we tracked participants over four weeks and we're looking at the goals they were pursuing and asked them about how much patience they were using in each goal and how much courage. And what we found is that when people had both patience and courage like MLK, they did not show passivity or recklessness. But when they had one and not the other, that's when you see them starting not to pursue their goals really well and either becoming passive or reckless. So those two together are really key. When we come back how we can all learn to be more patient and why we should. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Starting point is 00:30:42 This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. Do you have questions about today's episode? Maybe you're someone who's known as exceptionally patient. What helps you to keep your cool? Have you ever lost your patience and paid a huge price for it? If you have a personal story you would be willing to share with a Hidden Brain audience or a question or comment about this episode, please find a very quiet room
Starting point is 00:31:07 and record a voice memo on your phone. Two or three minutes is plenty. Email the file to us at Feedback at Hiddenbrain.org. Use the subject line, patience. That email address again is Feedback at Hiddenbrain.org. In a world that thrives on instant gratification, it's easy to believe that patience is passive, something that involves sacrifice and clenched,
Starting point is 00:31:34 teeth. At Baylor University, psychologist Sarah Schnitzker challenges this idea. She says there are ways to learn the art of patients and to make it less painful. Sarah, you say that there are three types of patients. You call the first interpersonal patients? Yes. The first type is really about being patient with other people. Being patient with your relationship partners, with your spouse, your children, your coworkers with the person in front of you in line who can't seem to find the coins to make change because why are they paying in cash, right? This is all the people in our lives who require patience from us. Have you found that to be true in your life, Sarah, that when you have been patient with the relationships, in fact, they transform and become quite different than what you might
Starting point is 00:32:27 I've imagined at first? Yes, I have. And, you know, there's lots of things that can be disruptive to a relationship and things that annoy us about others. But as I got older, I've learned, like, you know what? Maybe this friend and I aren't on the same page right now. Let's still keep in touch. I might try to talk to them. But even if we can't resolve that specific conflict, we can come back around and that there's something really lost when you give up on a new friendship or even an old one when the person's having a hard time too soon. And that continuing just to be patient with others allows for the richness of deep relationships to really be a part of your life. And it just takes a lot of patience and waiting. So we've talked about interpersonal patients,
Starting point is 00:33:27 but there is also the patients involved in dealing with setbacks at work and in life. Can you talk about the role of this challenge in your own life, Sarah? I understand that in the third year of grad school, you became very sick with a mysterious illness. What were the symptoms of this illness? It was a really rough time. I started throwing up one night in the middle of the night, and I proceeded to kind of had chronic vomiting for months. On end, I came to find out later, after I got a diagnosis, I have what's called cyclic vomiting
Starting point is 00:34:04 syndrome, which is a pretty rare disorder. It's kind of like abdominal migraines, so it's in the brain, similar to migraines, but instead of getting a headache, I just would start throwing up. And it was really, really hard. It took me six months to find out a diagnosis. And it was, I was studying patients and then given this life hardship where I had to actually practice my patients and deal with this chronic illness now for my entire life. It became apparent that this is not something that would go away. It was something that I'd have to learn to manage. I'm wondering, Sarah, if there were times when you felt so frustrated that you wanted to give up,
Starting point is 00:35:01 but also felt somewhat hypocritical because you were studying patients. So I definitely felt that. But then there were other times when I also found that my research on patients encouraged me to take the time my body needed. I think I was learning, you know what? Pushing through is not always the answer. And I would actually make little rules for myself of like, okay, if you feel nauseous or are feeling ill, maybe go lay down for 20 minutes. see if that rest and kind of practicing mindfulness or kind of taking time instead of just trying to push through on my work and write, taking the time and coming back and being a little bit
Starting point is 00:35:47 more gentle with myself, I found when I did that, I would be much more successful across the course of a month and actually getting my work done. And so trying to learn instead of being like RG3, with just always pushing forward. I don't care about my body. My nausea doesn't matter. I'm just going to push forward. It would lead to, like, getting so sick that I would have to be hospitalized for fluids and dehydration. So just learning the lesson of Simone Biles of listening to my own mental health, listening to my own physical health, prioritizing those because without my body and my mine in a good place, I couldn't achieve my other goals. And so it was a really useful lesson to learn earlier in life because I think a lot of us don't learn that till later in life.
Starting point is 00:36:42 So besides the challenges that come with our interactions with other people and the challenges that come with these life hardships, there's also the impatience we feel with daily hassles. Now, these don't rise to the level of crisis and catastrophe, but they're still a pain, right, Sarah? I think for a lot of people, when they hear the term patience, they think of being stuck in traffic and stuck in line and what it is, the six months of life, you'll probably stand in line. Like, this is a huge amount of our time. You know, when we practice our patients in these daily habits. Not only doesn't improve that moment, but I also like to think of it as good practice for the bigger life hardships and for our relationships, that the daily hassles might be a nice lower stakes game
Starting point is 00:37:53 to practice patients so that you're ready when you have that illness come up or your child frustrates you in a new way, that you're prepared for those things that might actually be more monumental. I want to go over some of your ideas on how we can build our patients. You say that one way to do this is that when we're feeling impatient, we should stop and reflect on the experience. Now, I think most people want to do exactly the opposite. They don't want to focus on the fact that they're feeling impatient. In fact, they want to get rid of that feeling as quickly as possible. What's the point of dwelling on it, Sarah? Yes, I think it's somewhat counterintuitive, right? We often think of patients like, don't be upset, don't be upset. But we actually find that does not work.
Starting point is 00:38:46 And people who are a patient don't actually try to suppress their feelings. Instead, they acknowledge them. And that it's okay to take that moment and say, oh, I'm really frustrated with this person in the workplace who is asking me the same question for the 15th time this week or my partner who is making that funny noise that they always make or my child who's throwing a temper tantrum, right? We actually stop and pause and say, oh, this is what I'm feeling. And just let that feeling be there for a moment. That actually removes some of the power of that feeling. And what you also see is if you can almost try to observe that feeling as a third person,
Starting point is 00:39:36 instead of just feeling it to say, okay, this is what I'm. feeling. I can understand why. That really is the first step to actually being patient. You also talk about the value of something you call re-appraisal. What is re-appraisal, Sarah? Yeah, so re-appraisal is really just this trick of learning to think about a situation differently. So one common reappraisal strategy is benefit finding. So what is the good thing that I can notice in this scenario? And I know for myself sometimes it's just, oh, great. this is an opportunity to practice my patience waiting in this line. Reappraisal could also include thinking about it from someone else's perspective. So why is this three-year-old screaming on the ground
Starting point is 00:40:23 and kicking? Oh, because they don't have the words or the capacities to tell me what they want. And so this is all they've got and I'm going to feel for them and how they're feeling. And so that reappraisal is just shown across many, many studies, just to be a highly effective way of regulating and helping yourself become more patient. The researcher Kate Sweeney ran a study that looked at how people spent their time during the COVID-19 pandemic. She found that some people were better able to deal with their impatience than others. Can you describe for me what the study found? Yes. What Kate and her colleagues found is that when people were able to immerse themselves in activity,
Starting point is 00:41:10 and experience what we call flow, that state really helped people to cope well with COVID-19 and all the stressors of the pandemic in China, in particular, during the most intense lockdowns. And so engaging in these flow experiences really help people across time, not just in the moment, but even later when the researchers followed up with them, people who were able to do that were able to be whether it was cooking homemade meals or playing video games even, which we often think of as a negative thing, they found that that can actually induce a flow state. And this was important in that time of really heightened uncertainty. You know, I find sometimes when I'm waiting in line or waiting on hold, I'll pull out my phone and I'll start playing a game of chess.
Starting point is 00:42:12 And within about five or six minutes, I'm so absorbed in the game that when someone finally comes on the phone, I'm like, Why are you interrupting my game? This is far more important than anything I need to talk to you about. Exactly. How dare you have come back so quickly. Yes, I feel the same way. I love to do my writing when I travel. And so it makes that weight in the airport or on the plane just so much faster when I'm like,
Starting point is 00:42:37 oh, no, the flight's almost over. I'm a lot longer. Yes, it's a good strategy. We've talked previously on the show, Sarah, about how purpose can give us patience, when it comes to achieving difficult goals. When we know why we are doing something, it becomes easier to bear the setbacks along the way. Talk about the role of purpose in helping us deal with our impatience.
Starting point is 00:43:11 It can really motivate us to do better when it comes to patience, when we have a reason for that waiting and for that suffering, that we need a higher order purpose. Why? Why do I continue to suffer in this way? Why should I wait for this thing patiently? When you have that big why, it becomes much easier to practice the how, to actually practice your reappraisal, to practice your naming of the emotion, to get into that flow state. And what we find is that when that purpose is bigger than yourself, it's not just about, me and my pleasure and my positive emotions. Instead, it's something bigger than me. We find in our research that when people have that, they're actually able to be more patient and they actually grow more in patience over time. You ran a study involving Muslim adolescents during the month
Starting point is 00:44:16 of Ramadan. What were these adolescents doing during Ramadan? And what did you find, Sarah? Yes. So Ramadan in Islam actually is called the month of patience. And so during the month of Ramadan, devout Muslims will dry fast from sunrise to sunset. So that means no food or drink, not even water across all of daylight. And this is an incredibly challenging time. But it's also a time of great spirituality. And that, the Islamic community, you see there are all kinds of special rituals and prayers and meals to break the fast or to begin it. And so what we found in our research is that when teenagers were engaged in this Ramadan sacred time, that they actually grew in their patience. And then what was really cool is that a month after Ramadan was over, so back to just kind of normal daily life, they actually sustained some gains in patience. So they were still more patient than before Ramadan had began. So what we interpret is going on here is that they are doing this
Starting point is 00:45:32 really difficult training in patience. And it feels like suffering in the moment. And you really want to be able to get that drink and having to wait for that sun to set is difficult. So when they practice their patience, but do it for a bigger reason to bring glory to Allah and to be a part of their community and do this together with others, it really seems to be a powerful intervention that I'm not doing this for myself, for my physical fitness. I'm doing this because this is what good Muslims do. And we are doing this for the sake of this higher power. And that is an incredibly potent experience. And our data show that it indeed has these benefits for patients long term. I understand that this work has been echoed by other research you did that looked at young adults who were training for marathons.
Starting point is 00:46:28 Yes. We also looked at adolescents and young adults who were running half or full marathons with a philanthropic training team. And what we found is that they didn't necessarily grow in patience if they were just doing the training for health and fitness reasons. The philanthropic purpose of the training team was to raise money for clean water efforts in about eight African countries when they were running for the sake of helping those other people or running to grow spiritually to get closer to God. when they ran for those motives that were bigger than themselves, that's when you see them also grow in their patients through this training activity. I'm wondering, Sarah, if we can take a moment and talk about what scientists like yourself are finding about the costs of impatience. Yes.
Starting point is 00:47:30 We see that impatience leads to not just irritability or negative emotions, but higher risk of heart problems, difficulty, handling stressors. Stress starts to actually become anxiety. We see it can lead to a lack of self-control. We also see that impatience is associated with loneliness. So I think this makes a lot of sense. If you are unable to be patient with other people and you are impatient toward them, that's going to be a strain on the relationship. It's going to be harder to have those deep connections. Then we also see one of the most robust associations we found in my research is that inpatients is associated with greater depressive symptoms. And conversely, that patients helps to ameliorate depression
Starting point is 00:48:27 symptoms over time. There's one form of patients that I think we have not discussed, Sarah, and that is patients with ourselves. We've talked about how we need to be patient with others, with the illnesses that afflict us, with hardships, with the hassles of daily life. But as we look at ourselves, and especially if we look at ourselves honestly and critically, we will find flaws and we will find limitations. And that is a source of frustration as well. Can you talk a moment about the value of being patient with ourselves? Patience with ourselves is quite critical.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Oftentimes, people have experience. expectations for themselves that might even be higher than the expectations they have for others. And so patience with ourselves is partly recognizing our own limitations as humans, that we are not superhuman, that we are just human beings and flawed like everyone else. Just like we have to have self-compassion, we also have to have patience with ourselves and realize, is that growth and whether that's growth in kind of our character, our morals, our abilities, our relationships that we're not going to be where we want to be right now and that it's a long game. There was a famous quote.
Starting point is 00:50:13 I think it was Stanislaw, Lex, said you have to have a lot of patience to become more patient. And, you know, someone might listen to a session. like this and say, okay, I'm going to become more patient and really try to do it quickly and then become discouraged and just give up and say, oh, I'm just an impatient person. I can't be good at this. So I think learning to have patience is a slow go, and it's going to take a lot to practice. And I don't think anyone gets it done very quickly. Sarah Schnitker is a psychologist at Baylor University. Sarah, thank you so much for joining me
Starting point is 00:51:01 today on Hidden Brain. Thank you for having me. Do you have a story to share with the Hidden Brain audience on the subject of patience? Maybe you're someone who's known as exceptionally patient. What helps you to keep your cool? Have you ever lost your patience and paid a huge price for it? If you have a personal story you would be willing to share with a hidden brain audience or a question or comment about this episode, please find a very quiet room and record
Starting point is 00:51:33 a voice memo on your phone. two or three minutes is plenty. Email the file to us at feedback at hiddenbrain.org. Use the subject line, patience. That email address again is feedback at hiddenbrain.org. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Starting point is 00:52:09 In his final semester in college, a young Harrison Ford took an acting class. A self-described loner, he used acting to get over his shyness. In the process, he became obsessed with learning how to tell a story. Harrison Ford pursued acting as a career and secured a weekly contract with a Hollywood studio as a small-time TV actor. It was a decent start, but he craved more. He wanted to be a star. At the same time, the struggling actor had a wife and two young sons. He had purchased a rundown home in the Hollywood Hills and spent his free time teaching himself to fix it up.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Eventually, to pay the bills, he decided to quit his TV contract and become a full-time carpenter. But Harrison Ford never quite gave up the dream of landing a major film role. One day, he ran into an old acquaintance as he was working on a carpentry project for the director of Francis Ford Coppola. The acquaintance, a young director named George Lucas. The director asked the wannabe movie star to read lines with actors auditioning for his new film. It was a little project called Star Wars. The rest, as they say, is history. Harrison Ford landed a starring role
Starting point is 00:53:37 in one of the most significant movie franchises of the 20th century. He hasn't done many carpentry gigs since then. We hear success stories like this all the time. The actress waiting tables, the musician ghostwriting songs, the writer toiling at an advertising agency. They labor in obscurity until one fine day, they catch a break and become famous. There's something irresistible about these stories.
Starting point is 00:54:09 They give us hope that we too will catch a break, that we too will get to pursue meaningful work that we love. At Babson College, Jennifer Toasty Kara studies the benefits and the costs of having a calling. She joined us for a recent episode. It was titled Passion vs. Paycheck. Today, we welcome Jennifer back to answer listener questions in our popular segment, your questions answered. Jennifer Toasty-Karris, welcome back to Hidden Brain.
Starting point is 00:54:40 Thank you so much, Shankar. I am beyond thrilled to be back. Jen, your graduate school advisor, Amy Reznesski, came up with a framework to help us understand how people think about their relationships to work. She suggested that people think of their work in one of three ways, as a job, as a career, or as a calling. Talk about these three categories
Starting point is 00:55:02 and what Amy found when she asked people to talk about their work? So just to break them down, a job orientation is when you work primarily for the extrinsic rewards from that work. So work is a means to an end, and it's typically a financial end. So working primarily for the money it provides, and maybe then you pursue a passion outside of work, that's a job. A career is when you similarly work as a means to an end, but this time it is the means to advancing within either an organizational hierarchy, picture climbing the typical career ladder, or gaining respect and centrality in an occupational community. So picture like, you know, coders who like to gain the respect of others,
Starting point is 00:55:52 like, whoa, you wrote that code. That would be a career orientation toward the work. Then finally, we have a calling. And when work is a calling, it is not a means to an but a meaningful end in and of itself. It is a source of fulfillment, of passion. You often feel consumed by the work. And often, but not always, you would say your work makes the world a better place. It's just a major, major part of who you are, pretty much inseparable from life compared to the other two. One of the things that I find intriguing is that Amy found that people who fell into
Starting point is 00:56:32 all three categories, regardless of what their jobs were. So you could ask the same questions of three surgeons or three accountants or three journalists and find that the same job did not hold the same meaning for different people. What do we make from that, Jen? Yeah, absolutely. So the meaning of the work in this framework is really in the eye of the beholder. So just as you said, you can have two people, same job, same organization, you know, same occupation, and one feels it's a job, and one feels it's a calling. And that means I could be working right alongside you or even with you on a work team. And we feel very differently about the meaning that that work has within our lives. I think another interesting thing that Amy found is that this distribution of jobs, careers,
Starting point is 00:57:22 and callings, which was about a third, a third and a third across people in a given population, really held regardless of the type of work. So it was as common in professionals as it was in, for example, administrative assistance. So this notion that, oh, you know, everybody who works or more people who work as a, you know, lower level in the organization, feel their work as a job, and people with, you know, very immersive or important occupations might feel their work as a calling, that didn't really hold either. So really, I think what we make of this is that it's less about what you're doing and even maybe less about you and this interaction of you and the job that creates the meeting.
Starting point is 00:58:15 We discussed this during our last conversation, but can you remind us of some of the benefits of having passion in your work or finding a calling? Yeah. A lot of the benefits of calling are really really. driven by an extra engagement in and motivation to do that work. So these are the employees who go above and beyond. They put in the effort. They, you know, show up to work even, you know, they don't miss as much work. The work they do is potentially very good and very high quality. They're very diligent about it. They just, they care about doing that work a lot. And then,
Starting point is 00:58:58 Similarly, there are benefits for the worker themselves. So research, including my own, has found that experiencing a calling toward your work spills over to benefit your life as a whole. So we might say it gives your life meaning, it gives you a purpose. That's really good for us in general. It can lead us to feel our lives are good, thinking about life as a whole and not just life at work. One of the things that I really enjoyed about our last conversation is that you not only talked about the benefits of having a calling, but some of the potential downsides of having a calling.
Starting point is 00:59:37 What are some of them? Yeah, so this is sort of that other side of the coin that as good as callings can be. There's also this side of it where that extra passion, that extra effort, that willingness to go above and beyond, can turn into an over-commitment where you're almost doing too much. You're putting in too much of yourself and then not leaving room for other areas of your life and potentially opening yourself up to exploitation. So along with my co-author on my book, Is Your Work Worth It, Christopher Michelson, we've started exploring in some more recent work this notion that maybe callings are best experienced not as an extreme high or an extreme low, but really in this sort of middle space.
Starting point is 01:00:31 And when we push to those extremes is when we see some of the downsides, either we're not at all committed or we're overcommitted. Let's turn now to questions from the audience. We heard from a listener named Elizabeth who says she and her husband have very different expectations about what they will get out of work. I grew up in a family focused on each of us kids finding our calling. Fast forward to me as an adult, and I've tried all different kinds of helping professions in my 15 years post-college in the work field, and I'm still trying to figure it out.
Starting point is 01:01:16 And my husband is tired of me complaining about work not being the perfect fit for me. My husband grew up in a blue-collar community, and to him, work is work. You just find something that pays the bills, and the idea of a calling was kind of a foreign concept. And so this has been this tension that I've been examining more and more
Starting point is 01:01:47 as I continue to seek and not find my calling. In some ways, Jen, what Elizabeth is saying is that people who think of their work as a job and people who think of their work as a calling might look at one another with mutual incomprehension. So Elizabeth, thank you for sharing that perspective. That is actually such a common occurrence for couples to have what we might call incongruent work orientations. One feels it's a job, the other feels it's a calling, that it can make it hard to know what do I really want in work and that this is, and you almost question just as Elizabeth is doing, you know, is this really what I want and is, you know, what sort of what am I looking for and what do I value?
Starting point is 01:02:40 And greater incongruence not only leads to, you know, uncertainty and a longer job search, but ultimately a lower probability of reemployment. The more incongruence of your work orientation with your partner, the less satisfied you are with your job, there's an interesting caveat to that unless you are the one with the higher calling, and then you are more satisfied with your job. So it's almost this like social comparison. Now, Elizabeth's example, I think, speaks more to the seeker nature of this, but it suggests that if she were, to be employed and feel that that work was her calling, she might actually experience more satisfaction as a function of her husband viewing his work as just a job. Is there any research that explains why it is different people might look at work as a job
Starting point is 01:03:40 versus look at it as a calling? Does it have to do with our upbringing and what we've been taught as children? Yeah. So there, I mean, definitely needs to be significantly more work done on this, but there are a few studies, and I want to point to one by Catherine Dekees and Wayne Baker, that looked at exactly what happens in adolescence through socialization with parents. So no surprise, we start thinking about work early in our lives through interaction with, you know, significant others, but a huge influence on us is our parents. What our parents, you know, feel about their work, the meaning they make of their work influences us. And it does, in some pretty interesting ways. So kids develop stronger calling orientations when both parents
Starting point is 01:04:30 possess strong calling orientations. Other work has looked at the journey toward when we feel our work is a calling and finds that just having role models and influences, seeing people kind of model the way of experiencing their work as a calling can be inspiring to us. Now, of course, the other side of that is pressure, but it can be inspiring to us. And so parents might be our earliest form of those role models. There are many professions that people enter into as a calling, but once in the profession, they find that there are significant portions of that profession that involve boring activities or mundane activities.
Starting point is 01:05:13 I'm thinking about someone who decides to become a firefighter, and so they have this very glamorous vision of running into burning buildings. and rescuing people. But if you're a firefighter, much of your time actually is just spent sitting around, waiting for someone to call, and a lot of the job might actually be quite boring. I'm wondering what happens, Jen, when people who expect that their work is going to be unendingly interesting and glamorous and counter the boring parts that come with every profession. Yeah, I try to really give my students a realistic preview of that. Like, even the most meaningful work does not feel meaningful all the time. So I think just even have,
Starting point is 01:05:49 this realistic preview of like, you're a firefighter, but it's not all glamour and excitement and how it seems on TV shows and movies. Now, of course, when we're talking about firefighters, I do think about work by Mike Pratt and colleagues that looked specifically at callings and firefighters and found that a lot of what really drives them is the camaraderie with the other firefighters. So it's funny, like, I could be bored sitting around the firehouse. And but I'm with my buddies, and that's really, that's who I show up for. And even in the glamorous role of putting out a five alarm blaze, I'm thinking about them and keeping them safe, and it sort of translates over. But I want to entertain your idea of, you know, I have lofty goals,
Starting point is 01:06:39 and then I get in my job, and it is just, you know, there is not a lot to remind me about that bigger picture. Sometimes what I would recommend is just trying to see the way that the work, though boring, is still helping. And that could be helping you. It could be helping, you know, you and your pursuits or your family or what happens outside of work. It could be helping society. Just you don't feel you're as, you know, personally responsible for it. But I think it's sort of this, there needs to be some kind of a balance between having a realistic expectation that even the most lovable work is not lovable every single minute of every single day. And also thinking about, you know, how much, there does become a point at which I think if you
Starting point is 01:07:29 are unable to sustain a meaningful connection to the work you're actually doing, you do need to listen to that and think about when is it time to change things up. When we come back, how our passions change over time and ways to find a new calling when your old one no longer satisfies you. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. Do what you love and you'll never work a day in your life. It's a phrase we've all heard and many of us have internalized the idea that if you experience a deep passion for what you do, your work won't feel like a burden. In fact, the word work itself comes from the ancient Greek term Ergon, which means the outcome of someone who achieves an inner
Starting point is 01:08:37 desire, a purpose. At Babson College, Jennifer Toasty-Carris studies how we find meaning in our work and the benefits and the costs of pursuing a calling. Jen, one interesting sentiment we heard from listeners is that one's passion for work can evolve over time, perhaps because of the work itself or changing life circumstances. A listener named Christina is in her mid-30s and has been able to make ends meet as a part-time singer in New York City. But she recently decided to take a full-time day job. Things changed for me in the past few years. I just realized that I needed more structure, more stability.
Starting point is 01:09:23 And there are other things I want life. Like, I've wanted a cat for a long time. I'd like to travel a little bit more. See my family without having to worry about every single cent I spend on plane tickets to go see them. You know, own a home someday. And those things just wouldn't be possible if I continued on the trajectory I was on. And so starting this new day job has been interesting because rather than making me feel like I've lost something, I feel like I've gained something.
Starting point is 01:09:51 What I find striking about Christina's story, Jen, is that she doesn't seem to feel what many others feel. She doesn't feel like she has sold out or traded down or given up on what matters to her. In some way, she has expanded her definition of what matters to her. Yeah, so I love Christina. story, and I think that this is very emblematic that the only way for work to have meaning is not just to feel that work has to be a calling. So work can be meaningful and add, in fact, a lot to one's life if it's a job that fuels our passion or our meaningful life outside of work. And I think Christina's story is an example of this. And we tend to, we venerate callings in our
Starting point is 01:10:37 society, but they're not the end-all be-all. We talked earlier about the problems that they can cause for people and actually directly for having a more balanced life. And so I think that, you know, a typical life change that might affect how we view our work is partnering, maybe having kids or other dependents and suddenly feeling like the best use of my time is to not only provide for those other people in our lives, but be able to spend time with them. So shifting away from sort of what I always thought I wanted to do in an ideal world where money didn't matter or other things in life didn't matter. And sort of this ideal bumps up against the reality of how we actually want to live our lives. Many of us do struggle when our passion.
Starting point is 01:11:36 is no longer within reach. Perhaps we lose a job or we fall out of love with our current one. A listener named Wendy was a federal worker who recently got fired as part of the Trump administration's mass layoffs. Here she is. All of my stuff went into storage yesterday. I'm moving out of my place to go stay with my little sister while I try to figure out a new career.
Starting point is 01:11:58 But there's a lot of emotional processing that I'll need to do as well. As I come to understand what the loss of this job, this work means for me. What does this process look like for most people, Jen? As I hear Wendy, I'm hearing grief, someone who's dealing with a loss. Absolutely. So I'm so glad and honored to hear Wendy's story. And I think I'm also really holding some very deep sympathy for her
Starting point is 01:12:27 because these layoffs affected government workers who many of them chose government work, specifically to help in a broader, in a broader way, help our society, help our country. They weren't necessarily thinking about more extrinsic reasons for working. I mean, again, this is a prototypical kind of area we would expect to see some strong callings. And so I think, you know, regardless of your orientation toward your work, losing a job is really hard.
Starting point is 01:12:59 It can lead to everything from just a more fundamental question about, you know, will I be able to put food on the table, maintain my rent, keep my lifestyle, what else will have to change in my life, to these really higher order questions of who am I? What is my identity now that I'm not working? I miss my friends who were part of that workplace. I mean, it's a loss on sort of every level. So I think to equate it to, you know, loss and to have a grieving process, I mean, that is borne out in research on job loss. There is absolutely, if you will, more lost than just the job. There's sort of everything that goes with it and including, and especially for someone for whom the work was a strong calling, this idea that it's part of my identity, it gives
Starting point is 01:13:50 meaning to my life. So there's really a lot that's lost there. And I think this notion that we can just easily, you know, plug and play and replace that loss becomes even harder the more attached we were to that job. We heard from a journalist named David who's struggling with the state of his industry. He finds himself questioning the stories he was told about his supposed calling. If your original belief in a calling was predicated on something that you subsequently learned was wrong, you start to question whether the work is your calling. So what do you do then?
Starting point is 01:14:27 What happens if you realize your work might not be your calling or no longer is your calling? I know that people pivot in life. Can people have multiple callings within their careers and lifespans? In some ways here, Jen, I'm hearing an echo of what Wendy said. David is also saying in some ways that he was given a promise and the promise didn't hold up. And I'm hearing almost a sense that he feels betrayed by the promise not working out. What do you make of this question? Can people, in fact, have multiple callings within one lifetime? Let me start by saying, I think David's story will resonate with a fair number of people. The world is changing so much. Technology is coming online. I mean, all the endless discussions about AI and what will be left of a lot of our jobs once we fully realize sentient AI.
Starting point is 01:15:20 and I think there's a lot of concern that the callings that we imagined might not be the callings that we're living out. And that's a real concern and I think a real problem. So, you know, beyond journalism or government work, sort of I think a lot of people can can really identify with that. When it comes to multiple callings, there's interesting research by Justinberg, Adam Grant, and Victoria Johnson. And they find that even if we're, we have on the one hand fulfilled one of our callings, we're still very acutely aware that there's something else out there that we're not doing. And that every time we're sort of reminded of that unfulfilled calling, we are really motivated to go seek it out. So absolutely, the notion that
Starting point is 01:16:11 this metaphor of calling is like a romantic partner and there's just one out there for you and you just have to find it. And once you find it, it's smooth sailing. I mean, just the same way that we are unpacking this notion about romantic partners or, you know, life partners, it's a very similar thing for work and for callings. For most of us, there's not just one calling out there and we have to venture to find it, but rather that we can, there can be multiple things that would fulfill us and that I always say when in doubt, just have experiences, try to, you know, learn from trial and error and reflect on what's working and what's not. Because odds are it's out there if you are attentive to it and looking for it. We got a lot of listener questions
Starting point is 01:17:10 about your research, Jen. It was a really popular topic with our audience. And I think the reason is because, you know, especially in the U.S., our work lives play such a central role in our identities. A listener named Midian called in. She's worked in the film industry for more than 20 years as a makeup effects artist. But recently she became jaded, so she's transitioned into a role that involves teaching and training other makeup artists. But she says it's been a tricky change to navigate. This transition has been so painful, mostly because I am, makeup effects. And what am I without that?
Starting point is 01:17:50 It has been quite a process. And I've had to just like, Gagan, get rid of everything. I'm moving to Albania. I'm going to just let it all go. And the more I let go, the better I'm feeling. I'm wondering, Jen, if you can talk about the link between who we are and what we do for work, because one thing I'm hearing in Midian's question is that for her, her job was not just a calling. Her job was who she was. Yeah, I actually wrote down Midian's quote, I am makeup effects. What am I without that? That's such a powerful way of stating, I think, the emotional experience of callings for many people, that it's not just what I do, it's who I am.
Starting point is 01:18:36 And I think part of that is it's very American. I think it's a very culturally situated view. But I also think, it's something that is definitional to a strong calling. It's certainly the way I think about it. It is not just the fact that I understand why I'm doing my work in a broader picture, but it really says something about me and my values and then transmits it to others. Often when we measure callings, one of the scale items that we use that we ask people to agree or disagree with is one of the first things that I tell people about myself is what I do for work. And I just think that that really says it all. It's a point of pride. It's a point of identity. And so then, of course, as Midian is saying, to go without it feels especially challenging. We almost can't imagine it. I do wonder, can that
Starting point is 01:19:33 give you the sense that I found it once before. I can find it again. I think that's what I would like to be the optimistic view of this for those who have experienced a calling and then maybe fallen, you know, whether it was taken away from them or they chose something different, fallen out from their calling. I would like to think there's some hope. You know, hearing these notes from listeners really shows me how much of a hunger there is for callings out there. So many people really want to feel inspired by what they're doing. We heard from many listeners wondering about finding a calling in retirement. Has they been research looking specifically at finding a passion later in life, Jen?
Starting point is 01:20:17 I mean, there is research on how to think about retirement and actually embracing retirement, sort of not as an end point when life is over. I mean, I think a lot of people view it like that. So I can't imagine what I would do if I wasn't working. And again, this is part of this cultural message. that were often fed that says who you are is what you do. And if you're no longer doing work, you know, do you even have value? But I think that retirement is an opportunity for people to, I think, pursue passions or do meaningful, I mean, work or do meaningful, you know, volunteer activities
Starting point is 01:20:57 or hobbies that maybe work got in the way of. So the people that I, you know, and again, this isn't research, but more anecdotal, but the people I know who are happy, in retirement really see the benefits. They're not sort of focusing on the fact that work went away, but they're focusing on the benefits that retirement opens up for them in terms of, wow, I could never hike all the high peaks in my area when I had a day job. I could never learn a new skill that now I, you know, practice every day when I was working. What does retirement open up time and other resources to do that you couldn't do before. So it's really not an ending of anything or sort of an ending of certainly life,
Starting point is 01:21:50 but a chance to live in a new and hopefully more meaningful way. When we come back, Jen shares her advice for people still searching for their calling. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. At Babson College, Jennifer Toasty-Carris says finding a calling in work can lead to a range of benefits for our physical and mental health.
Starting point is 01:22:35 But the pursuit of a calling can also come at a cost. Jen, let's talk a moment about some of those drawbacks. Here's a listener named Catherine who had a question about it. I just turned 40 yesterday. and what I really wanted to do for my birthday was work. I run a company that makes artwork, and it's a luxury brand, and it looks very successful on the outside.
Starting point is 01:23:00 But when I was recently featured in the Wall Street Journal, I couldn't even afford more than two copies of the paper. Most weeks, I end up with just a few dollars in my own account, and more than that, the sacrifices you talked about really resonant. The work is exhausting and sometimes even dangerous. I will probably die from the work. I have to get heavy metal blood testing every month and will probably develop silicosis or have already, but it feels meaningful to support artists and create something lasting. Thank you for reminding me that I'm not alone in trying to balance passion with paycheck. So if I'm hearing Catherine, right, Jen, she's really driven and she feels passionately about her work, but she's also struggling economically and sacrificing her health to do what she loves. How can a person think about balancing those competing priorities in their life? So what I think is so telling and powerful about what Catherine's said just now is that, I mean, to me, this is such a prototypical downside of a strong call.
Starting point is 01:24:14 story in that it's almost like you can't help but not do it. You know it's probably too much. You know that probably it's not great for your health or not great for your relationships, but you just, you've you've got to do it almost at all costs. I mean, to me, this is that strong calling verging on a too strong calling. And so in terms of how to balance this better, I do think, I mean, Catherine seems nothing if not self-aware about the situation. That would be the first step is just are you even sort of aware of the toll that it's taking on you? She seems to be, and then at the same time saying, but she still continues to choose it. I think it's very important to pay attention to if this is a long game and if you are your, you know, psychological health, your physical health,
Starting point is 01:25:10 your relationships with others who enable your life or keep you grounded are are compromised, but it actually can affect the longevity and sustainability of your ability to do that work. So I think if things get too out of whack, that in and of itself can keep you from doing the work that is so meaningful to you. So if that really is a priority in a big picture, longer term way, are these actions sustain, you know, can I sustain these actions over time? I mean, in some ways, we're talking about callings that are spilling over into obsessions. We talked in our last episode about the very word calling.
Starting point is 01:25:51 I mean, originally, it started in a religious context. You were called by God. That was what a calling was. God was basically telling you, set down your work and come and do the things that I have set out for you. And you can easily see if, you know, God is actually calling you to do something. you know, maybe you don't have time to have a shower. Maybe you don't have time to meet a friend for a cup of coffee because God's on the other line. So you're absolutely right.
Starting point is 01:26:18 And in fact, the moralization of callings is something that is happening increasingly. And I think is one of the primary drivers of these effects is the fact, Stuart Bunderson and Jeff Thompson in their study of zookeepers described it as a moral duty. I have to do it. The animals need me. Some beneficiary needs me. It's my drive to do this, but it feels morally significant that if I were to choose something else, that would be a problem. And we see this showing up. So we do see a cultural veneration of callings that it's sort of, we believe it's better to have a calling than a career or a job. Certainly, we sometimes refer to jobs as just a job. and there's increasing evidence that in the workplace callings are venerated, that, for example,
Starting point is 01:27:13 those with stronger callings are perceived to be the better performers, putting in more effort, deserving of more pay and promotions. And interestingly, even when that's not objectively the case, that's the subjective sense we have of them, is that they're the good employees. There's another study about believing that those who are intrinsically motivated by and passionate it for the job are deserving of more help than others. So all of this kind of combines to create this both, I think, pressure to feel like work is a calling and also if you've found it, this moral imperative to just do the work at any cost, that it's that much more important.
Starting point is 01:27:59 We heard from a number of listeners who pointed out that not everyone has the ability to pursue a calling. Here's a listener who is also named Jen. I listened to your episode about calling, and I think that I would push back against it because many of us don't have the privilege to do something that we would love because we would have no way to pay to live while we did that. So when I graduated college, I had a degree, wanted to work in documentary film, That did not work out, and my degree is pretty worthless, so I had to go back to school and did something extremely practical, which is nursing. And I very much dislike it, but it allows me to pay the mortgage and pay for hobbies. So I think it's actually safe to detach yourself from what you do for
Starting point is 01:29:00 work because it can be a pretty sad road and I was depressed for several years because I had been raised thinking that you identify yourself based on your so-called calling because ever since I can remember in the 80s it was what do you want to be when you grow up but what you want to be when you grow up isn't necessarily what you can be when you grow up unless you're independently wealthy or extremely talented or just very very lucky. So we heard early early. So we heard early from Christina Jen, she has chosen to do more practical things because they allow her to do things that she now wants. She wants to travel, spend time with her family, get a cat. We're hearing in some ways a mirror image of that story here. Listener Jen is telling us she made similar
Starting point is 01:29:47 trade-offs but takes no pleasure in the work that she's doing. I don't hear relief. I hear sadness, regret, maybe even some resentment. Yeah, I think those themes absolutely came out loud and clear in Jen's story. And I really appreciate the honesty. And I think that's absolutely, we ask people to trade off between money and meaning all the time. I think we don't even as a society always question the fact that we do that. So I think that is a tradeoff that a lot of people face. And I think actually to Jen's original point, you know, is it a privilege to do what you love? I think that's absolutely true. I mean, there are so many people, if we think about our world and how many people really don't even have freedom to choose whether to work, what they do for work, how much control and autonomy they have over what their own workday looks like. Absolutely, these are questions of privilege and I don't want to pretend otherwise. I think, first of all, it's important that we think about a society in which no one has to do work. that is truly meaningless or denigrated or what David Graber once referred to as bull-shops jobs
Starting point is 01:31:05 that, you know, just sort of exist to perpetuate a hierarchy with, you know, no intrinsic value or purpose. So within a subset of the people who do have some choice over what they do for their work, I think the decision to prioritize, well, as Jen says, paying the mortgage and what's safe, I think that's a defensible position. You shouldn't feel less than because you prioritized stability, security, even a certain lifestyle over work that maybe was more lovable or more likable. However, it would be nice if that work didn't make you feel sad or make you feel that you actively dislike it. If you have the privilege to be able to change what you do or who you do it with, is there a way you can, as we call it, job craft, to turn that work of patient care
Starting point is 01:32:05 into something that seems, you know, less like a dredgery and more like a source of what you find meaningful about work? And I think this is one of the mechanisms that gets to one person's job being another person's calling. What are you making of the work? And in some regards, what are you doing and who are you doing it with? We heard from one listener who spoke very explicitly about the role of social comparisons in how he is thinking about whether he has a calling. Here's Jesse. I think the idea of work as a calling is one of the most harmful ideologies in our culture today. If you look at the research about job satisfaction, the predictors are pretty straightforward. You should have good relationships with the people that you work with, fair compensation, a sense of appreciation and respect from those above you and those beside you, a positive work-life balance, opportunities for growth.
Starting point is 01:33:09 And in my life, I have all these things, but I still feel unfulfilled because I compare my job with other people who seem to have that sense of calling. And I crave that. I earned a PhD in research psychology because I found the discipline interesting. And I just, I loved learning. It wasn't a calling, but it was a lot of fun. And the work I do now is based on the skills that learned in my PhD program. It's not really fun or interesting, but it is a really good job. I have all those predictors of job satisfaction, but I don't have that sense of calling. And that one thing seems to undermine all the other positive things in my life. I try to ignore it, but I wonder every day what I should be doing instead of this. That is so powerful, Jen. What do you make of it?
Starting point is 01:34:09 Jesse's story is really such a powerful and vivid illustration of the downside of this cultural pressure to find our callings, that anything less really makes us feel like a failure. I mean, if we look at the things that Jesse talked about, he, I mean, he said it very succinctly. It's a really good job. It feels like he would like what he's doing, comes to terms with it, knows why he chose it, sort of went in with eyes wide open. And it's just the fact that he feels that others are more fulfilled or have, you know, this bigger sense of a calling. And he doesn't. That's like the one thing that's standing in the way and the fact that it's sort of swamping all these other things that
Starting point is 01:34:57 are really positive for him. I mean, that's powerful. And I think Jesse is really acknowledging this is coming through social comparison and this is coming through cultural pressure and that doesn't make it any easier to dismiss these feelings. These feelings are clearly very real for him. We received a flood of messages from listeners sharing their frustrations over not finding a calling in their professional lives.
Starting point is 01:35:26 I'd like to play a few of those messages for you, Jen. I feel that arriving at one's calling is somewhat a fun. of luck in life. I'm 37 and I still don't know what I want to do with my career. When I think about a calling, I don't feel like I've had that experience. I'm wondering what advice you all would give to someone who deeply desires to find that calling in life, but so far for whatever reason has not figured that out.
Starting point is 01:35:55 So those were listeners, Dave, Katerina, Alex, and Stacey. I'm wondering about Stacey's last question there, Jen. what are two or three specific steps that people can take if they haven't yet found their calling, but hope to do so? Yeah. So I want to take the pressure off people that it's not a better calling if you knew it from childhood, or it's not a more pure calling if you feel that it's the only one thing you've ever imagined yourself doing. It's a more A to B kind of journey, and it's a little simpler, cleaner than the alternative. But it doesn't make it better or it doesn't. make it any more, more or less a calling. So there are people who have studied the pathways to finding a calling. So Matt Bloom, Amy Colbert, and Jordan Nielsen looked into this. And they found two types of pathways. The one I just described, I know my one true calling and I sort of venture toward it.
Starting point is 01:36:50 And then this other path called discerning a calling, which is really what I see for your your callers. It's more about having experiences, but not just at random, not just randomly trying things, you know, throw the spaghetti at the wall and see what sticks, but really thoughtfully learning through trial and error. It has to be an iterative, reflective learning process. So you try something, you learn what you liked about it, you learn what you didn't like about it, you try, you know, adjust it accordingly and try again. And that that in and of itself is a pathway toward people ultimately at the end of this feeling like they're in work that was a calling. And also paying attention to, you know, what kind of signals are you
Starting point is 01:37:41 getting from outside? So are there people who are exemplars and have a sort of career that you might want? What can you learn from them? Talking to them, talking about their journey, talking about how they knew. I mean, really, just talking about callings, getting people's stories and finding inspiration from it and when all else fails, or not even when all else fails, but just let's not forget, there are also resources, you know, I, for the number of times that people have said they took, talk to a coach or they took a class on, you know, how to change careers or how to make a pivot or how to get to meaningful work. I mean, I do think, and humbly as someone who wrote a book about this, I do think reading books, taking courses, talking to a coach, you know, just
Starting point is 01:38:30 putting some time and attention to this question of how can I find a calling, it can help. It certainly beats the alternative of just trying random things and then being, you know, upset when it doesn't work out. Jennifer Toasty-Carris is a psychologist at Babson College with Christopher Wong-Michelsohn, She's author of the book, Is Your Work Worth It? How to Think About Meaningful Work. Jen, thank you so much for joining me again today on Hidden Brain. Shankar, thank you so much. It was great.
Starting point is 01:39:13 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 you've listened all the way through the end of the show, we're guessing you may love the topics we cover on Hidden Brain. If that's the case, please consider joining Hidden Brain Plus.
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