How to Be a Better Human - The science of happiness (w/ Laurie Santos)
Episode Date: January 23, 2023The phrase “comparison is the thief of joy” might be the kind of cliche that makes you roll your eyes – and yet, it’s an idea that is, scientifically, pretty accurate. In today’s episode, ps...ychologist Laurie Santos – a Yale professor and host of “The Happiness Lab” podcast – discusses some of the surprising evidence behind what does and doesn’t make us humans happy. Laurie also shares strategies on how to improve our well-being, discusses the irony behind “self-care”, and explains why happiness is often a journey not just within, but beyond, ourselves. For the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to How to Be a Better Human.
I am your host, Chris Duffy.
Here's a strange thing that I have noticed about my own brain.
Often, the times that I feel the happiest are where I have a lot of irons in the fire.
There's all these possibilities and there's this sense that exciting things might happen.
But the thing that's weird is that I often feel happier in that moment where the irons
are in the fire than when they actually come out and become a real thing.
Right. Like even if I have accomplished something that feels really big and special,
like we finished recording the season of this show or I did a big live show and it went well,
I crash so hard that night or the next day as soon as I've done the thing that I thought that I really wanted to do.
It's like I have a happiness hangover.
I'm confused, to be honest, about why it is that
accomplishing the things that I thought I wanted to accomplish often don't make me feel very happy
at all. In my experience, happiness is kind of a slippery fish. When I try my hardest to grab a
hold of happiness, it just flops out of my fingers and slides away. But when I ignore the fish and I
focus on other things, sometimes out of the corner
of my eye, I see that, hey, that happiness fish is swimming right around next to me all
over again.
Our guest today is Lori Santos.
Lori started the Happiness Lab podcast to help people understand how science could help
them lead more satisfying lives.
And I promise you, I swear, Lori is going to use zero fish-based metaphors to do that.
Lori's podcast grew out of her work teaching at Yale, where she started a course called
Psychology and the Good Life.
It's also known as the Happiness Course.
Since then, Lori has taken the Happiness Course online at Coursera, where thousands of people
enrolled in the program.
But then when the pandemic and the lockdowns came, a time when so many people were reassessing
what was truly
important in their lives, that number shot up into the millions. But a part of Lori's interest
in exploring human happiness didn't actually come from working with people at all. It came from
working with animals. Lori gave a TED talk explaining her research with monkeys. I love this
clip. And because we started this work around the time of the financial collapse, around the time
when foreclosures were hitting the news,
we said, hmm, maybe we should actually start in the financial domain.
Maybe we should look at monkeys' economic decisions
and try to see if they do the same kinds of dumb things that we do.
Of course, that's when we hit a sort of second problem,
a little bit more methodological,
which is that maybe you guys don't know,
but monkeys don't actually use money.
You know, you haven't met them.
This is why, you know, they're not in the queue behind you at the grocery store or at the ATM.
You know, they don't do this stuff.
So now we faced, you know, a little bit of a problem here.
How are we going to actually ask monkeys about money if they don't actually use it?
So we said, well, maybe we should just actually just suck it up and teach monkeys how to use money.
And so that's just what we did.
When we return, we will find out more about what Lori learned from animals
about our most deeply embedded attitudes towards happiness and what we can each do to be happier
in our own lives. Okay, we are back. We're talking about what it means to be happy with Laurie Santos.
Hey, I'm Laurie Santos.
I'm a professor of psychology at Yale University and host of the Happiness Lab podcast.
So, Laurie, I first heard about your research that was basically like having monkeys build an economy based on different types of fruit.
Yeah, it was a pretty good description, actually.
So we wanted to see whether or not some of the standard economic biases that humans showed were shared with monkeys, too. And
so we taught monkeys how to use that kind of form of currency, these little metal tokens that they
traded with humans for food. And that meant that we could put monkeys into kind of really simple
economic experiments, really ask them their preferences about things like risk and whether
or not they paid attention to how much food they were getting and so on. And what we found was that the monkeys were
pretty rational in all the spots that humans were rational, but they also showed all the same
irrational biases that humans tended to show. They overpaid attention to risk and they kind of
had this tendency to frame what they were getting in terms of gains and losses, which is the kind
of thing that leads humans astray. And one of the big things from this study that has just kind of always stuck in my head
is that there were a lot of monkeys who were totally happy with the fruit that they were
getting until they saw that a different monkey was getting more fruit or better fruit.
And then all of a sudden they became furious and didn't like the things that had made them
happy just moments before.
Yeah, I mean, this was actually some lovely work by Sarah Brosnan, who used really similar kinds of studies with her group of monkeys. And it's yet
another bias that we tend to show, right, which is that we tend to socially compare ourselves with
others. So even if what we're getting is perfectly fine, as soon as we see that somebody else is
getting something that's better than we're getting, all of a sudden, we're unhappy with it.
And this has a really strong connection to happiness and subjective well-being, right?
Because we're doing well in terms of got a roof over our head,
you know, food on the table and so on.
But we're so prone to be seeing what's going on with other people.
And it can really negatively affect our happiness,
even in cases when we're objectively doing really well.
Is that part of the bridge of what got you into human happiness?
I wonder if seeing how animals, how it's kind of hardwired into many of us to have these things that make us unhappy that
we wish we could overcome was part of the seed of what brought you into happiness in the first place.
Yeah, I think so. I mean, I think one of the reasons I was always so fascinated with work
in monkeys is because a lot of times we get focused on, oh, humans, we do things so amazingly
well. We have all this technology and language and this amazing culture. We're so different than other animals. But when I look to humans, what I saw generally was, yeah, you know, we're doing great. You know, we're having this podcast, no other animal, no bonobos doing that right now. Right. But we're also so prone to error. We're so prone to bias. We're so prone to not appreciating what we have. You know, the take that I bring to
my students and that I talk about a lot on my podcast is this idea that our minds lie to us
when it comes to happiness, right? We have these intuitions about the sorts of things that would
make us happy. But in practice, a lot of those intuitions that research shows are wrong. And so
I think the connection with the monkey work is recognizing how deep some of these errors go,
and that we might have errors when it comes to happiness as well. You teach at a school where there are so many driven students,
right? There's students who are high achievers who have gotten into one of the most prestigious
universities in the world. So in some ways you would think like you've done it, you should be
happy. But I know from listening to other interviews that you've done that one of the things that you really found was that your students were really unhappy, kind of profoundly so.
Yeah, and I saw this, you know, in a really acute way in this new role that I took on on campus.
I've been teaching at Yale for now about 20 years, which makes me feel very old.
So I saw students in the classroom and in my lab, but I didn't really get to know them really well.
All that changed when I took on a new role at Yale, where I became a head of college on campus. So this is a role where I physically live with students, like my house is in a quad with students, I eat with them in the dining hall and so on. And that was where I got to see this college student mental health crisis up close and personal, you know, particularly acute at Yale, because as you've said, Yale students, these Ivy League kids that are incredibly driven and so on.
these Ivy League kids that are incredibly driven and so on. But I think a shocking thing that I realized is that it's not just at Yale. In fact, there's lots of evidence that just nationally,
students are really struggling. So nationally right now, college students report being too
depressed to function. They're lonely. They're overwhelmingly anxious. And nationally right now,
more than one in 10 students has seriously considered suicide in the last year, right?
This is not just a couple snowflakes in the parlance of, you know,
I think what the media talks about, right? This is a real national health crisis. I realized,
you know, I really want to do something about this. Also, as educators, I think we're not
really fulfilling our educational mission until we address this, right? Like students too depressed
to function most days, like they're not learning whatever we're teaching them. If we're teaching
them, I don't know, Shakespeare or computer science, like they're not like retaining this just memory wise, their brains can't possibly
pick up on this information if they're feeling so depressed and anxious. And so that was kind of
more the origin story was to realize we got to do something about this. You know, I think my field
of psychology has a lot of answers for the kinds of things you can do to feel better, right? Things
you can do to not feel so stressed and depressed and anxious. And so I said, well, let me develop a whole class where I teach students all these strategies. Let me kind of give
them the party line of what my field says about things you can do to feel better and hope that
they can put these things into practice themselves. Well, when we're talking about college students
feeling too depressed to function, when we're talking about one in 10 students in the classroom
thinking about suicide, having self-harm thoughts.
How do you walk the line between the science of happiness and trying to get that out to people and not making people feel bad that they're not already happy? Which, to be clear, I don't think
you do, but I think a lot of the, like, you should just be happy framework that's out in the world
sometimes does that, is like this toxic positivity side. So how do you personally think about like walking that line?
Yeah, no, toxic positivity is real. And I think it honestly, I think it stems from yet another
myth that we have about happiness, right? Which is that a good life means being happy
all the time, right? If I'm feeling sad or frustrated or angry or anxious or whatever,
I've done something wrong, right? And I need to
fix it. And I think this is a myth, right? Emotions are these signals that are telling our body what
we should be doing in the future and how we should behave in the future. And negative emotions are an
incredibly important signal, right? Your sadness is telling you that there's something amiss. Your
loneliness is telling you that you might need to seek out social connection. Your anger is telling
you that something is wrong. There's an injustice out there that you need to fix. And so I think this
idea that we need to be happy all the time would just be psychologically and evolutionarily would
be terrible for us, right? Like we'd be missing out on these signals that tell us what we need.
And so I think what we need to do and what I preach a lot in the class isn't happiness isn't
about being happy all the time. It's kind of having the normative emotions that come up based on situations. This is one of the things that I
admire most about your work. And I think it's so interesting is that you really are rigorously
grounded in the science and in the practical pieces that make a difference. I mean,
one thing that really stands out to me is that when your course was offered as a free online class,
they were able to measure
significant increases in well-being scores. So this isn't just like, hey, look at the sun and
say, I'm happy. And then all of a sudden you feel happy. This is like real practice.
I'm a scientist first and foremost. And, you know, I want to help people, but I also want to make
sure that we're not selling snake oil. And as you've said, there's a lot of snake oil out there,
from the toxic positivity to the woo stuff. There's just a lot of advice out there that
isn't necessarily scientifically rigorous, although it pretends that it is, or at least
it's kind of scientifically adjacent. If I say, hey, experience more gratitude or look at the sun
or whatever the recommendation is I'm saying, and here's the paper that shows that it might work for
you. And if possible, trying to test it ourselves
to make sure, hey, if we suggest these strategies
to students, if the students actually put these things
into practice, will we move the needle?
And I think that's a hard test, right?
I mean, behavior change is really hard
and I think there's a lot of factors
that affect our happiness.
So if a simple 10 minute practice
that I'm suggesting to students is moving the needle,
realistically, it's probably not gonna move the needle that much. Like if all of a sudden
my students go from zero on a happiness scale to 100, probably something's wrong. But the cool
thing is that we actually do see small but significant increases in happiness, small but
consistent increases in people's self-reported happiness. And that's really cool. It suggests
that some of the practices that we're suggesting really can work. So let's talk about it then. What are some of these practices that you would
recommend? If you survey people, again, around the new year, like when we're having this
conversation, there's a lot of goals out there that people think are going to make them happy.
Right now, or at least if you look at statistically last year in 2022, people's top New Year's
resolutions were lose weight. Around four out of 10 people basically said they want to lose weight. Absolutely no evidence that losing weight is going to make
you happier. Changing your body in general, probably not going to make you happier.
What really does make us happier, though, is changing other behaviors. For example,
increasing our social connection, a huge, huge boost in people's happiness. Pretty much every
available study of happy people suggests that happy people are more social. And there's also evidence that getting more social will increase your happiness,
no matter your personality profile. So even if you are a self-reported introvert, getting some
social connection will make you feel better. Again, not like huge parties, huge crowds,
but just like contacting that person one-on-one that you care about, but you haven't been in
touch with in a while. Another big boost for our happiness is kind of getting away from this idea
of self-care. These days, we hear a lot kind of getting away from this idea of self-care.
These days we hear a lot about treating ourselves and I think sometimes self-care can be like, you
know, buy this bubble bath, but sometimes it's really about, you know, me time and me, me, me. But
if you look at happy people, they're not as self-focused. They tend to be really other-oriented.
Happy people on average, controlled for income, donate more money to charity. Happy people
on average, controlled for free time time spend more of their time volunteering.
They're kind of just like doing stuff to make other people happy rather than focused on their own happiness.
And so there's evidence that if you just kind of do more stuff for other people, get kind of out of your own headspace and try to help others, it can actually boost your happiness.
So those are just some behaviors that help with happiness.
There are also lots of mindsets that we can shift into that can really help with our happiness. So those are just some behaviors that help with happiness. There are also lots of mindsets that we can shift into that can really help with our happiness. For example, a mindset of
gratitude, this idea of just counting your blessings, like taking moments to notice the
good things in life. Sounds super cheesy, you know, sounds like grandmotherly wisdom, but I always say
it might be common wisdom, but it's not common practice. Like common practice these days is to
complain about everything, right? But again, there's evidence even if you just like write down a few things that you're grateful for every night,
you can show significant increases in your happiness in as little as two weeks.
A final practice I'll mention is sort of this mindset of being a little bit more present,
right? You know, we talk, people have heard about mindfulness and being in the present moment, but
the evidence really suggests that like if you're just there with whatever's going on, noticing it, paying attention to it, allowing it,
that's better. And that includes being present when things like suck, like that includes being
present when you're feeling frustrated, when you're feeling really sad, when you're feeling
overwhelmed. The start of the new year where you're like, oh, there's always things I didn't
finish last year. There's so much on my plate. Like that's a moment to say, hey, wait, let me notice for a second. That's
overwhelm, right? That's feeling like I haven't had a break. And that's not a nice thing to notice
and feel. It's much better to like, you know, pretend that that's not happening or cover it up
or check your email or whatever. But the act of noticing that it turns out is important. It
ultimately winds up making us feel happier in part because it
causes us when you notice that you've got to deal with it and allow it and change it perhaps in some
cases. So this act of being present is important, but it's not just being present when everything's
like unicorns and rainbows. It's also being present when things don't feel so good.
It's interesting because that does seem to tie back to what you were saying before about the
toxic positivity pieces, right? Like if you insist on everything has to be happy and good all the
time, you can't actually be present when you're not feeling happy and good. And that paradoxically
leads you to feel less happy and good. It prevents us from really taking action on the things that
matter, right? Really noticing like, oh, this is loneliness. And oh, hey, I can do something about
loneliness. I can reach out to somebody. I can do something different. Or I'm feeling really
overwhelmed. Like, actually, that means you need some rest. You need to take some things off your
plate. And so I think we can't see the solution that's going to help us most unless we know what
the problem we're dealing with is. And knowing that problem requires understanding what emotion
we're experiencing at any given time. Something that I often think of as kind of my personal goal for happiness is if I imagine
myself in this metaphor as I'm a cup to be overflowing with so much that I can fill other
people's cups.
Sometimes I associate the idea of like volunteering and charity with like, oh, there's I'm
overflowing.
So there's plenty to give.
And that's when that happens.
But it sounds like you're actually saying that that can also help fill my own cup,
which I know I'm pushing this metaphor to its very limit here.
But I wonder if that is that true.
I think that's totally right.
I mean, I think another misconception that comes up when we think about happiness
and motivation and things is this idea that if I do something nice for others,
it kind of like depletes me, right?
There's this kind of fixed happiness pie out there, right?
And if I kind of give some of happiness to someone else,
I'm kind of losing out myself.
But that's just simply not what the data suggests.
Like the nice stuff in the world
and happiness isn't a zero sum game.
Like we're actually increasing the pie.
So you're kind of, to use your cup metaphor,
I guess, making the cup even bigger.
Like you kind of add parts to the cup, you know, larger and larger cup.
Which again, totally, I mean, it's absolutely not what our intuition is.
It's not what my intuition is.
I mean, I know the data, I can cite the studies on this stuff showing people, again, people who do nice things for others tend to be happier.
If I force you to do nice things for other people rather than do nice things for yourself, that will over time make you happier.
Just like the simple act of forcing people to give some money to charity makes them feel better, right?
But that's not my intuition myself, especially when I'm having a bad day. My instinct is not,
hey, let me do something nice for my brother or let me like give a gift to a co-worker or
something. It's me, me, me. It's like, I want this stuff. But in fact, I know from the data that if
you really do something nice for somebody else, you'll wind up feeling better. So, yeah, we're increasing the cup size as we go.
OK, well, take a second to grab your increasingly enormous cup and get yourself a refill of whatever it is that you're drinking, because we're going to take a quick break for some ads.
But we will be right back with more from Lori in just a moment. On today's show, we're talking to Lori Santos about science
and well-being. And here is a clip from Lori's podcast, which is called The Happiness Lab.
Science shows us lots of really simple habits we can add to our lives to feel better.
We can take more time to connect with the people we care about or just chat with a stranger we meet
on our commute. We can try to reduce the exhausting choices we make on a daily basis. We can count our
blessings. We can become more accepting, both of the bad emotions we feel and the obstacles we face
in life. We can stop focusing on the end goal and think more about the journey.
How much of happiness or more broadly well-being is adding positives and how much is removing
negatives? Oh, I think, I mean, it's definitely a little bit of both, right? I think things like
adding social connection, you could construe as adding some positives in, right? I'm getting the
boost of the social connection, but it's also decreasing your alone time, right? It's also getting rid of
loneliness to a certain extent. I think also a lot of another big factor for happiness that we
haven't talked about yet is giving yourself a little bit more free time. There's lots of evidence
for the power of what's called time affluence, this subjective sense that you have some free time.
And for most of us,
kind of feeling more time affluent means taking some stuff off our plate, right? Like taking stuff out of the calendar rather than adding to it. And so I think we sometimes often forget that
happiness requires taking stuff away. But definitely when it comes to boosting our
time affluence, there's a lot of spots where we need to take some stuff away to get more bandwidth
to even think. It's interesting. I feel like for myself, one of the things that is often a
trap for me to feel less happy is being too focused on money or income, especially because
I have irregular income. So it causes a lot of stress to be like, well, is this actually going
to last? How long is it going to last for? Blah, blah, blah. But sometimes then when I look at my
actual day and I think like, what would I do if I won the lottery? I don't think I would actually like fly to some exotic
locale. I'd probably like see some friends and have a great conversation with someone. And
I want to make a lot more money so that I can do exactly what I'm doing now, but not worry while
I'm doing that right now is a strange loop that breaks me out of that cycle a little bit sometimes.
Yeah. And I think this is, you know, this is some lovely work by the Harvard Business School
professor Ashley Willans that shows exactly this, that often when we think about getting more time,
we're often thinking about, well, I'd have to give up money to do that. But what she finds is
that people who focus on being wealthy in money aren't as happy as people who focus on being
wealthy in time. And in fact, even spending your money to get back more time, you know, if you have, if you are lucky enough to have some
discretionary income, spending it to, you know, not have to clean your house, or even in some
cases like buying takeouts, you save time cooking and things like that. Spending your money that
way and really framing it that way, which is a spot where we mess up. A lot of us might go to
a restaurant, but we don't sit in the restaurant and think, look at how much time I'm saving. I don't have to go to the grocery store. I don't
have to clean the dishes. We're not framing it in terms of the time saved, but the act of doing that
can really make you happier, much happier than money can make you. On the money and happiness
point, it's worth saying money does make you happy if you don't have much of it, right? Like if you
can't put food on the table, if you can't put a roof over your head, like it really will make you much happier to get some money. So it's not that money
doesn't matter for happiness. It's that for probably a lot of the people listening to this
podcast, if you have the basics in life, getting more money isn't really going to help. And in the
U.S. right now, that's at around 75K, some estimates put it at. This is work by Danny
Kahneman and Angus Deaton.
Find around 75K.
That's probably the upper limit of like if you were to double or triple your income,
wouldn't matter very much.
So if you're like lower than that, more money will make you happy.
Probably not as happy as you think, but a little more might help.
After that point, more is just it's just kind of gravy. It's not really going to help as much as you assume.
When you're in a situation, obviously, where the basics are hard to come by, so much of life requires a lot of mental energy. It also requires
a lot of, there's a lot of instability where you're not really sure, things aren't predictable.
Are we actually happier when we know this is just reliable? I know for sure my rent is covered. I
know for sure I'm going to be able to go to the grocery store. Those are kinds of predictability
that just intuitively, they seem like they must be really important for sure. I'm going to be able to go to the grocery store. Like those are kinds of predictability that just intuitively they seem like they must be really important for happiness.
It honestly kind of depends. I think if there's a really important thing like food on the table
that you're not sure you're going to get, that feeling that anxiety is real. Like the anxiety
is a true signal of like, man, if we don't do something different, we might not get food on
the table. So it's that those negative emotions are honest signals that are telling you, hey,
a really important thing kind of matters. You know, we sometimes forget that back in the day,
this, you know, Maslow had this idea of hierarchy of needs. And at the bottom, it's like food,
shelter, you know, whatever. Sometimes in our discussion of happiness, we can forget like,
no, no, no, those basics are still basic. Like those are still really essential. If
you're unsure of them, it's going to be a bad scene. But once we get them, then there's a question of like, okay, what else kind of has to be stable in life? What else has
to be uncertain? And I think, you know, obviously novelty is kind of interesting, but that's in part
because we get used to the things we have, right? And so one way to get back the novelty is to find
ways to reframe the stuff you have as kind of being interesting again. It's sort of getting
off what's often known as the hedonic treadmill,
which is this idea that if you're on a treadmill for a long time,
if you're running, you can sort of get used to it.
You get used to the pace, you know, such that when you get off it,
you're like, whoa, you know, it feels like the world's not moving anymore, right?
This is a treadmill that we can get on with all the rewards that we experience in life,
all the good things in life.
It's one of the reasons that gratitude can be so powerful is that gratitude can get you to notice the stuff that you already have.
And so, yeah, it's true that it feels like novelty will help us feel better, you know,
new phone, you know, new trip or a new whatever. But often it's because we have stopped experiencing
the benefits of the things we already have. So if we can use strategies to re-experience the
benefits of the stuff we have already, then we don't have to buy anything. Then we don't have
to make any changes. We just kind of get the same happiness benefit over time for the stuff that we
have now. So this is coming out in the new year. And I wonder, what does the scientific research
around well-being and happiness say about New Year's resolutions and about the way that we
actually should approach a new year? Which which obviously I feel like every scientist I know
feels very strongly that like January 1st is just a day. It's truly just one more day. But
for a lot of people, it doesn't feel like that. There's some evidence that it's worth sort of
striking when the iron is hot, when the sort of motivation iron is hot. And there is evidence for
what researchers call the fresh start effect. This is some lovely work by Katie Milkman, the University of Pennsylvania.
And what she finds is that our motivation can kind of kick into high gear at certain temporal
moments, right? New Year's is obviously one of them, but we have other ones, like our birthday
is often a time where we're like, this year, you know, new switch, right? There are these kind of
moments that should be arbitrary, right?
January 1st is just another day.
But for some reason, it feels like we're turning a new page, right?
A new page on the calendar, blank slate, like anything is possible.
And she finds that like those things matter, right?
They can actually be moments where because our motivation is in high gear,
it makes sense that we're ready to make some changes.
I think the problem though with this fresh start effect is that we apply it to the wrong changes. We're like, this is the year that I'm going to lose a bunch of weight. This is the year that I'm going to make more money at work or really double down on my career. Right. When if you took the fresh start moment and said, you know, this is the year that I'm really going to invest in social connection. This is the year that I'm really going to try to talk to myself in a different way. So I'm a little bit more self-compassionate. This is the year where I'm really going to focus on the things
I'm grateful for and just try not to pay as much attention to the negativity and the hassles.
Then the fresh start effect, you'd kind of apply this moment where motivation was feeling so amped
up. You'd kind of apply that motivation in positive ways that would really have a true
effect on our happiness. So I think it's not so much that New Year's resolutions are bad. I think,
yeah, any day you're feeling motivated to go for it, you should go for it and make changes.
The problem is that we pick the wrong changes. And I think we also go about those changes with
the wrong attitude. We sometimes talk to ourselves, especially I think in the new year in
this sort of drill instructor mindset where it's like, well, if I just scream at myself and berate
myself for how crappy things were last year, I'll make it all better this year.
And there's so much evidence to suggest that that simply doesn't work, that we'd do better if we took baby steps, if we engaged with these goals with a little bit more self-compassion.
Like kind of thinking about not in terms of perfection, but in terms of kind of getting better slowly over time.
So we need to pick different resolutions and we need to go about them a little bit differently. I've heard you talk before about this term mind hitches. Can
you tell us about what that is? Yeah. I mean, this is the idea that like, you know, our mind kind of
sometimes messes us up, right? I think the problem with happiness isn't that we're not
working towards it. I think most of us are putting in a lot of effort to feel better.
But the problem is that we seem to be doing it wrong. We tend to go about the wrong goals. And so I think understanding these biases, these spots where our minds go astray can actually
be really helpful. It's worth noting that they don't fix things completely. I still have pretty
much all the wrong intuitions when it comes to happiness about my social connection and what I
need and what circumstances will make me happy. I have the same bad intuitions as everybody else.
But I think if you know that your mind is leading you astray,
you can start doing better.
You say you're not so good at this yourself.
No, I suck terribly, terribly.
What are the things that you struggle with?
Like when you personally see it,
like you're like, oh, I'm not doing my own research.
I mean, literally, I mean,
like having a tough afternoon, right?
Today I have a bunch of podcast interviews,
a bunch of meetings.
I know around five o'clock, it's gonna be one of those days where I'm feeling tired. And my
instinct is going to be like, I'm going to plop down and watch the next new Netflix show and like
not get up, not talk to anyone, probably, you know, eat a bunch of junk food. Like that's what
my brain is like, do this and everything will feel better. And I know that actually, if I like
called a friend, or if I did a hard Pilates workout
or if I just took a walk and meditated, all of those things would feel way better than
plopping down and watching Netflix and eating a bunch of junk food.
But like, it's hard to remember that in the moment.
It's hard to really do it.
So I believe you.
And I also believe the science and the research is correct about these things.
But I do feel at least inside of
myself, this like instinctive desire to push back when you say like, I've had a long day,
instead of watching my favorite Netflix show, I should do a hard Pilates workout.
What are the things that people push back on the most? Because I feel like that might be one of
them. Yeah, to be fair, it depends on what you need, right? You have to figure out what's going
to work for you in those moments and pay attention really to like kind of how it's feeling.
In terms of some of the stuff where people push back a lot, you know, especially with my, you know, type A Yale students, I get a lot of pushback when it comes to the work on money.
A lot of them have worked incredibly hard in high school to get into a place like Yale so they can leave and get, you know, a job in finance or where they're going to make a lot of money.
And I'm telling them like, nope, that's not going to work. After I present the work saying
after 75K, you're not going to feel better. They're like, well, what if I invest it different
or what if I like, they really don't like that. Get a lot of pushback when it comes to this idea
of negative emotions, right? That like we should allow and be one with our sadness, with our
anxiety. I think that can feel really scary. How can I even overcome these emotions? So that's a spot where I get,
you know, lots of pushback. And then also just this idea of, is this the right enterprise? I
mean, I think in the midst of where we've been with the COVID-19 crisis, with anti-Black violence,
with political polarization, with the climate being on fire, it can feel weird to focus on
our happiness. I think people are like, is that just like really selfish or kind of Pollyanna-ish,
right? Like I'm just going to pretend that I'm happy when the whole world is messed up. And I
think that's a spot where there are really interesting empirical data to push back.
Because what the data suggests is if you really want to fight for social justice, if you want to
take action against climate change, you might actually want to focus on your happiness. Because if you look at who's doing the push for these
kinds of things, it tends to be people who are happier. You got to put your own oxygen mask on
first before helping others or helping the world. But we forget that our mental health kind of
matters for our ability to do good stuff in the world and also for our performance. So that's
another spot where I get pushback is like, does this stuff really matter beyond just kind of
selfishly feeling good? And it's like, yeah, I actually think we'll solve a lot more of the
crises in the world if a lot of us were feeling better. You don't have to wait till you're
perfectly happy because giving your life meaning by working towards stuff will actually make you
happier in the long run. It sometimes doesn't. I think we sometimes forget that, too.
Totally. I think the key forget that too. Totally.
I think the key is, again, how much we're pushing and how we're doing and not noticing.
And this is something that you can speak to from my own experience.
So I'm actually taking a year off this year to kind of address my own sense of burnout. I was in the trenches working with students in the midst of COVID-19, fighting for all
this stuff, and was starting to notice all the classic signs of
burnout. Things like that you're just really exhausted all the time, and even getting a great
night's sleep doesn't make you feel less exhausted. Things like cynicism, where, you know, like simple
questions that my students had really like irk me a little bit more than they should have, and a
little bit more than they would have if I was feeling a little bit better. Focusing on happiness,
helping my students, it's given me tremendous purpose and meaning in life. But that doesn't mean you can pull back and stop paying attention
to when the balance is a little bit off. And if you find that it's a little off, that is definitely
a negative emotional signal that you should pay attention to because there's lots of evidence that
if you don't, then you're in for a full-blown burnout. And that doesn't go very well after that.
And that doesn't go very well after that.
One topic that I would like to get a little deeper into is how COVID-19 and the pandemic and the shifts that have happened in the world over the last couple of years, how those have
changed the way that you think about happiness and well-being?
You know, if anything, they've made me realize how important they are and how fragile some
of the things that we need for our happiness really
are. I mean, if you designed a disease that would hit at some of the things we fundamentally need
for happiness, like COVID-19 would be it, right? Like it really made it so difficult to engage in
social connection, right? It was like this uncertain thing that's still kind of uncertain.
Is it here? Is it not here? How long is it going? Right? These are all things that the human mind doesn't deal with well. And we faced it out of nowhere, like in the middle of a time when we
were also experiencing political polarization, which makes us feel uncertain and allows us to
feel a lack of social connection. We experienced it at a time of climate anxiety, which is a
normative anxiety to have. It should be scary that the planet is getting hotter and hotter, right? It means all the more that we need to start focusing on our
mental health in part because there's things chipping away at it, right? So we need strategies
to kind of do better. But also, as I said, like these are threats that are real that I hope
someone, especially my young, smart students will be able to solve. And unless they're protecting
their mental health, they simply won't have the emotional bandwidth to fix any of this stuff either.
If someone's listening to this and they want to immediately, like this podcast ends, they
start a practice right now.
Like what's something that they should do in this moment as soon as the show ends to
make themselves a tiny bit happier?
Yeah, well, I think the social connection piece is powerful.
I think if when this podcast ends, you pick up your phone and you try to text a
friend or call a friend or set up a time to like engage with another real human being in real life,
it's a positive thing you can do. And I promise that once you actually engage in that at the end,
if you again, play scientist yourself and take your own data and figure out like, how am I
feeling? You'll feel, oh, I feel much better. I bet you'll feel relatively better relative to
maybe what you could have done with that half hour, which is like scrolling and scrolling through your social
media feed or something like that. That would be the biggest, fastest takeaway. But I think all of
these practices we've talked about, it's worth noting that like they're kind of fast, right?
Figuring out time to text a friend, you know, I best that I'll take half hour. Doing something
nice for someone, texting someone and checking in about how they're doing or doing a quick $5 donation to charity if you're having a bad day. Doing
something to feel a little bit more present, you know, that could be like a five minute meditation
or just like three conscious breaths of where you are right now in terms of your emotions.
Scribbling in a gratitude journal, that'll take you like five minutes, right? I mean,
all the things we're talking about don't have to be these mega investments.
And I think recognizing that,
realizing that these tiny baby steps can have big effects
is also a way forward to realize
you don't have to revamp the whole wheel.
Like your fresh start doesn't have to be
like tearing off the new page
and like throwing out the rest of the book.
It can really just be these small changes
that you do intentionally
and ideally turn into a habit over time
that can have a big impact on how you're feeling.
Well, Laurie Santos, thank you so much for being here.
It's been a pleasure to talk to you.
I'm sure that anyone who's listening to this podcast is going to immediately go and listen to the Happiness Lab, your podcast, to get even more from you.
But really, it's been an absolute pleasure.
Thanks for making the time.
Thanks so much for having me on the show.
That is it for today's episode of How to Be a Better Human.
Make yourself happier by immediately texting a friend or loved one about the show
and have them listen to this episode so that you too can discuss it.
A huge thank you to today's guest, Lori Santos.
Her podcast is called The Happiness Lab.
I'm your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and information about my live touring dates at chrisduffycomedy.com.
How to Be a Better Human is brought to you on the TED side by Anna Phelan, Whitney Pennington
Rogers, and Jimmy Gutierrez, who are psyching themselves up right now to come home from work
and do an intense Pilates workout. Every episode of our show is professionally fact-checked,
so you don't have to just take my word for what you're hearing.
Thank goodness.
This episode was fact-checked by Julia Dickerson and Erica Yoon, who, much to my amazement, tell me that scientists really did teach monkeys how to use a fruit-based currency.
From PRX, our show is brought to you by Morgan Flannery, Rosalind Tortosillas, Jocelyn Gonzalez, and Patrick Grant, who are taking the next five minutes to furiously scribble in their gratitude journals.
And, of course, thanks to you for to furiously scribble in their gratitude journals.
And of course, thanks to you for listening to our show and making this all possible.
We will be back next week with even more How to Be a Better Human.
Until then, take care and thanks so much for listening.