Modern Wisdom - #711 - Dr Tracy Vaillancourt - The Ruthless Ways Women Compete With Each Other
Episode Date: November 25, 2023Dr Tracy Vaillancourt is a professor at the University of Ottawa, a researcher and an author with a focus on the link between violence and mental health. Intrasexual competition is present in all anim...als, however the sophistication of this rivalry amongst human females is unbelievably impressive. The "fairer sex" wield their competition in some very weird, wonderful and ruthless ways. Expect to learn why women use indirect aggression as a competition strategy, how resource scarcity influences competition, whether children actually developed just fine with no consequences during the pandemic, the relationship between bullying and social status, the impact of bullying on a developing brain and much more... Sponsors: Get the Whoop 4.0 for free and get your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a free month's supply of macadamia milk from House Of Macadamias’ at https://houseofmacadamias.com/modernwisdom (use code MW20) Extra Stuff: Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ Buy my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello, everybody. Welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Dr. Tracy Vainkor,
she's a professor at the University of Ottawa,
a researcher and an author with a focus
on the link between violence and mental health.
Interosexual competition is present in all animals.
However, the sophistication of this rivalry
amongst human females is unbelievably impressive.
The ferrous sex wields their competition
in some very weird, wonderful,
and ruthless ways.
Expect to learn why women use indirect aggression as a competition strategy, how resource scarcity
influences their competition, whether children actually developed just fine with no consequences
during the pandemic, the relationship between bullying and social status, the impact of bullying
on a developing
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and mw20 at checkout. But now ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Dr Tracy Vienkau. by Encore. Do women have an intolerance of sexy peers?
Absolutely.
100%. have an intolerance of sexy peers. Absolutely.
100%.
We say we don't.
We say that we just love women and we promote women.
But we love certain women and we promote certain women.
So yeah, we're not the angels that we
report VR to be.
I think we do a lot of impression management.
Who are the women that we do support and love?
It depends.
Like, obviously, we're going to have different qualities that we admire in a person.
And so if they have those, then I think that that's who we're going to promote.
We're pretty good at tolerating our friends and promoting our friends.
But I don't think we're universally kind to all women. And it's interesting because I think that
there's been this like change in zi guys where people or women talk about how the sisterhood has never been stronger and we support each other unconditionally.
And yet we really don't.
Why?
Why do you think that that's the current pop culture summarization of female friendships
and why is it not the case?
Well, I think that it's funny because it's kind of said, but it's not really said.
So have you seen the Barbie movie yet?
No.
Okay, you need to see it.
It's really good.
But anyhow, so it's funny because there's this big speech where she talks about like all
the pressures that women are under and everything that we have to manage.
And, you know, and then there's also this like thread about women supporting women.
And yet there's like plenty of examples of women not supporting women in that movie,
right? So I think that there's this like a little bit of a disconnect where we shape, then we don't actually
live that
ideal.
Now the reason I think it happens that we don't support each other as much as we should is because
there's like
research or there's like a risk or a scarcity that affects women, I think, more than men,
and I, or this perception of resource scarcity. And in some places in the world,
there's absolutely resource scarcity with women, you know, they don't have as
many privileges. They don't make as much money, those sorts of things. And when
things don't seem fair, it's hard to be generous.
Right.
So what's the sexy bit of the sexy peers?
Why be particularly intolerant of the sexy ones?
So, so that would be the idea that it's gonna sound sexist,
but it's a robust finding.
I did a study on this. So the idea that historically, we've
sort of maintained control over what the opposite sex wanted. And so if we are giving away sex freely,
sex freely, when we as women, then we don't hold that, we don't, the power of that resource is less. It's even non-existent. So it would be who of us to then punish those who give
away sex to freely. So slutsh shame, debase women who are a threat
to that powerful deposition.
And so this is a study that I did
that showed that exact phenomenon.
It has since been replicated around the world.
And basically, women are
intolerant of certain types of women,
but in particularly,
they're particularly intolerant of certain types of women, but in particularly, they're particularly intolerant
of women who are sexy.
And it's a universal phenomenon.
Right, so sexy is a very specific word to use here.
This isn't necessarily just attractive.
It's like presumably sexually provocative.
Exactly.
It's not attractive per se, although I think that if you get to the end of
that spectrum on attractiveness, so like you're incredibly attractive, I think that that would
publicly under some women, because that person would be revered by men, and that would then
would be revered by men and that would then debase their own standing in terms of competition.
But generally speaking, I mean, yeah, so
the impression would be that you're sexually provocative or available.
What was the study that you did,
or are there any that came along after yours and did it even better that you prefer?
Well, I don't know if anybody's done it better because I think I did it the best, but
because I thought about it forever and ever, it took like over a decade for the study
to come to fruition.
So basically what I saw all the time was that when a woman violated norms, so the norm
of, you know, you could be sexy, but not too sexy, then women
would mock them. They would use indirect aggression. An indirect aggression takes the form
of gossiping, peer group exclusion, but also more nonverbal things like, you know, the
once over where you start at the top, you look down down you look up, but you don't smile to convey discuss or you stare at each other
And then when she leaves the room you laugh those sorts of things. So
Anyhow I saw that over and over again. So I
Designed a study with my postdoctoral student on Chul Sharma
Where we had women come into the lab. They were part of this previous study where we were looking at their use of indirect aggression,
then we invited them into the lab to talk about female friendships,
how they deal with conflict.
We randomized them into one of four conditions,
with their friend, with a stranger,
and whether or not they were gonna be interrupted
in their conversation by a very sexy dress confederate
or a conservatively dressed confederate. And the person was the exact, it was the same person, Lisa
gorgeous, absolutely gorgeous. Anyhow, we standardized everything right down to the number of steps
she took. Everything was scripted. So they came through, they didn't know that we were recording
them right from the get-go.
She came through and walked right between the two women and mentioned to Onchal in the back room that I needed to talk to her about something.
And then she left with Onchal and we recorded what they did.
And everybody in the sexy condition treated her poorly with two exceptions. And I think they were just
not paying attention because they had how they'd been, they would have done something. And those
that when Lisa interrupted them and she was just dressed conservatively, they didn't even pay
attention. So the only thing that was different between the two conditions was her sexy outfit.
Wow. Okay. So what are the implications of this? What does it tell you about female psychology? It tells us that, like, I mean, a lot of times people think that the
suppression of women's sexuality is done by men, and it is done by men, for sure, that exists,
and especially in certain countries, but it also is policed by women.
And women do suppress other women's sexual expression.
So on average, would you say most of the shaming comes
from men or from women?
I think it depends on the country.
It really does.
There's a cultural component to that,
but let's just talk about Western cultures. I think that
that women are particularly intolerant of sexy peers more so than men. Does it bother you to see
a sexy woman? Me, no, but I would campaign for more if there would be opportunities. Exactly.
And would you be upset if women were more promiscuous? Yeah, precisely. I mean, this is from Roy Baumeister. I learned this from him that he was saying,
it's very strange to lay at the feet of men a restriction in female sexual freedom,
given the fact that almost every man, if given the opportunity, would campaign for that
precise thing. Exactly. I haven't been to a parade downtown here in Austin,
but if there was one for that,
that would be up there with one of the,
for my other male brethren,
I'm going to stand firm and I will help.
You will finally be able to get your underwear.
So yeah, it makes complete sense to me.
And I learned from Jeffrey Miller and Tucker Maxx as well,
this insight about the game theory of slut-shaming,
where if you think about sex as having a price,
and if one woman is prepared to lower the price
from three dates to one date,
or from X amount of resources to 0.5 X amount of resources,
that lowers the market value of whatever that thing is overall. That's exactly what I showed.
Yeah, exactly.
We need to price enforcement mechanism.
Exactly.
It's a cartel.
Yeah, and that's in Balmester's theory that so he wrote a paper with Gene Twingy where
they talk about this and this is what I used as the theoretical basis for the study
along with what I knew about indirect aggression.
So it's interesting because intracetual competition is like one area that people study, but indirect
aggression is very similar.
It's like the behavior, the manifestation of intracetual competition.
Actually, it's the enforcement mechanism of intracetual competition.
People hadn't really considered that.
So I wrote a theory, it was published in Trans B
of the Royal Society, and it did very well.
And people have used it now to springboard other studies.
But basically, I was arguing just that
that the form of intersectional competition,
the form it takes in women is indirect aggression.
Interesting.
I've got a quote from you here,
sex is coveted by men,
accordingly, women limit
access as a way of maintaining advantage in the negotiation of this resource. Women who
make sex too readily available compromise the power-holding position of the group, which
is why many women are particularly intolerant of women who are, or seem to be, promiscuous,
and it's the seem to be bit, I think, which is particularly interesting there.
Exactly. It's interesting because after that study came out, I was in Florida at Disney
with my daughter who was eight, and we brought along her two girlfriends. And there was a woman
who was dressed in a very sexually provocative manner. She was probably in her mid-50s,
tiny, tiny skirt, tiny skirt tiny tiny shirt Florida baby
Florida look gorgeous look gorgeous anyhow and I turn around and I saw these three eight year olds
Doing exactly what was done in my study
She was getting she was getting the once over by three mean eight-year-olds.
Well, that's fascinating.
Why would it be the case that animals who aren't even sexually active, who don't understand
what sex is, how deeply wired is this at the base of the brainstem that even they have
got an idea?
She might be too promiscuous, and maybe she's going to take some future husband away from me.
I don't know if it's at the brainstem, but it's certainly there's like a lot of socialization
around this. Think about school dress codes. So we've had tons of pressure in Canada. A lot
of schools have had to revoke their school dress codes because they're sexist where they
punish girls for dressing in small clothes, but not boys.
And so they've gotten rid of them under that premise that it is sexist, which it is.
But anyhow,
hang on.
Do boys want to wear small clothes?
Well, they wear tank tops. I think that's a small clothing.
Right. Okay. So girls are allowed to wear things like skirts and vests.
So we don't wear uniforms in North American schools unless you go to a private school.
Okay.
But my point is, is that these dress codes exist and they've long existed.
And just now in 2023, are we getting rid of them?
And little girls know about them
and little boys know about them and they know about why they know that they're unfair or they feel
that they're unfair. They are unfair. So where's that come from? So it's like really hard to separate
the evolutionary significance of this from the the mass of socialization pressure that they're under. So I do think
that it's rooted in our evolutionary history. I wrote that in a in a paper that to 2013 paper,
I talked about that theoretical paper. I do think that there is an evolutionary significance to our
behavior, but I also think that, you know, we're society in general across the world is quite intolerant of this.
Why is it the case? If this is true, and I believe that it's true, and I've been singing this
game theory of slut-shaming song for at least a few years now, why is it the case that we are a
sisterhood that is all together? These men need to stop controlling our sexuality,
these men need to stop controlling our sexuality. It's all girl power stuff.
How is that meme remaining so sticky
if the truth doesn't seem to actually match up to the
that sort of zeitgeist?
I think it's easy for us to blame you and not look at ourselves.
Right? And I do think that there's truth
that sometimes it does exist.
Like we talked about like, do you get upset by somebody dressing sexy?
Absolutely not.
But some men do, for sure.
And in some cultural groups, they really do, right?
We know that that's the case.
But that said, I just think that, and this is the book that I have coming out
next year called Mean with Simon and Schuster. And it's basically just that trying to reconcile that. And this is the book that I have coming out next year called Mean with Simon and Schuster. And it's basically just that trying to reconcile that. So, you know, a good feminist
doesn't say what I'm saying. So, a good feminist supports women no matter what. And yet,
a good feminist actually doesn't support all women. Like, if you really look at the behavior
of women, you see that, you know, we say that it's men oppressing women, but it's also women
oppressing women. And if we can acknowledge that, we can manage it. Indirect competition,
do men use that too? What's the ratio of indirect competition between the sexes?
So, proportionally speaking, and I'll talk about indirect aggression because indirect competition,
I'm not too sure what that means per se.
So indirect aggression is used by men for sure.
Men talk about each other.
They gossip.
They give each other the silent treatment, that sort of thing, but not as often.
So men use a melalence of behavior.
So you guys are like straight out in your face.
You are physically aggressive and you also use indirect aggression, indirectly aggressive
tactics.
Whereas women, proportionally speaking, only use this form of aggression.
Of course there are exceptions.
There's some women are really violent, but they are rare and they're so salient.
When we see these women, they make the
front page of every news outlet in the world because we don't see them that often.
So this is our exclusive way of dealing with each other when we're being less than appropriate,
being less than kind. Interesting. Okay. So we're more affected by it. So if I rolled my eyes at you, it's not going to cause much distress.
If I did that to a woman, it would cause some problems. And there is quite a bit of study
showing that we have a heightened physiological response to being ostracized, rejected, all
of the things that encompass indirect aggression.
So women are more attuned to it?
More attuned to it, and we respond to it more.
And that has an evolutionary significance because belonging was far more important to women than to men,
not to suggest that you didn't need to belong.
You needed to get your coalitions set right so that you could win the war and kill the board.
But for women, we also needed
owl parents, we needed support from other women.
And so it's a really interesting issue
because on the one hand, you need the support of women,
but in another hand, there's not enough resources
to go around.
So there's also a zero sum game, in a sense, attached to that.
So it's trying to reconcile that.
So then the way to do it then is to be strategic, is to appear to be on your side, but not
really be on your side.
Why is it so important to not be directly aggressive as a woman?
So, Anne Campbell wrote this really great theory about this and basically it was about
she called it staying alive. And so if women historically got into a physical battle, a fight,
and they died or were injured and not able to take care of their offspring,
those offspring did not survive.
So historically, and in some places in the world, it still exists, infant survival is inextricably
linked to maternal survival.
So we can't be fighting all over the place.
I think that it's not good for our health and wellness,
and it's certainly not good for our offspring.
So how do you get your genes into the next generation?
They got to grow up and make babies in cells.
Okay, whereas if the man was to die in some fist fight gone wrong,
the kids are still probably going to survive, mum's still around,
men also a little
bit more physically robust, a bit more tolerant of being hidden in the head. That's why I've
got the brow ridge and the bigger hands and the blah, blah, blah. Okay. How effective is
indirect aggression? And just before we say that to get to that, before I answer that,
the other thing to you is that men don't always stick around and yet we still we still have managed
It'd be better if they did historically they have an always though and they still don't really always stick around
I just needed to put that dig in okay
See because I'm like really good at indirect aggression
It is effective it is effective
I felt it in my soul. What is that?
Me search research.
It's incredibly effective.
It really is.
Again, because women are so attuned to it.
It doesn't have the same hit on men.
Us using it against men doesn't have the same effect.
The man are we ever good at picking it up women.
We see it in a nanosecond.
I coach adolescent girls. I'm a high
performance soccer coach and I tell them I can hear them roll their eyes like a kilometer away.
I know when it's going down and we do. We notice that. There are means like you go on to any
social media platform and there's tons of means of you know, a woman like opening the door real quickly because she heard somebody like,
roll their eyes or do a, you know, we come back and we hear it.
We know it.
There's a number of interesting studies
going on at the moment to do with female sports.
I think tennis players and basketball players
on the opposite teams,
given that you've been doing your ethnographic
in place research with your high performance female soccer team. players on opposite teams, given that you've been doing your ethnographic in-place research
with your high performance female soccer team, what have you observed about inter-intra
team, love and distaste and all that stuff?
Oh, notice so much.
And in fact, I've studied a lot of the things that I've noticed.
So one of the things I've noticed, and then we actually have a study that showed this
to be true more so for adolescent girls than for adolescent boys. But adolescent girls
make a lot of social comparisons. Is she prettier than me? Is she better than me? If she's smarter than
me, she more popular. Those social comparisons elicit jealousy. And the way that jealousy is managed
is either it's turned inward, they become depressed, anxious, the like. I'm not as good as so and so.
Or they turn it outward, which is more common, and they tear down their rival.
So the only reason that she's playing left fullback, and I'm a left fullback, is because her dad's the coach or her mom's the coach. That sort of thing. So we showed that launch,
tunely, that's the pathway.
We showed it to be stronger and girls than a boy.
One thing I noticed all the time is that
when somebody's done you're wrong on the field,
you can't let it go if you're a girl or a woman,
but men just go out for a beer right after the game.
They don't give a shit.
It's done with, let's move on, right?
Does that matter whether it's your own team
or the opposition?
We can't let it go from the opposition.
So I'll get to this.
So what happens is it's very common to do a handshake
after the game in North America.
And for you to not get your hands shook
by somebody who thinks you did them dirty on the field,
where's man just shake hands them dirty on the field.
Where's man just shake hands and get on with it.
And there was a study that looked at this across, it was 44 different countries post-affilitive
behavior after competitions.
And it showed that women around the world just can't let it go.
So like if somebody's done this wrong, it's there.
It's there for life.
Like if you did me wrong in grade five and I ran into you just now, it's on.
Okay.
So anyhow, so I noticed that and I don't notice that and I coached little boys too and
I've never noticed that.
And then they talk about the girls on the other team and the women on the other team and
what a bitch, I can't believe she did this, this and that.
They're personally offended by a slide tackle gone wrong,
whereas men don't really seem to care about that.
And then the other thing I've noticed that is that on a girl's team
or a young women's team, the best player on the team
is not necessarily the most popular player on the team.
Whereas in boys' teams and men's
teams, the best player on the team is almost invariably always the most popular person on
that team is always the leader. So we don't care if you're the best per se unless you get
to like the high high high end of elite women sports, that's not what makes you popular.
And in fact, being the best might actually get you bullied on a girls team or a women's
team, because how dare you think you're so good.
So there's this whole theory about tripping the prom queen, I've written about it, knocking
down the tall poppy, and we're pretty good at making sure women stay in their place.
And if they're not going to stay in their place and they're going to think too well of themselves, we'll put them back there real quick.
Okay.
So status and competence are split apart in female hierarchies in a way that they
are not in male hierarchies.
100%.
And it's interesting because I read Carly Lloyd's autobiography and she talked about how Carly Lloyd is one of the most decorated women's football
player in the world. She won the Ballon d'Or for the bat and also the best player
for the FIFA World Cup when it was here in Canada in 2015. She ordered her and
her autobiography she talks about how when she joined the national team that sometimes
She felt that women weren't passing to her the ball even because she was seen as competition and
Can you imagine like you know if you're playing a sport even if it's like a beer league and
You're not that good as a guy you take yourself off and sit on the bench so that you guys can win the championship.
Whereas I think, and it's been said by many of my colleagues,
in some ways, women and girls would rather lose the game
and have everybody play than win.
Now, of course, I'm not talking about
at the elite elite level,
because that's gonna have different parameters
and different personality types.
But you've got this, this preference for egalitarianism.
You have preference for knowing your place and staying in your place.
Yeah, I learned some interesting stuff to do with the behavior of male and female students as
they walk out of exam halls and they talk to each other and
the guys will say, oh yeah, question three, absolutely smashed it, I revised that.
That was absolutely great.
Whereas the girls would go, oh, you know, I was already high, probably failed, it's not
so good.
And the guys will also say that too, but it seems like the guys have less of an issue proclaiming their successes.
Again, also a super interesting study where girls will tend to downplay qualifications and
accolades if they think that their responses are going to be seen by other people as opposed
to if they're being kept private.
So there is this very below the surface, you know, under sea current that's going on here with how women play with status, what they want other people to know about their accolades and their accomplishments, they do not want to enact the ira or the jealousy or the envy of any of the other girls specifically that are in their location. And I think the final bit is that probably at least partially
aware that many of the accomplishments
that they could be talking about probably don't impact
their mate value all that much.
So it's going to be a detriment to me to the females
that are around me.
And maybe not that like, is the guy around you going to be that much
more attracted to you if you say that you smashed that exam than if you didn't, like is your
socioeconomic competence going to be a big part of it? He's not going to be turned off by it,
that's for sure. But what's going to happen is like the reason why women, they make themselves smaller,
not because of men, they make themselves smaller so that they don't attract the negative
attention of women.
We can't brag, we can't say what we're good at because then you think you're special
and you'll get torn down.
And then we wonder why we lack confidence, right?
It's just really interesting.
A lot of times people will talk about how women dress for other women.
And there's some truth to that, right?
Like we really are trying to please other women
and minimize the discomfort that could come
from not pleasing them.
Amy Schumer has this really funny skit
and you should try and find it after where it's like,
women basically, we use a lot of self-deprecating humor so we put ourselves
down all the time like oh my goodness you know if somebody says something nice
about us like are you kidding me I just found that in the garbage and put it on me
you know like whatever you know we go on and on and and make sure that we don't
think well of ourselves or give the impression that we think well of ourselves.
So this skit goes on about women
just putting themselves down all around
and then this one woman, somebody compliments her
and she just says thanks and all of their heads explode.
Like, you know what I mean?
Thanks, like, we just said something
and nice about yourself.
You're supposed to put yourself down.
Those are the rules.
So it's spot on what she did in this in this skit.
Talk to me about how jealousy mediates this relationship
then between attractiveness comparison
and indirect aggression.
So it actually works just like that.
It's a mediator, right?
So it explains the relationship.
So if I am jealous, then I need
to remedy that icky feeling. That's not a good feeling. And so I have a couple different ways
I could do it or more than a couple. I have a few different ways I can manage it. But
the more often, the more common way it's managed is by attacking myself or attacking the source
of my comparison, the person that's making
and feel jealous.
And women are very good at attacking other women whom they perceive to have more.
But again, they justify it.
So back to, remember, we started off with impression management.
So they use a variety of cognitive strategies to make their egregious acts more palatable.
And one way they do it is they make it so that the person
that's being targeted had it coming to them.
It was justified.
So if she wasn't so arrogant, if she wasn't, you know,
whatever it is, it's going to be,
then I wouldn't have treated her poorly.
Interesting. Did you see that? And by the, like I can predict what the reaction is going to be when this comes out
and when my book comes out too.
The reaction is going to be that, you know, I have internalized the misogyny myself that,
you know, what I think about women.
So is your data, apparently.
Part of me.
So is your data, apparently.
Yeah, exactly.
Like I obviously don't like women and I don't like women
because I believe what men have said about women.
And yet, you know, we do these really sneaky studies
and in the right context, we see it done,
we see it comes out like in full force.
So I don't know, like maybe there is a bit
of internalized misogyny, I'll own some of the variants,
but a lot of this is,
it persists because it works.
It's very, very effective.
You don't need to worry,
we've had Tanya Reynolds and Joyce Benenson,
and there are many female heads
that have been chopped off by the internet before you've got here.
I think everyone that's listening is fully aware of the fact that being a woman,
being a female and trying to navigate the delicate samurai blade that is,
the female status hierarchy is really, really tough and it does not get any easier.
It is not made, you're no more prepared
by ignoring the sort of thermodynamics
of how these interactions work.
But I mean, how do you change it if you can't acknowledge it?
So like, I'm prepared, I've dealt with it for many, many years.
I know what's gonna be said.
And ironically, they use indirect aggression to make their point.
And I just think like seriously,
you don't see the irony and how you're behaving.
Because certainly we should be tolerant
of people holding different viewpoints.
It's not like I'm a spousing hate speech.
But Mr. Rogers of all people said that
if it's mentionable, it's manageable.
So how do then we change our behavior
if we can't acknowledge it?
And it causes a lot of harm.
Like, I mean, we've kind of been joking around here,
but some young women take their lives over this.
Some older women take their lives over it.
Teenage girls take their lives over this.
You know, the bullying that the endure is real,
it's significant.
It's linked to eating disorders, depression,
anxiety, suicidality. So, I mean, this is an important worthy area of study. We've got
to get this right.
The issue that you come up against is anything which is seen as not being up front, very, very positive for whichever the maligned or lower-down
group is, is always presumed. It's always castigated very quickly as being the thing which is at fault.
Yeah.
And it's the child wants to eat ice cream every night. That is what the child wants and would be
enjoyable, but is ultimately not good for it in the long run. So your front loading compassion, but back loading all of the issues that come from not actually understanding
what the problem is in the first place.
Exactly. I would love for women to be, and some women are. I mean, women in academia,
I find, are very tough and can handle opinions being expressed directly
and in contradiction to their own viewpoints.
But I just wish just generally speaking,
I think if we were a little less sensitive,
a little bit more tolerant, a little bit more honest,
then we'd probably be in a better position
in terms of wielding power, holding power,
progressing with power.
Did you see this hypothetical hairdressing client study that came out a little while ago?
Okay, so give me one more hint.
I feel like I know this.
I explored how women sabotage hypothetical hairdressing clients through disingenuous beauty
advice, which would detrimentally impact clients' physical attractiveness. In both studies,
the more attractive the client, the more hair was recommended to be cut off. Both the lay
women and female professional hairdressers put most hair off women who were of the same attractiveness
level as them, with women cutting the most hair off women they perceived to be about as attractive as themselves.
They sabotaged women whose hair was in good condition
and had requested a smaller amount cut off
to a greater extent than women with hair in poor condition.
Client makeup caused lower-mate value,
lay women to cut off less hair,
suggesting the dominance incited by women wearing makeup
resulted in reduced sabotage.
More intracexually competitive women,
including hairdressers, cut off more hair, confirming competitor manipulation as intracexual competitiveness
strategy being employed.
Yes, that study finds itself in the book. It's interesting because I had this one girlfriend
in high school. We were in that popular group and everybody was very
attractive and had a lot of assets and competencies that the peer group
valued but anytime she told me that I looked really good in an outfit, I
automatically had to change it.
Anything she said, I mean I just, it was almost like a given that-
It's fucking opposite today.
I look like crap and this is why she's saying it.
Wow, that is so good.
And that's not my reaction to all women, right?
But experience tells you what's going on.
Bill Burr has this amazing bit about the body positivity
movement.
He thinks, basically, that the body positivity movement is women encouraging other women to push themselves further and further
out of the appropriate make value dating pool. As you applaud women for being the size that
they are, it makes a really good case that, well, yeah, you get all of the points of being,
you know, morally grandstanding and I am empathy and I care for the
downtrodden group and so on and so forth, but you are also doing something that benefits your own mate
value, right, which is moving more and more women away from wherever you are. So are we that macchi-ovalien?
I think that the
underlying So are we that Macchi-Ovillion? I think that the underlying turbulence
that happens below the surface is so effective. It doesn't matter whether you are or whether you aren't.
The net result is what works.
And ultimately, I think that this would, you know.
Because that's some sneaky shit.
That is some sneaky shit, but I don't think that it's,
I don't think pretty much any woman is cognizant of this. This is, again, it's a bit from Bill Burr that I was sneaky shit. That is some sneaky shit, but I don't think that it's, I don't think pretty much any woman is cognizant of this.
This is, again, it's a bit from Bill Burr
that I was listening to and as I was listening to,
I was like, wow, this sounds like really
comprehensive, intersexual competition from women
to push the women out of the mating pool.
Hmm, I wonder if that's, so this is total bro signs here, right?
And you know what's interesting,
because I have a reaction to it, because like here,
I know people are gonna, women are gonna have a reaction to everything I said and now I'm having a reaction to this
So I'm gonna have to give this some thought because like I want to believe that we're not that Machiavellian
And I also want to believe that
We we I do know we have free will and we're conscient conscious beans and conscientious
we have free will and we're conscious beings and conscientious individuals as well. So, I don't know, I'm not buying that one just yet.
Hi, hopes for humanity.
Okay, so one of the other things you mentioned it earlier on about bullying, sort of the
effect of youth ostracization on especially young girls.
Some of the stuff that I learned from your work,
one in four children report that they have experienced
clinically elevated rates of depression,
25% of children and adolescents reported
that they had experienced significant depression,
incidents and hospitalization rates for new,
unset eating disorders increased by 60%
during the pandemic and rates for emergency department visits for attempted suicide have increased by 22% in the past few
years. What is going on with young people's mental health? So there's been a
general decline in their mental health for the past 15 years or so. So it wasn't
good before the pandemic and it was worse during the pandemic
And it'll be interesting to see what happens in the next few years. So I've been studying
Mental health and violence for years and not the violence like not the mental health of violent people
But what happens when people are exposed to violence and the mental health issues that ensue
so we have this crisis, this mental health crisis,
that's particularly pronounced for adolescent girls
and young women.
And there's a bunch of reasons why this could be the case.
During the pandemic, I think that a lot of it
had to do with social isolation.
There's a lot of evidence to support
that the need to belong
as a fundamental human motivator to all,
but it's particularly pronounced for women
and we talked about this already, so staying alive,
so belonging, being in a group,
affiliating, all of those things are really important
for my survival and my offspring survival.
So I think that challenged girls and women,
particularly during the pandemic.
But also too, we're more exposed to violence more than men.
So we're more likely to be victims of intimate partner violence.
You know, everything except for murder, men get murdered more than women.
And then there were big on social comparisons and so social media has not been
really good for adolescent girls and for women. I think all of those things contribute to poor mental
health. Well, if you look at Greg Lukyanov and Jonathan Heitzwerk, they lay an awful lot of the
changes at the feet of social media.
What's your perspective on that? Do you think it is the patient zero of all of this or
is there more going on?
There's going to be more going on. You're never going to find one thing that causes everything.
But I do think it counts for a lot of the variants. I really do. We see this over and over again. I don't do any
clinical work anymore, but certainly that's something that was when I worked in the Moot Disorders
Clinic when I was doing my internship. It's something I saw a lot. Yeah, girls and women make a lot
of comparisons. They spend a lot of time on social media, And those social comparisons already told you lead to jealousy
and that jealousy in turn leads to externalized
or internalized behavior.
I don't think men use social media the same way we do.
I really don't.
I don't know how often you take your screen and zoom it
to see every wrinkle and every hair out of place.
Do you ever do that?
I'm just curious.
No, it just is even like if I asked my husband,
he'd be like, what are you even talking about?
But certainly we do that all the time
and thank goodness that feature exists now
because I used to have to take a picture of it
and then I could zoom it.
Anyhow, so yeah, it's not good for the health of females and we need to get a grip on this and figure it out.
We did this study that's just under review.
One thing I noticed that happens and hasn't been looked at, but it makes sense.
We're really interested in threats to relationships, right?
Meet poaching and the like.
I know you know that literature very well.
So I was really interested in female and friendship poaching
and what it looks like for girls,
I'm sorry, for women versus men.
So what we did was we developed a scale
called the social media friendships jealousy scale.
And basically, he said like, you know, how affected
are you if your friend posts something and you're not tagged in it or
Your friends geo locator tells you that they're out with all their friends and you're not invited
Your friend and it's like just all these things that happen on social media and we found that women were more affected than men by it
across three studies.
Very interesting.
And then they became more depressed and anxious as well as a consequence of that jealousy.
Wow.
What's the underlying dynamic that social media is playing on, which is particularly effective
at impacting girls' mental health.
Like, is it the ostracization?
Is it being felt, feeling like they're being left out?
It's that, it's that, it's that FOMO,
it's that fear of missing out.
It really is significant for girls and women.
And it comes back again to that need to belong.
I'm not suggesting that you're all psychopaths,
that men are psychopaths and they don't need positive relationships and affiliation
on the like. You certainly do, but we need it more. We absolutely do need it more. And
so, you know, we, our value is not that it should be, but we place a lot of value on having friends and belonging and
being included and when we're not, it hurts.
Give me the evolutionary explanation for why that's the case.
Is it just that a woman on her own is fragile and potentially dead?
Is dead.
She's so fragile.
She needs the resources of other women.
That's that Taylor-ten and thefriend hypothesis that we really do need.
And there's tons of evolutionary scholars
who've written about this, that women have historically
relied on other women to stay alive
and to keep their children alive.
And it still exists in some places in the world today.
So it's like a fine line again.
You need to belong more so than men,
but you also have to compete within this nest
of belonging, and that's really challenging, which is why I think we're so good at indirect
aggression.
We're so sophisticated in how we use it.
Like you're all pretty crude when you use it and we're not.
We're like locked.
It's a surge in scalpel rather than a big hammer. Totally. when you use it and we're not. We're like blocked out from this.
It's a surge in scalpel rather than a big hammer.
Totally.
It's so funny how often I'll say to my husband,
oh my goodness, did you notice what she did?
And like he didn't even notice she was in the room.
Like, how do you get through life like this?
But then it's like how do we get through life
where we're like so hypersensitive and
attuned to every perception of slight?
Have you got any idea this attenuation to what's going on in the room?
Is that on a sliding scale where, obviously, on average, there is a bell curve, blah,
blah.
Is there a particular personality trait which really tunes that up?
Is it conscientiousness?
Is it neuroticism?
Is there something that you have found
that can quite accurately predict
the level of attenuation that a girl would have
to her surroundings and the status in her group?
I think it's not gonna be any of the big five,
or if you look at the hexa-coats,
not gonna be any of those per se.
When we looked at it, we found conscientiousness was actually negative related to it, but
it's going to be hypercompetitiveness.
So, there's the competitiveness where you, just like personal development competitiveness
that you use to better yourself, vis-a-vis yourself, and then there's the, I need to be
better than everybody else, where everything is a zero-sum game. So women who are hyper competitive are the ones
that are more likely to be attuned to these things. They're more likely to perceive
slight when things are ambiguous. They're more likely to cause harm to others who
they perceive to harm them, the whole grges, to get others mad at them,
so to use indirect aggression.
So hyper competitive women are,
they're difficult in a lot of ways
and they're not happy themselves,
which is really interesting.
Their mental health profiles are very problematic.
Wow, talk to me about the relationship
between bullying and social status. I had Tony
Volk on the show a few months ago. I adored his work on bullying. I spent a lot of time
being becoming more familiar with bullying than I would have liked while I was in school.
So I was getting to learn an awful lot. What have you found about this? We've spoken a lot
about social status so far, mostly for girls, but also for boys.
What is this?
How do these two things live in relationship to each other?
So Tony's a really good friend of mine.
He's fantastic.
And so I told you about that study,
the slut-shaming study, the sexy Confederate study.
So I think one of my other more famous studies,
if you could say that without getting knocked down,
because I'm like bragging about myself,
is basically I, for my dissertation, my PhD,
I looked at Mean Girls, the phenomenon
before it even came out as a movie.
So I was really interested at the time,
scientists kept talking about popular kids
being really well-adjusted, good citizens in their schools
and that sort of thing.
And I kept thinking, I'd go to these conferences and say,
like, what the heck are you talking about?
That's not what popular kids are like,
but I honestly think that there's probably
an over-representation of nerds in academia
who weren't in the popular group,
so they really didn't know what it was about.
But I was in that popular group
and we weren't all that nice in a lot of ways.
So I, for my dissertation, looked at adolescents
from grade six to grade 12,
and whether or not they had assets and competencies
at the peer group values,
so that they were attractive, good athletes, rich, funny,
tough, all of those
things, and how that related to bullying and other status indicators like popularity and
power.
And what we found was, or what I found for my dissertation was that most kids who bully
others have a lot of power.
Then there's this other group of kids who bully others who have low power.
Those are like the Nelson's from the Simpsons, right?
So that group kind of indiscriminately bullies everybody, but they're very marginalized,
they're rejected, you know, their future is pretty bleak.
But most kids who bully others are actually the elite of the school.
So the reason that they're afforded power and they abuse their power is because they
have things that the peer group values, right?
So for girls, it's being attractive and for boys, it's typically being athletic in
North American culture or probably even in Western culture.
So every school is going to have a different culture. You could, you could go to a performing arts school and the most popular kids
at that school will be maybe the best, I don't know, whatever, guitar players or
whatever. So all this to say, whatever the peer group values, that affords you
power, that power then in turn typically gets corrupted. And that's true of almost every human being on the planet.
Power corrupts and it absolutely corrupts, right?
So anyhow, so that's what my dissertation was about,
and it's been robustly replicated.
You know, this is something we see over and over again.
I went to Finland early in my
career to give a talk on this and I was hosted by Christina Samo Valley and she's like, I don't
know if we'll find this in Finland. And I was like, oh, I've been to your malls, you're going to
find it. And they found it. It's been found everywhere, right? So, and it exists in colleges too, universities. So my daughter plays D1 soccer.
It exists in D1 sports, it exists in sororities,
it exists in university life.
And then we get out of it.
What, two questions.
First off, what do the bullies get out of it?
What is the benefit to them?
And secondly, why do we then get out of it? What is it about
growing up? They get resources, right? So we've shown, and we've shown with Tony, so Tony and I
published a few studies on this, they get more sacks, which is awesome, I guess, and good stuff
for people. They get better recognition.
They can influence the peer group and the norms of a school more.
They get more resources.
People give them shit.
People look at them.
People adore them.
All of those things are good, right?
Like they're the silverbacks of their school.
And then nobody messes with them, which is also a good feeling. I don't understand how standing on the shoulders of lower status individuals gives the bully.
It bestows that benefit.
That's not who they bully.
That group doesn't bully the lowest standard.
So they do a little bit, but no, it's not that unfair fight so much.
So Bob Verris' work and others have shown that high status bullies tend to bully those
that are just at the next wrong, the ones that are challenging their status, right?
So those are the ones that are in trouble, or anybody who threatens their catboard seat in the sense.
Is that because it's a signal of low status to seem like you're in competition with someone
who's supposedly 10 rungs below you? Well, they're not on your radar because the thing
is the corrupting influence of power also makes you impervious to the plight of others.
So you're not paying attention to others unless you're paying attention to people that are threat to you. That's all
you're really paying attention to. So I don't know if it's that, if they're that conscientious
where it's like such an unfair fight and you're a loser if you pick on somebody who's perceived
as a loser kind of thing. I don't think it's like that. I think it's about maintaining,
so achieving and maintaining a gemini. I really think it's about trying to maintain power
and you maintain power by making sure
those that are trying to threaten your power base
don't get too close.
There's a meme that very well may be in your book as well
that says everything after high school is just high school.
Or it talks about the lunch table that you sit at and the cool kids and the games and so on and so forth.
You've suggested there that once your D1 soccer career is over, you enter the real world and
these dynamics at least begin to dissipate. How much do they fall away? What adult bullying look like?
Is there even such a thing in the same context as childhood bullying?
Adult bullying looks different from childhood bullying
and that it's not as status oriented.
Like I just suggested these high status bullies.
It's more, I mean, certainly it exists.
Like in the workplace, people will pick on somebody
who they perceive as a threat to them.
The reason it dissipates is because our peer groups
are more fluid.
They're not as stable.
So I think the stability of high school peer groups
is what contributes to it as well.
Because the hierarchy gets formed through stability.
And that doesn't exist in adulthood as much, right?
So like you have your hockey friends and then you have you know your gym
bros and then you have I'm just making all of them a gym bros, all gym bros.
I only have one group of friends and the all. Okay, but my point is like you know
and then you have a workplace and you have an atypical job. So let's just say like
mostly we go to the job, the same job where we see the same people over and over again.
All of those things sort of happen, but we have all these different groups, right?
So it's less likely to take hold unless there's more stability.
One place that does happen though, that you kind of see high school happen over and over again is when your kids,
when you have kids and then you become like a soccer mom,
soccer moms are scary. Like, that's where the high school higher key comes up again. It's
honestly, it's high school all over again. There's a queen B mom. She usually is the manager
of the soccer team. She organizes everything in favor of her daughter or her son. She
manipulates other moms. You get, you don't get included to go
to the mall with them during tournaments. You know, it's all high school all over again and it's
really interesting why that happens. So we kind of relive it again through our kids.
Right. So when the social groups aren't sufficiently ossified and stable, you don't have enough
time for everything to lock in and for people to understand, I am this with this group
and this with another group.
School creates a purpose built, in almost a purpose built environment, to precisely create
this predictability of what's going to go on.
We know where people have come before.
Someone news come in, but they come into an existing dynamic
as opposed to just being part
of this sort of swirling mess.
100%.
So very well summarized.
I think I'm more wordy than you are,
but that's probably why you're good at your job.
And I'm just like trying my best here.
But the other thing that happens
that I think contributes to this
is that we can get out of toxic relationships
a lot easier than kids can.
So if I'm in grade 11 and all the girls are treating me poorly because I'm like the cute one on campus,
that sort of thing, like, how am I going to manage that?
So I have to change schools and historically that wasn't really allowed.
Now we allow it more before the internet.
You could kind of escape that. Now you can't escape it as much as you used to be able to,
but anyhow, it's adults.
Like, okay, so the moms are being mean to me
on the soccer team.
We just move teams.
Like, it's easier than what it is in high school.
Yeah, so again, it's that sort of ossified nature,
the fact that it's predictable,
the fact that it's gonna continue going into the future.
Yeah.
So funny that you get school and then you leave
and then you get dragged back into school
from your children and then the dynamics of school
happen again even though you're no longer in school.
And yeah, and they do and they don't.
Like so in some ways, like, like I see it replicate itself
also in academia, like academia, oh man,
there are a bunch of like bully brats.
Like, it's like, we're like, you know, when the,
what's that, what's the saying?
You know, like when the stakes are so low,
you have to fight fiercely.
And that's kind of what's happening.
But anyhow, anytime you can get a hierarchy going,
that hierarchy is going to organize in such a way,
and the people at the top are typically going to use their power
with very few exceptions.
So there are very few people who are just pure implicit power.
An implicit power is the kind of power that you get
by having assets and competency that the peer-reviewed group values
and you elevate people.
You treat them well.
Most people are a mixture of nice and mean, implicit and explicit power.
Explicit power is the kind of power you get by making people afraid, sitting compliance,
that sort of thing.
There was this, my favorite study that's ever been done
was a study on parking.
And so what's your prediction?
If somebody is in the parking stall
and they know you're at Costco, do you have Costco real?
You must have Costco.
Yeah, I do.
I also know the study.
So if you try to get me to predict it,
you can you can yeah
I'm ruined the game. So like the thing is is that when somebody's waiting for your parking spot
you take longer than when somebody's not working waiting for your parking spot. That's when you got
to do all your safety checks. Got to reapply your lip gloss. Make sure everything's good. Got to answer
that really urgent text and then it's like oh you want you want this? You're going to have to wait. Like, that is the ultimate example of the
corrupting influence of power. So people in the right context tend to abuse their power.
What is the impact of bullying on the developing brain? Oh my goodness, it's enormous and it persists across the
lifespan. So we've done, I'd say like most of my research
has been on the neurobiology of peer victimization,
so how does it get under the skin to confer a risk
for future mental health difficulties and health difficulties?
So bullying affects all aspects of functioning,
not only in childhood and adolescents, but also in adulthood.
So it always hurts.
So you're gonna have the mental health difficulties,
the physical health difficulties, the physical health difficulties,
the memory issues and the like.
But it impacts your hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis,
which is your stress response system.
So at the beginning, you get overly activated HPA axis
because you're stressed out,
and then eventually the body adapts,
and then you have lower cortisol,
your HPA axis downgrades and that in turn then causes an inflammation response and then
it affects your cortisol, sorry, your testosterone levels.
It has an effect on your brain in terms of places in your brain like areas that are really
rich in glucocortic receptor sites.
So those are the areas of your brain,
like your prefrontal cortex and your hippocampus
that are really sensitive to the effect of cortisol.
So it affects your memory.
So people think that kids don't do well at school
because they're bullied.
And that's just because they don't want to go to school
they're not paying attention.
But it actually affects their memory.
I've shown that in a study that was published in 2011.
It has epigenetic processes too,
so you can't change the gene code,
but you can certainly change the expression of genes.
And you see telomere erosion
that you have shorter telomeres,
which is an indicator of, basically,
if you're gonna do well, like, in terms of health
or die kind of thing.
So it's like a good, I guess, bio indicator of
how much shit's gone down in your life in a sense.
Yes.
Well, it's terrible.
It's so bad for your health.
It's so bad for your brain.
It's so bad for your health. It's so bad for your brain. It's so bad for everything in your body.
Why would it be the case that our bodies would respond to childhood bullying by making
all of this stuff happen?
Is this an adaptive response or is it just a byproduct of some other fuckery?
I think it's an adaptive response with sounds a bit weird because, again, back to this need to belong.
So if we were all long wolves and we weren't like taking care of each other and we didn't have this strong need for affiliation,
we wouldn't be where we are as humans, right?
And every system, like, so when you look at the prevalence of psychopathy is 2% worldwide. We can't tolerate more than 2% on that, on psychopathy.
It just creates havoc.
So we need to get along.
We need to belong.
And we need to feel pretty shitty when we don't belong,
because then it motivates you to then do everything
you can to belong.
And then there'd probably be some that would argue
that it also reads out the week.
But you know, the kids, people who get bullied aren't often weak.
Like people are bullied for a right of reasons.
And a lot of times, especially for adolescent girls, it's because they have, they're pretty,
they're pretty good looking and they have a lot of assets and competencies.
Like you've mentioned that you had a pretty rough go at this.
What do you think, what would you attribute it to? I struggled to relate to other kids, so I wasn't socially very
attuned or adept. I think I was quite awkward. There was definitely a neediness around. I was
an only child going to school. I spoke differently. I don't have the accent from the place that I'm from.
I did cricket, which was seen as this sort this upper class sport in one of the most working class
towns in all of the UK.
And yeah, it was just ostracized, a combination of not being socially nimble and doing things
that made you stand out with probably being a physically unfermitable child.
I was like a skinny kid.
Yeah, yeah, small skinny kid.
And I mean, I ended up growing probably heightwise
at the same rate as everybody else,
but there was lots of, you know, these dudes in school
that just hit puberty at 10 and a half years old
before you've even got into secondary school.
And these guys are massive.
So yeah, I think that was, that would have contributed a good bit.
So it's interesting.
So we did a study and we found that like late developing boys were 22 times more likely
to be bullied than on time, they're on time peers.
So these like, squirty little boys, especially in places that have a dog eat, dog world, like the
UK and Canada and the United States. They don't fare too well. And then they, then they go
through puberty and then life gets a little bit better. And it's interesting, though. What do
you think for girls? So it comes back to all full circles of slut shaming. Wow. Okay. So early
developing girls, if you have precocious puberty and you look more like a woman early on,
you're going to be seen as more of a threat by the girls and they're going to be picked on.
Wow.
Because you're going to get the attention of the boys in class.
They're going to be looking at the girl who's got boobs at 12 years old and the girl that doesn't have boobs at 12 years old is going to be ignored.
The only way that she can rebalance this disparity is to claw down the one that's developed.
You got it.
So you can come to your PhD with me now. I'm ready to go.
I'm ready.
I'm moving to Canada. But yeah, I mean, the brain developing thing, just to kind of round
that out, is the suggestion that if you was a child
ancestrally grew up in an environment where there was a lot of peer group
ostracization, an awful lot of pressure, perhaps you were left out, perhaps it was by design,
or perhaps it was simply just as a byproduct of the climates or the period that you were living through. There is a likelihood down the line from that that
the world is still quite an unsafe place to be. Therefore, you being more forthcoming,
you being more needy, you being more anxious and more attached to the people that are around you
is going to be adaptive because I am living in a period that is not particularly safe socially
or from a kinship perspective.
Is that kind of the narrative story that are evolutions telling us?
I think it's one pathway and that's the whole thing. I think we tend to want to tell a simple story,
but in truth, there's tons of heterogeneity and we should expect it.
People will start in the same spot and end up
in different spots and people who end up in the end spots the same, but their beginnings
are so different. So multifunality, equifinality, that sort of thing. I think that it's really
hard when you think about the evolutionary significance of bullying. And I know you spoke
to Dr. Volk to Tony about, because it's such a cruel experience
and it's such a damaging experience that it's difficult to put an evolutionary lens on
it and say, how could this be adaptive?
I mean, I think it's adaptive for the people who are perpetrating the violence, but not
for those that are receiving the violence.
I can't think of how it makes them better people in any way.
People will say that they wouldn't want
to trade their experience because they've achieved excellence
and it made who they are.
It's so interesting how often you hear about people
being bullied and they're really prominent individuals.
I just watched the Netflix series, Beckham,
have you watched it yet? I haven't. No. And both. They were both, you know, kids
isolated, kids in a lot of ways. And and it's interesting because then I hear
this often by people who have achieved a lot and they said they were bullied and
they think they're tough because of that. That experiences what made them. And I
always think, okay, so if you're at a on a scale of one to ten, you're at an eight on
excellence and excellence is like world-class excellence, what if you were supposed to be
a ten?
Like, you know, we don't know what your top was supposed to be.
Maybe you were supposed to cure cancer.
Well, I said this to David Goggins, who had opened up an awful lot about the way that he was treated as a kid
Both at school and by his father at this tyrannical father that was very abusive
And I opened up about for the first time at the start of this year
properly about sort of bullying in school
I hadn't brought it up before because it just seemed kind of lame to bring up the fact that I guess I was still ashamed and kind of guilty
About the fact that I had been mistreated as a kid and like,
you know, what does it mean to be someone in the 30s still talking about this?
But then it's an important part of the origin story of you and it's been very formative,
so you should bring it up, but then it kind of seems like maybe you're giving power back to the
so there's, you know, the ping pong game of why you should or shouldn't bring something up was kind
of strong. And one of the things that I said was something along the lines of a lot of the things
that you're most proud of in yourself
are the light side of something
that you're probably pretty embarrassed about.
And it's exactly the classic narrative
that you talk about, this alchemy,
I have taken something which should have been awful
and I turned it on its head.
I got to, I took control.
I used my agency, my sovereignty
to kind of wrangle this reality into something which is good to me. Now, there's, I'm falling
in love with this frame at the moment, things which are literally true, but figuratively
false and things that are figuratively false, but literally true. I think that this is one of those things that may be literally
true but figuratively false or at least functionally false, which is I may have been a much better
businessman, son and podcaster had I have not been bullied. But belief in that is completely
pointless and the only way that I can
ameliorate the fact that I did get mistreated in school is for me to say
actually most of the things that I went through helped to not only not hold me
back but also forge me into the situation that I'm in because believing about
the other universe, the second strand where you won't, and thinking about just how much further ahead
you could have got is just a recipe
for victimhood and misery.
And it's a, yeah, literally true, functionally false,
perhaps.
You know, it's interesting too.
It kind of highlights back to that heterogeneity point
that it was making.
So like, I do think that some individuals are bullied
and they do okay, they fare better.
And the reason why one person goes left and one person goes right is varied.
Like, you know, the attributions that you're making are really important and those are helpful.
But there's also biological risk that we never talked about.
So for example, and this has kind of been, this is a bit dated, but
it gives you, it's a really simple way of explaining it, so I'll use it, but just know that
the genetics have caught up and that things are a little bit more complicated than this.
So Caspi Moffitt and all published a seminal paper in science in 19, And basically they looked at 5-HTT LPR,
so it's the serotonin transporter gene,
the polymorphism of it.
So you can get 50% of your genes from your mom,
50% from your dad, so you can have a long allele,
like a long, long allele, short, short allele,
and a short, long allele.
And having the short allele, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long,
long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long,
long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, long, of them becoming depressed at age 26. And whether or not it was moderated by their 5-HDTLPR.
And what they found was that if you were bullied or sorry, maltreated in childhood and you had
the short, shorter leal, you were 65% you had a 65% chance of being depressed in adulthood.
If you had the same horrible experience and you had the protective long long, then you
were no more likely to be depressed than if you hadn't been abused.
So do you know what your 5 HDT LPR polymorphism is?
No, but I can ask someone because I've had a full gene scandal.
This is my point.
You don't like, okay, so now we know you give you 23 me We can have some idea
But it really is important for people to understand this because sometimes too when people aren't resilient
We blame them again
So they get bullied and then they're not resilient on their on being bullied and we say ah you see you know look at
Should it try harder should it on the way? Yeah, like Chris came out of it and he's a better
He's a better person. He's done all of these things, you know. So if you could just,
you know, be stronger. But you don't know what their biological risk is. Well, I mean, this is the,
it's ultimately the brutal red pill of behavioral genetics, right? That the raw materials that
everybody is starting with is not the same.
And when you fold that in with epigenetics and determinism, you have a pretty brutal
soup quite a nihilistic life.
You know, if you don't believe that there's free will and if you believe that the predisposition
that you had was ordained before you were even born.
And then if you learned that epigenetic, I thought epigenetics was total bullshit,
and then I had Sapolsky on and he totally blew my mind.
And there are things that can have happened
to your parents' lives that aren't a part of their genetics,
which can influence the genetics that they will give to you,
the behavior that your mother goes through
when you're in utero will have huge changes, epigenetic changes that are locked in
for the rest of the life. And not only that, it's now your kids and your grandkids are potentially.
Grandkids, because your grandmother made the ovum that became you, right? I mean, exactly. So
these stressors play out into generations to come. My point in telling this is just, it's really important because like,
so there's like, you know, talking about genetic risk,
but there's also attribution risks.
So, for example, studies have shown that
we're really keen on reducing bullying.
And, but studies have shown that
when you're the only kid in the class being bullied,
your mental health outcomes are worse
than if there's multiple kids being bullied in the classroom.
So then how do we reconcile that? And it makes sense because if I'm the only one being bullied,
then it's something I've done, right? But if everybody's getting bullied, it's because there's
some asshole in our classroom that's just picking on everybody. So there's like a communism of bullying.
You know, there's like, misery loves. So so here we're trying to reduce bullying
and then we're we're having this issue. The other thing that's really interesting about the
intervention literature and I'm given actually a talk to the Montreal School Board tomorrow on
this is that studies is shown. So back to Christina Salma Valley, I told you I went to Finland and I
told them that you know I went to your mall. I know you're going to have popular bullies that have a lot of assets and competencies.
What they found, they have like almost every kid in the country involved in their studies
and they have this big anti-bullying program called the Kiva.
They found that the ones that were most impervious to their anti-bullying efforts were the
highest status bullies.
Why would you give up your powerholding position?
So, yeah. What about, so for the people that are listening who might be thinking, okay,
well, I went through some bad times in school. Am I now locked into a life of suboptimal brain
developments and my hippocampus and gray matter smaller? I'm never going to be able to remember
my 16-digit number across the front of my card.
How possible is it to reverse the harm
that's being created neurologically, biologically,
from bullying?
So we don't know,
but I think that it's going to be okay for a lot of people.
And the reason I say that is that we're adaptive.
Like, so we have hundreds of thousands of years
of selection pressure. We are designed
to survive. We're designed to be resilient. And so we know that neuroplasticity exists
across the lifespan. So we, you know, we can, I think, reverse some of this damage for
sure. But in the absence of knowing that, knowing that
it causes us much harm, it behooves us to be better citizens. And we really need to be
reducing this, right? We can't just be hoping that, well, you know, in the end, at the end
of the day, we'll be able to fix this.
Pick up the pieces in your late 30s or something. Yeah.
Well, and also, it just a lived experience, I mean, again, like, you can fly the flag
from my ethnographic research, like, it's just not enjoyable. Like, you, and also, it just a lived experience, I can, again, I can fly the flag from my ethnographic research.
Like, it's just not enjoyable.
Like, you have this 4,000 weeks that you've got on this planet
and of them, however many hundred is spent,
like, really just not enjoying your time,
feeling bad about yourself.
It's funny that you said that,
like, I'm giving the keynote for UNICEF's violence conference
that's coming up.
Pro violence, presumably.
Per me?
Pro violence, presumably.
Pro you're going into violence.
No, they're violence, symposium.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, anti-humane.
Anti-violence.
Anyhow, and so the abstract that I wrote was just about what you said in a sense like
that.
It's interesting how people with live experience have told us over and over again how harmful
this was and is being bullied, being treated poorly, even women being treated poorly by other
women.
And yet we needed to like put 30 years worth of science to it to in a sense acknowledge
their pain was real.
Like, that's bullshit.
Like, why did we need to do this?
Like, we certainly needed to show it,
but why do we have to show it over and over again?
Like, we keep showing it without doing anything about it.
Like, we need to do something about it
and stop docks into alarms.
Well, definitely, you know,
speaking as a member,
a proud member of the ex-bolead community,
I guess one of the issues with at least being too forthcoming
is what I said at the beginning.
It's the reason I was reticent
to bring it up in the first place on the show
that it's a signal of those status.
You'd already had to battle with this before in the past.
Is this not something that I should have already
got passed into adulthood?
Is this really something that plays on my mind?
And even if it's something that doesn't play on your mind and that you have got passed
and you do feel like you've managed to get a balanced life and you've got friends that
you care about and you think that you've repaired the damage that might have been done to your
brain and all the rest of this stuff, even the fact that you're able to acknowledge that
it was a part of the story in the first place is also kind of still the signal and mobility.
You don't want to give the people that mistreated you any more power, any more time, or any
more thought than they already got out of you when it was happening at the time.
So it's just a, you know, the real litany of reasons as to why people who have gone through
bullying wouldn't want to bring it up even in adulthood when
it's no longer affecting them.
It's interesting because women are more vengeful than men.
You may not think that, but it's true.
So we never forget somebody who's done us wrong, remember I said.
So if I was you, and I had the podcast, like meaning like I was as popular as you
and I had the good lighting that you have in the back
of me and stuff like that, I'd be naming names.
I mean, like here's the list of the people who fucked with me.
I doubt them, but you're like a kinder person.
It's interesting that you still say this though
because you're probably very familiar
with the social pain research. No, what's that? Okay, so there, so about, maybe about 15
years ago, you know, with the, the advancements and FMRIs and the like, what they found was
that the physical pain network. So you stub your toe, your brain lights up, it tells you, you know,
this thing just happened, you pull your foot away, that sort of thing. So there's this mechanism
and we know what parts of the brain that are activated when you physically hurt yourself.
When you're ostracized, treated poorly, bullied, you name it, the same areas of your brain
are activated. It's called social pain. The difference
between social pain and physical pain, so there's overlapping neuro structures, physical
and social pain. And this has evolutionary significance again because it's a neural alarm
that you're not belonging. So you better be motivated to get back in there and belong,
right? So it actually does hurt.
And it's interesting because like when you think about the physical pain,
are the, the, the physical pain metaphors are used to describe social pain around
the world, broke my heart when I wasn't invited to that party.
I felt like you punched me in the stomach when I think about it, right?
So the thing about physical pain is that it's short-lived.
I think about it, right? So the thing about physical pain is that it's short-lived.
So I had two daughters and both times
the epidural didn't take, which is complete BS.
But I can tell you and I don't have a visceral reaction.
I don't.
But if I think about the time when my daughter was in grade six
and she wasn't invited to that party,
I feel like I felt that day. And so social
pain lasts a lifetime. And it's very, it's very socially motivating, but it's really hard
to shake. So when you're 88 and you think about when you were eight, you'll feel the same
thing. It's so salient. And that's been shown to be very robust.
So, you know, this is why it hurts. It hurts forever. It serves an evolutionary function,
but it's kind of like an evolutionary function that took steroids and kind of went off.
Have you looked at interventions for people to grow beyond the vestige of their bullying?
No, but I mean, I would say that probably the better programs would be cognitive behavioral
therapy. I think that that would be the way to deal with it because it's really about reframing
that and being kind to yourself. Like kind of things that you've been saying, you know, that makes sense to me.
And the reframing is really important.
You know, there's kids who get bullied,
like where the peer group says they're being bullied
and they say they're not bullied
and their mental health profile looks good.
And then there's kids who say they're being bullied
and the peer group doesn't say they're being bullied
and their mental health profile is look bad
because at the end of the day,
it's how you perceive the environment of that pattern.
Very interesting.
You're a percent of the event.
Given that you're talking about this in awful lot, it's obviously a topic that you're
passionate about.
What are the interventions that look most promising for reducing the rights of bullying?
So the most programs don't work very well.
They work a tiny bit if they work at all.
And then there was a paper that just came out
a meta-analysis that involved over 100 studies.
And it showed that the effects were pretty small again.
Better than they've been in the past.
But the programs that work tend to be universal.
So they address all kids in the school.
They do it before they head out of middle school,
because they're not very effective in high school.
They involve the peers, but are not pure led.
They include education of teachers.
They have consistency.
So there's like some components here and there.
But ultimately, I think that the reason
the programs don't work is because we don't have
a good enough appreciation of that dichotomy.
I talked about the low status bullies
and the high status bullies.
And I think historically, all of our programs
have been devoted towards the remediation of Nelson
instead of the remediation of that mean girl clique.
I think that we'd be in a better position if we address that talk to your group.
It's such a kind of like not a game of Russian roulette, but a little bit of a catch-22 for parents
and for the kid. By bringing it up, there's a fear that
more bullying is going to happen to you. The parent goes into school that also lowers the status
of the kid, presumably, because they can't handle it on their own. And then the parent now is super
vigilant. I mean, there must be something like, even though it's no longer a developing
brain, but a second-order parent to the child that's being bullied, vigilance effect, which
is going on, you know, increased anxiety, all the rest of it. So they're now going to
be asking their kid when they come home. Did that girl speak to you today? Has anything
changed? And you're then kind of scared because mum, I don't want to say,
if I tell you what's happened, then I'm scared,
you're going to shout at me, I feel like I'm a fault.
And you end up as the child,
I certainly did this with my parents,
I ended up being scared of telling my mum and dad
that bad things had happened at school,
but I was also having to absorb the bad things
that were
happening.
So you end up kind of like, I don't know, this sort of neutron star that's just absorbing
whatever is around it, desperate attempt to try and just not make the situation any
worse.
So I need everybody to understand that most studies show that when you tell somebody you're
being bullied, like a Karen adult in your school, that bullying stops, and it tends to stop immediately.
So we have this misperception that it's not going to be dealt with
if we actually say something out loud.
So a lot of times what happens is kids finally tell somebody
six months after the fact when it's been going on for far too long,
and now they're like, they're near death store kind of thing.
So that's really important that people understand.
They should be telling somebody.
But oftentimes, parents advocacy is,
I understand why it happens,
but it's maybe not the best advocacy to your point.
And it's because it's mirror neuron systems, right?
So they're absolutely feeling what their kid is feeling
and they have an intolerance for their kids' discomfort
and they want it addressed immediately.
So they come in and they're probably not
in a good position to advocate for their kid
because they're too emotionally charged.
Instead of coming in and rationally speaking about this,
it's hard to be rational when your baby's hurting.
I get that.
But if you did, you'd get a little bit further,
I think, with the schools.
The schools, most schools in the world,
have to deal with this,
even at a legal point.
So, like, for example,
in Ontario where I live,
it's in our education act that they have to address bullying.
So they're motivated, legally,
if not morally, and they are morally motivated,
but even if they weren't, they would be legally motivated to do something. So that's how
it's done. Now, when you were being bullied, that wasn't the case. Like, it was really like
the wild, wild west in a lot of ways, right? And like, teachers, even bully kids, and
it was about like, it sorted itself out. And that's just how it is.
You know, it was Darwinian thinking on this,
which was problematic.
So yeah, it's tough.
Parents need to advocate for their kids.
They need to do it rationally.
Kids need to understand that their parents
aren't gonna screw it up if they go in calm,
and that the school will deal with it.
It's not gonna fix everything overnight, but it certainly will fix a lot of things.
All right, Tracy, let's bring this one home.
I want to run this back again next year when your book comes out.
But for the people that have loved what they've heard today, where should they go if they
want to keep up to date with all your work?
So I'm on this platform called Twitter X where you go to get bullied.
You can keep up with it with me there. It's really lovely. I just love my interactions there.
I think that's probably the best place because I'm not on any other social media site.
So I got to keep my social comparisons low, so my mental health
is good. Very nice. Try to see. I really appreciate you. Thank you.
It was so nice chatting with you, Chris. I could do it all day long.
you