Life Kit - How to find lost objects: Techniques that really work
Episode Date: October 31, 2024Finding missing items isn't a matter of "looking harder." There's an art and a science to it. The next time you misplace your wedding ring, try these strategies to hunt it down. They'll make your sear...ch process faster, smoother and calmer. Life Kit digital editor Malaka Gharib talks with visual search experts, a metal detector enthusiast and a detective about their best tricks for finding what's lost.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Hey, everybody.
It's Marielle.
A few years ago, our digital editor, Malika Gharib, lost her passport two days before a big international trip.
Getting a new passport expedited would cost her hundreds of dollars, and she wasn't sure if it would even get to her in time. You can imagine how stressed I was. I mean,
the last time I saw my passport was on the bed. But I retraced my steps about a dozen times and
nothing. She was so stressed about the missing passport, she even took off work to look for it.
I mean, I was really frazzled. I tore up the house, and I was checking the most random places,
like the bathroom cabinets.
That experience made Malika think, you know, there has to be a more methodical way of finding lost objects.
Right. I mean, like, what do researchers know? And what about people like detectives and search and rescue responders? How do they hunt stuff down?
On this episode of Life Kit, how to find the stuff you've lost.
And we're not just going to tell you to look harder if you've lost something.
Malika will bring you useful techniques to find things that don't have an air tag on them,
whether that's something sentimental like a class ring or something valuable like an envelope full of cash
or something you need to cross the border.
And I'll reveal how I finally found my missing passport. So after I called my boss and told him I wasn't coming in, I went into my bedroom where I lost my passport and I turned it upside down.
I remember feeling so overwhelmed that I wasn't looking carefully enough.
That's exactly what you want to avoid
when you're looking for a lost object. This is takeaway one. Your attention is like a spotlight
and you need to be able to point it at the task at hand. To do that, you've got to relax, which
I know is the last thing you want to hear when you've lost something important.
Erin Robbins is a cognitive psychologist at the University of
Richmond, and she specializes in visual search. She says that stress clouds our ability to focus.
Stress can have a couple of different types of effects on us. So imagine you're highly distracted
because you're thinking about something that's coming up, like a big international trip that
you're packing and getting ready for. That type of distraction, that mental distraction, is taking away attentional resources from the task at hand.
So I was already frazzled when I was handling my passport to begin with.
Then I realized I lost it, which was my second layer of stress.
In terms of visual processing, when you are stressed out, you have that sort of fight or flight response kicking in,
that sympathetic nervous system is kicking into gear. Your heart is beating a little faster. You
might get a little sweaty because you're anxious. What that does is it actually narrows your
attention. So if your attention is like a spotlight, you could increase the size of that beam
or shrink it down. When it's narrow,
it's almost like you're having tunnel vision. On one hand, that can be great. You're able to
process your environment with a lot more detail. But you, to some degree, need your attention
sort of expanded in order to get the gist of your search environment to know where to put
that spotlight next. So take a moment to widen that beam.
It helps to take a breath, kind of calm the body down,
because it really is your body response to that stress that's causing that restriction and attention.
Once you've calmed down and centered yourself again,
it's time to start hunting.
Takeaway two, if you've lost something important,
think about the features of the object that would really make it stand out in the environment.
Erin says it'll make your search easier and more efficient. When you are looking for objects,
you're using a bunch of different cognitive processes in your brain, but the two most
important ones are memory and attention. You're going to rely on your memory to remind you what the lost object
looks like and its likely location. It's visual features like color, shape, texture, size, memory
for where the object is most likely going to be. And that information and memory is used to direct
your attention. Say you're looking for a white sedan in the parking lot. To find it, you're not going to look at every single car in the lot. Your attention is going to be directed to cars that are
white, that are sedan-shaped. You're going to skip over the black SUVs, and that helps you save time.
This is what scientists call attentional guidance. It's the process of moving your attention toward
areas in your environment where you'd most likely find your object, including important features of your object and where you tend
to keep the object.
It's something we do all the time without even realizing it.
When we look for our toothbrush in the morning or favorite coffee mug, you only realize you're
looking for something when it becomes challenging.
For example, when you're looking for a white sedan in a parking lot full of white sedans. So in that case, you have to really think about what would make this
object stand apart in the scene. What are some distinctive features of this object? Maybe you
have a bumper sticker that sets it apart. Erin used this tactic recently when she lost the back
of a rose gold earring on a carpet in a similar color.
So I had to think about, OK, what would set my earring apart from this carpet that would allow me to find it?
Well, my earring is shiny. It would reflect light.
And so as soon as I thought about that, like almost instantly, I saw it.
OK, so you've tried this technique and you still can't find what you're looking for.
Time for takeaway three.
Think about the likely scenarios of how and where your object got lost.
Damien Garcia is a metal detecting enthusiast.
For more than a decade, he's been using his metal detector to help people where he lives in Northern California
find their lost jewelry in some pretty challenging environments.
Parks, beaches, roads.
His track record is impressive.
Over the years, he says he's helped recover some 50 lost objects for folks.
When people pay him to find a lost object, he charges around $25 to $35 a search.
He starts off by asking them questions.
Do you have any locations that you put it normally? is around 25 to 35 bucks a search. He starts off by asking them questions.
Do you have any locations that you put it normally?
Have you lost it before?
Has it fallen off before while doing something?
You know, some people say,
oh yeah, it always slips off when I'm in my car and I play with my ring while I'm driving.
Then he goes through typical ways
people lose rings off their hand.
He's got a lot of experience in the behavior of rings, as you can imagine.
Did you throw anything away that day?
Were you dealing with cold water?
Did you put on lotion somewhere?
And one of my favorite ways that Damien helps people find their lost jewelry,
without the use of a metal detector, is to recreate the scene.
An example of that was that a couple were pulled over the side
of the road and she tossed the ring out in the passenger seat. Side note, Damien says this
scenario happens a lot. Couples get into an argument and one of them takes off their wedding
band and chucks it out the window in anger. But then they make up and then they can't find where
they threw their ring. So they contact Damien.
And she kept going, it's right there.
I threw it straight out the window right there.
Damien wondered, was it really right there?
He wanted to test the theory.
So he took a cheap ring, tied a long red ribbon onto it,
and asked the woman to throw the ring out the window again like she did with her wedding ring.
Well, she threw it three times in a row,
and it never went straight out the window like you would think.
It went flying back behind the car because of her arm going out the window makes her hand throw it towards the back of the car.
So it went back about 20 feet to the rear of the car going a different direction.
Using this technique, he was able to find the woman's ring.
Yay, Damien!
So the next time you lose something, try recreating the potential movement of the object.
I should have done that with my passport. I could have taken something similar to it,
like a little booklet or something, laid it on my bed, the last place I saw it,
and I could have ruffled the duvet cover around to see where something of that size and weight might have landed. Because where I ultimately found it was not that far from
my bed, actually. More on the exact spot later. At this point in your search, you've probably
looked in some pretty obvious places. Now it's time to change your perspective and scour elsewhere.
This is Takeaway 4. Michael Hout is a cognitive psychologist
and the director of the Vision Sciences and Memory Lab
at New Mexico State University.
He specializes in how people find things
and where and why people move their eyes.
He was telling me about this experiment
that one of his students did.
She had participants look for objects
in a campus courtyard,
and she found that people tended
only to look at the ground when they searched. So they're not looking up, they're just kind of
walking in a straight line and sweeping back and forth with their head in their eyes in front of
them. This is different from how search and rescue responders and law enforcement operate.
These professionals scan their environment in 360 degrees. That means looking down, looking up, looking left and right, crouching down to change
your perspective, turning around to view things that weren't visible to you when you first
approached them. He says if you've lost something, you need to engage in these kinds of perspective-changing behaviors too. That also means looking in unexpected places. So if you can't find your
keys in the places where you normally leave them, your purse, your pocket, the entryway table at the
front door. You also have to then sort of force yourself to look in the low probability areas. I
think sometimes people put their keys in weird places,
or they drop them, or someone moves them.
Search and rescue responders use this technique
when they look for missing persons in the wilderness.
Instead of just looking on a trail for clues like footprints or a cell phone,
they look up at the trees and off the beaten path.
A windbreaker that someone shed when they were getting hot, for example,
might have been picked up by the wind and blown into a bush or a tree.
When I was looking for my passport, I actually checked inside the fridge. I know this sounds
far-fetched, but maybe I was holding it, intending to put it in my backpack, got hungry, and then
brought it into the kitchen with me? No, I did
not find it in the fridge. But it was still good that I did that anyway. This exercise is all about
breaking out of the way you would normally search for something. And that takes a little bit of
additional effort to sort of force yourself out of the routine that you might automatically use
to look for something. At this point, if you've looked in some weird places
and you still can't find your lost object,
it's time to bust out a more serious search technique.
Takeaway five, divide your space up into sections
and then search each section thoroughly.
Aaron says grid search, as it's called,
is one form of systematic search.
It's sometimes used in search and rescue as a last resort to find missing people.
But it can also be a useful tool if you're looking for something in a messy room where your missing object's distinctive features may be hard to spot.
It's going to be slow, less efficient, but it's going to ensure that you find the thing that you're looking for.
And so in this case, you might imagine that your search
environment, whether it's a room or an office space, is like a grid. And you want to cover each
square in the grid, maybe top to bottom, left to right. Aaron says the general idea is to come up
with a strategy to be thorough without having to remember every location you've already looked at.
You don't necessarily have to measure out a grid. Just imagine breaking down the search environment into smaller units.
Sections of a room, pieces of furniture.
Then search those units in an order that makes sense to you.
Aaron says you are likely going to forget where you searched.
So have a way to remember the places you already sifted through.
When I lost my passport in my bedroom, I deployed a similar strategy.
I divided the room into sections and I put a post-it note where I'd already looked.
Erin thought that was an excellent strategy.
But did I find my passport with this method?
No.
Looking back on my journey to find my passport, I realize I did one thing right.
I was persistent.
That's our final takeaway.
Takeaway six, be persistent. That's our final takeaway. Takeaway six, be persistent.
Daryl Ellis is head of A1 Detective Agency in Illinois.
He's been a private investigator since 1996.
His whole job is to find stuff, people, to say, serve them legal papers,
but sometimes physical items like vintage cars and important documents.
I asked him what it takes to be a good detective.
If I had to use one word, I would say tenacity.
It's my client asking me to do a performance service for them,
and I try to do my best to locate anybody that they're requesting me to locate.
Daryl can spend hours doing surveillance, following targets,
taking photos of them, logging their whereabouts.
Weeks tracking down information about the location of a specific individual.
I mean, I'm looking for a gentleman now.
I've been looking for him for a month.
And we've pulled out all the resources, kind of located him,
been to five or six addresses, and he hasn't lived there.
Daryl says he'll keep looking as long as his clients want him to but Damien says sometimes they give up before he does.
Sometimes they don't have the patience and they're you know an hour into it two hours into it and
I'm on my hands and knees and crawling through bushes and stuff and they're looking at me like
you don't have to go anymore look mean and you and you don't, you know, they're kind of like, well, I guess it's gone.
And I, I just tell them, no, no, I don't, I don't give up until I'm satisfied.
So if you've lost something you really care about, keep going. Don't lose hope. When I was looking for my passport, I remember sitting on my bed and looking around the room.
At this point, it was about 3 p.m., and my brain was fried.
There were post-it notes everywhere.
I had emptied all the drawers in my cabinet to see if the passport was in there.
And I just had this moment of clarity.
The passport has to be near the bed.
It has to be because that's where
I last saw it. And I don't remember taking it anywhere else. So I pushed the mattress off the
bed. And where did I find it? Wedged between the wall of the bed and the side of the mattress.
Hallelujah. Reflecting back on that wild, wild search, I truly believe that if i had these tips i just gave you
i would have found it a lot faster and listen if you don't find the object you're looking for
hold on to the fact that you tried really really hard to find it that's what damien does it may
help to know that i did my best to look for it you, and not to spend time looking in areas that I have looked
and, you know, maybe it'll show up someday. Or if not, you know, you did the best you could. Let's recap.
Takeaway one.
Your attention is a spotlight.
You need to be relaxed so you can widen your beam and stay focused on your search.
Takeaway two.
Speed up your search by identifying the qualities of your missing object that make it stand out from the environment.
Takeaway three.
Search the environment. Takeaway three, search the obvious.
Think about the likely scenarios of how and why your object might have gotten lost to begin with and where it might be. Takeaway four, change your perspective. Professional finders like search and
rescue responders don't just look at the floor. They look behind, they look above, and they look
off the beaten path. Takeaway five, create a systematic way of searching for your lost object.
Divide your room into a grid,
search each square thoroughly
and use post-it notes to mark where you've already looked.
And finally, takeaway six, don't give up.
Be persistent, just like our detective
and our metal detecting enthusiast
and you'll hopefully find what you're looking for.
That was LifeKits digital editor, Malika Gareeb.
For more Life Kit, check out our other episodes. We've got one on improving your sense of direction and another on strengthening your memory. You can find those at npr.org slash Life Kit. And if you
love Life Kit and you just cannot get enough, subscribe to our newsletter at npr.org slash
Life Kit newsletter. Also, we love hearing from you. So if you have episode ideas or feedback
you want to share, email us at lifekit at npr.org. This episode of Life Kit was produced by Margaret
Serino. Our visuals editor is Beck Harlan. Megan Cain is the supervising editor and Beth Donovan
is our executive producer. Our production team also includes Andy Tegel, Claire Marie Schneider, Thanks for listening.