Modern Wisdom - #799 - David Robson - The Science Of Building Genuine Friendships

Episode Date: June 20, 2024

David Robson is a science writer, journalist, and an author. Loneliness is the real pandemic. Many people yearning for connection but struggle to hold onto it. David has uncovered 13 laws of human con...nection which you can apply to build and deepen relationships with the people in your life. Expect to learn whether we are actually in a loneliness crisis, how solitude impacts our health, why people are struggling to make deeper connections, how you can express appreciation more freely to others, how you can heal bad feelings, why asking for help is important, why it’s so important get better at forgiving others and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom (use code MW20) Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://www.shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: http://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: http://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: http://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello friends, welcome back to the show. My guest today is David Robson. He's a science writer, journalist and an author. Loneliness is the real pandemic. Many people are yearning for connection but struggle to hold on to it. David has uncovered 13 laws of human connection which you can apply to build and deepen relationships with the people in your life. Expect to learn whether we are actually in a loneliness crisis, how solitude impacts our health, why people are struggling to make deeper connections, how you can express appreciation more freely to others, how you can heal bad feelings, why asking for help is actually important, why it's so crucial to get better at forgiving others, and much more. David wrote
Starting point is 00:00:42 The Expectation Effect. He came on the show maybe three years ago, two years ago, and that book was so fantastic, awesome insights. And today is the same. It must drop 20 studies, 20 different stories about some lab somewhere that found something out and it's been replicated. So much fun. Lots and lots to apply to your life.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Great for interpersonal stuff, building new relationships and deepening connections. He's awesome. I really, really hope that you enjoy this one. Don't forget that the next few weeks have some huge guests coming on. And the only way that you can ensure you will not miss those is by pressing subscribe.
Starting point is 00:01:16 So please navigate to Apple podcasts or Spotify or wherever you are listening and press the follow button or the plus in the top right-hand corner. I really do appreciate it. Honestly, the plus in the top right hand corner, I really do appreciate it. Honestly, the difference in the quality of your life when you have a world-class backpack is pretty hard to describe. Nomatic make the most functional, durable and innovative backpacks, bags, luggage and accessories that I've ever used. Their 20 litre travel pack and carry-on classic are absolute game changers. The amount of thought that they've put into every pouch
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Starting point is 00:03:14 Plus you can sign up for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.com slash modern wisdom all lowercase, that's Shopify.com slash modern wisdom to grow your business no matter what stage you're in. It's important to me that the supplements I take are of the highest quality and that's why for over three years now I have been drinking AG1. Taking care of your health should not be complicated and AG1 simplifies this by covering all of your nutritional bases and setting yourself up to success in just 60 seconds per day. Their ingredients are heavily researched for efficacy and quality
Starting point is 00:03:46 and I love that every single scoop also includes prebiotics, probiotics and digestive enzymes for gut support. I've partnered with AG1 for so long because they make the highest quality product that I genuinely look forward to drinking every day. So if you want to replace your multivitamin and more, it starts with AG1. Try AG1 and get a year's free supply of Vitamin D3 and K2 plus 5 free AG1 travel packs with your first subscription at www.drinkag1.com. But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome David Robson.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Are we in a loneliness crisis? What does the data say? Yeah, I mean, you see this like everywhere, like I think every week, there's a new like newspaper article saying that we're in this kind of loneliness epidemic. And like there's no doubt that like the surveys showed that lots of people feel lonely, like as many as 50% of people feel pretty lonely, like a, you know, regular points in their lives. So yeah, it is a kind of crisis,
Starting point is 00:05:08 but whether this is like a new phenomenon, that is really up for debate, because if you look back at the historic data, which is imperfect, but you can go back like 60, 70 years, and people were reporting high levels of loneliness back then too. So even though I'm sure that like some elements of our society today are kind of driving people apart, you know, like people don't live in their families so
Starting point is 00:05:31 much, often we're kind of based in, you know, different continents, even, um, people are living alone a lot more. Like, I'm sure all of that is super relevant, but I don't think it's the only reason that people are feeling lonely. And I think like the research really shows that there must be some kind of psychological barriers, you know, like the problem lies within us as much as in our environment. And that's why people have felt lonely for decades, centuries, potentially. Oh, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:05:58 So there's a like an ambient level of human loneliness that's just endemic to being us. And then we have this sort of new world of technology and atomization and isolation and, and, and digital communication and stuff. And maybe a lot of people are laying what is a much more sort of ancestral archaic problem at the feet of the new technology. Is that kind of how you frame it? Yeah, exactly. You know, like, um, every time a new technology? Is that kind of how you frame it? Yeah, exactly. You know, like every time a new technology comes along, like we blame it for everything.
Starting point is 00:06:30 So you know, like back in like Jane Austen's time, like people were saying that reading novels was like driving the youth into like madness. You know, so I think like technology, you know, like our cell phones are just tools. They can be used to enhance connection or they can be used to enhance connection, or they can be used to kind of just engage in social comparison and make us feel really shit about ourselves compared to other people. But the tool itself isn't the problem, it's the way we're using it. So that's where I'm coming from really is, it's all
Starting point is 00:06:59 about kind of mindfully knowing like how we handle our relationships that's important. Yeah, I think, to me, I would say there is a step change in the power that these devices have over us compared with previous ones. You know, yes, maybe the wireless in 1912 or something was these kids, they're just going to be listening to the news all day or whatever. And then the television as well was a huge concern, especially when it was in more households. This is going to turn everybody into sort of adults, totally useless citizens.
Starting point is 00:07:29 I do think that there's a step change. I do think that social media and smartphones are a difference of kind, not just a difference of degree of what we're talking about here. But at the same time, how easy and convenient it is to now have a legitimate excuse and a genuine enemy that you can say this. This is why I don't connect with people the way that I want to. This is why I don't have any social depth with the people that are around me. This is why I don't seem to be able to find a deeper meaning in my relationships. It's the boogie man. It's like the smartphone of the gaps for all of your social ills. Yeah, it totally is. I mean, like,
Starting point is 00:08:12 you can blame it on the technology and you can just kind of take this attitude that is you're kind of helpless to solve your loneliness, or you can look at the kind of psychological literature. And actually, like what's come out in the last five or ten years is that there are lots of things that we can do to enhance the relationships that we do have or to build new relationships, which is often a lot easier than we expect. That's something that comes out in the literature all the time that we're probably much better at being social and having these authentic, deep relationships than we believe we are, we just have to know how to do it correctly.
Starting point is 00:08:51 Just to set the scene, how important is social connection? I mean, it's so important. So I think like we all know, you know, it's nice to kind of have a group of friends who you can rely on and to have meaningful relationships with your family, like to live with a spouse or a boyfriend or girlfriend. We know, I think everyone knows that that's super important for kind of mental health and happiness, but what has become so apparent is that social connection is fundamental for
Starting point is 00:09:23 your health. I mean, accumulating evidence from 50 years shows that it's actually one of the big predictors of mortality. So you have things like smoking, drinking, your BMI, whether you do exercise, whether you're taking care of things like your blood pressure. but social connection is right up there with all of these. It's as important, if not more important, than all of these other core lifestyle factors. So you really can't actually overestimate how important social connection is. You know, it's just fundamental to living a good and healthy life. Yeah, I was looking at some of the different correlations that you'd found
Starting point is 00:10:06 immunity, diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer's neurodegeneration. So like friendships are the panacea that the ultimate cure to whatever it is that ails you. Right. Yeah, exactly. I see it as being like exercise, you know, like exercise basically reduces your risk of all illness. Social connection is pretty much the same. There are really strong evolutionary arguments for why
Starting point is 00:10:33 that is. Essentially, when we were in prehistory, it was like we were living in nature. There was really dangerous with the threat of predators or other groups who might have attacked our group. You really had to have solid alliances with the people around you. So, if you were excluded or if your ties were quite weak, you were in danger. First of all, it evolved this strong signal to warn you that something was up and that you had to remedy that. So in the same way that you feel physical pain to warn you that you've got a wound that needs to be tended, you would feel social pain to warn you that your relationships really aren't as secure as they need to be to keep you physically safe. So that's why loneliness is so painful emotionally. And then that also, that is accompanied
Starting point is 00:11:25 by a physiological reaction as well. So you see an increase in inflammation because if you're isolated, you're at more risk of injury. So you have this kind of low level inflammation that's gonna protect you from infection if you do get injured. You have like a higher levels of blood clotting factors which would stop you losing blood if you do get injured, you have like a higher levels of blood clotting factors, which would stop you losing blood if you're attacked.
Starting point is 00:11:48 Information and blood clotting might be good in the short term if you do have a wound, but actually in the long term, they're gonna increase your risk of things like Alzheimer's or a stroke or a heart attack. And actually those stroke and heart attack are the two things that are most strongly linked to loneliness. And you can really see the mechanism is like so, so totally bound into our
Starting point is 00:12:11 kind of evolutionary history. So I, everyone that's listening has been red-pilled about a lot of evolutionary psychology. They understand that a human on its own 50,000 years ago is a human that doesn't survive for very long. So I think everyone can understand the ultimate reason for why loneliness would hurt right from the ultimate proximate paradigm. The mechanism is something that I didn't know about.
Starting point is 00:12:36 And that is so cool. What are some of the other mechanisms meet? Cause this is, you know, big question that I had. Why do friends make such a difference? Like what our bodies got some weird Facebook friend tick counter thing in the back of its mind. Like what, what's it doing to detect this? What's being mediated by the people that are around us.
Starting point is 00:12:57 That mechanism thing to me is, is really important. Yeah. I mean, it's so fascinating and it's still being kind of researched and kind and developed this theory. But you can see in other social animals, even rodents, do depend on living in groups. They have these loneliness neurons that are a little like the areas of the brain that deal with hunger. So it's like you feel satiated after you've eaten, so your hunger kind of decreases and then it increases when you're going to run out of energy. Well, it seemed to be the same with the loneliness
Starting point is 00:13:30 neurons. It's like when you've been apart from people for a while or if you feel isolated from those who are around you, but you just don't feel close to them. It seems those loneliness neurons become more active. They're kind of telling you, they're giving you this warning, like you need to tend your relationships. And then when you've spent time with your friends or your family, the loneliness neurons stop firing so much until you're kind of in that danger zone again. So yeah, we are keeping track of our social connection very tightly, automatically it's kind of a low level desire,
Starting point is 00:14:10 just like hunger, thirst, but all of the other things that we need to survive. Lots of people will say, I don't need anybody. I'm a lone ranger. Maybe I've been in friendships before and I've been betrayed. Maybe I've tried to make friends and I've really struggled. I don't even care about the world. I've absconded, I've tried to make friends and I've really struggled. Um, I don't even care about the world.
Starting point is 00:14:26 I've absconded. I've gone full Ted Kaczynski mode. I'm out in the equivalent of the digital woods, you know, in my apartment or whatever. Um, how much are these effects of loneliness outside of our conscious awareness that we feel lonely? Do you know what I mean? There's some people who will not be around many people and go, God, I just really do feel lonely, the solitude is hurting me.
Starting point is 00:14:49 And then there's other people who either, uh, genuinely or sort of, um, deceptively don't have that sensation. Is it your belief that pretty much everybody's brain is still playing the ticker sort of loneliness neuron thing is firing regardless of whether you think fuck the world or actually I really want a lot of friends? Yeah, I do think it's like that. I mean, I think like, you know, pretty much everyone is going to need some kind of level of social contact.
Starting point is 00:15:20 I think it differs depending on whether you're like introverted or extroverted for what that kind of social connection will look like. Some people, I think, are very happy with having like a hundred weak ties that they see semi-regularly, but they maybe don't have such a close bond with each one of those. For others, it might be important just to have their spouse or one close friend who they really rely on. But I think fundamentally some kind of social connection is this kind of basic human urge. I do kind of see looking at the literature and reading between the lines that there might be some people who, like you say, they're kind of neglecting this basic need in the
Starting point is 00:16:05 same way that someone with an eating disorder might kind of start to neglect their need to eat. So you can isolate yourself and it's almost like you just stop listening to the kind of brain or the body signals of what you desire. But then your mental health is going to suffer in other ways. You just might, you might not be linking it to that cause, but I think there's no way that you're not going to suffer some consequences from that. Yeah, I was, uh, I was trying to sort of correlate it to your last book, the expectation effect, which everybody needs to go and read by the way.
Starting point is 00:16:38 Fantastic. Um, I was wondering whether the story that you tell yourself about your degree of loneliness mediates this sort of loneliness neuron activation and the platelets being closer to coagulate all that stuff. I think it probably does a little bit like, because say like we know that your kind of attitudes to stress in general can have an influence on how you physiologically respond to that stress. So if you see stress as being this kind of thing that makes you stronger and is important for growth, you have a better physiological response than if
Starting point is 00:17:16 you see stress as being super dangerous and bad for your health and a sign of failure. So I do think when we experience these kind of transient periods of loneliness, I think our mindset is going to have a role there. I think no matter how strong your social network, sometimes you're going to still feel a bit rejected by people. But your friends aren't always going to act in the way that you want.
Starting point is 00:17:43 And you can kind of catastrophize that. And you can catastrophize that and you can start to blame it on yourself and see yourself as being totally unlikable and something inherent within you. That's not going to be as healthy as if you just take a more philosophical, stoical approach to that. And I accept that sometimes loneliness is a part of the human condition. And you can recognize the loneliness as this kind of core signal, a bit like physical pain, that's telling you that maybe you have to nurture your relationships in other ways. So if you've been let down by one friend, like maybe it's time to reach out to
Starting point is 00:18:18 another, to kind of get that connection that you're missing. What was the relationship between creativity and finances with loneliness? Yeah. I mean, so this is a whole other mechanism by which, um, uh, social connection might be related to, uh, our health because actually when we're socially connected, we become more creative. Um, because if you're surrounded by loads of different people of different backgrounds who have different viewpoints, you have this kind of cross-pollination process
Starting point is 00:18:52 where their ideas feed into your ideas and vice versa. And then that plays out in how innovative you are as an individual and as a group. So you can see that in data from like the creators of Broadway musicals, for example. You sometimes had groups of like the choreographers, composers, lyricists who only worked together in very small isolated groups. They tended to be less successful like as seen by like the critical success, how long the plays ran, how much money they took in. They were less successful compared to some of these groups who were a bit promiscuous in who they would work with.
Starting point is 00:19:37 So they would work with one group for one production and then go on to another. But they were just carrying so many different ideas from all of the people they'd worked with. They had this broader professional network and then that seemed to help them to break the norms of the genre so that they became more creative in what they were producing. And something like West Side Story seemed to come out of that very collaborative process where you actually had people who had already worked with a whole bunch of other professionals before they joined that particular group. And then, you know, if you have, if you're more creative, you have more financial security often because you're doing better at your job. If you're well connected, you know, you just see more opportunities for business. So that gives you better financial security
Starting point is 00:20:25 if you're made redundant. Like something like in the UK, like 50% of people found their job through like an acquaintance. So it's easier to then kind of get back into employment. So that, you know, all of that is good in itself, but it's also just relieving you of like some of the biggest stresses that you're going to have to face
Starting point is 00:20:45 in your life. So independent, independent of the kind of loneliness response and what that's doing to your levels of inflammation and the clotting agents, you're also just better to better equipped to deal with all of the challenges that you you're going to have to face. And that's a cycle of feedback loop as well, presumably that poverty, for instance, is a reliable inducer of stress into a human's life.
Starting point is 00:21:11 If you drop into poverty, there's this great study that I learned about to do with epigenetics for mothers. And they did this study, Robert Sapolsky talks about it, did this study where women Sapolsky talks about it, did this study where women who entered poverty during pregnancy and you can see this epigenetic cascade into the child, into the fetus and if that child is a female, that child has every egg that they are ever going to make a baby from while they're inside of what will be grandmother who has just gone into poverty. So you end up with three generations
Starting point is 00:21:50 of this epigen... It's so interesting. So yeah, this sort of interest, it's like, it's kind of like stabilises in a way. It's just sort of robust, increasing robustness. Yeah, that's exactly how I see it. It's just that you, you know, like if you fall ill and you've got someone to take you to the hospital, like that is something that could potentially increase your lifespan as well. We know, you know, when people are socially connected, they're also just more likely to kind of take care of their health because they get that kind of feedback from other people who might be saying like,
Starting point is 00:22:23 Fucking hell, David, you've gained a bit of weight or whatever it might be. Exactly. Yeah. No, totally. It's like that. Or like, you know, if you've got like a cough or whatever, they won't go away. Like you really do need to get that scene. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:34 Yeah. The denial of your own medical issues is harder if there's someone watching you. Yeah, that's exactly it. Um, so, you know, it's just so fundamental, but like you said, it's like we have, when you're connected, you have these kinds of, um, you know, it's just so fundamental, but like you said, it's like we have, when you're connected, you have these kinds of, um, like stabilizers that mean that even if you hit a kind of rocky road, like you're just better able to write yourself more quickly. Is it the number of friends?
Starting point is 00:22:58 What are some connections more important or higher value than others? How should we think about connect our connection balance sheet or the profit and loss account? Yeah. I mean, so it's going to vary from person to person and kind of what connections you really value. Like I, I know some people who, um, you know, just love like having a huge social network of people that they aren't so close to. Others are happier with
Starting point is 00:23:26 just having a very small but tight-knit group. But even within those connections, you can differentiate. So you have the people who are purely supportive. They're always there for you when you need them. And they're an allied good, like they're just gonna, you know, like you want as many people as you kind of those, then you have the purely aversive people who are kind of, you know, like consistently nasty, um, like, you know, we would tend to avoid them. Cause I've been saying, I've been saying friends, but you're talking social connections and social connections can be both good and bad.
Starting point is 00:24:03 Right. Yeah. Well they can, that's it. So, I mean, like, you know, those people, I guess we would try to like shift out of our social network. But then there's these people who are kind of in the middle, the kind of ambivalent relationships or frenemies. And what is weird about those is we might keep them in our relationship for our in our kind of relationship network for our whole lives. But they're pretty bad for our health actually,
Starting point is 00:24:27 if you have too many frenemies. So these are kind of Jekyll and Hyde figures who might seem like your best friend one day, then they're in a bad mood and they'll like lash out at you the next. But the good kind of might outweigh the bad, so you don't wanna just like fall out with them and like exclude them from your social
Starting point is 00:24:45 network completely. But what the research shows is that they can actually be more stressful for you than the purely aversive, consistently nasty people. If your boss is just always difficult with you, you can discount what they say. If sometimes they're praising you and then another time they're just unreliably really critical, that raises your blood pressure a lot more basically. So even just knowing that you have like an ambivalent connection in the next room as you and that you're going to have to interact with them, that is enough to raise your blood pressure. So is it the uncertainty? Is that what's causing it to happen? Yeah, it's the answer is totally the uncertainty.
Starting point is 00:25:27 And it's because they're nice enough to us that we actually really care what they say. We're not like, um, we, we are not going to ignore them in the same way that we might ignore, like you're like horrible uncle who's just going to be critical. Like whatever you do, how can people recognize or learn to recognize for enemies better? I mean, so I think like there are, I think like actually the questionnaires are pretty easy actually to kind of, so I put them in my book and it's basically like like when you need help is this person on a scale of one to seven helpful, like not helpful at all, very helpful, and not hurtful at all, or very hurtful. But essentially, if someone scores more than two on both of those scales, they are a frenemy. And then the research shows that they're actually pretty bad for
Starting point is 00:26:26 your health if you have too many of those frenemies within your group. Yeah. I think we all know people like that, and I'm not saying that we should just detoxify, but I think we can be mindful of the way that we interact with them. So like if you're already feeling stressed, like just avoid an ambivalent connection, like don't go to them for help. If you have to see them, like try to do something like to kind of chill out afterwards, like try to exercise some self-compassion, like maybe just even like just remind yourself of the fact that like, you know, of their nature that they are this ambivalent connection and that you don't have to take what they say so personally, because that's, you know, that's on them.
Starting point is 00:27:11 That's not on you. I think all of these things can help to mitigate their effects. So it's kind of like a, a lowering of expectations in some ways that you're the unpredictability comes about because some days they convince you that they're potentially a good friend. But then many days they come and they're a dick or they're aloof or they're not responsive
Starting point is 00:27:35 or they're mean or they're not helpful or whatever it might be. So just bringing down the expectation of the good. And this is the reason why your boss that's just 24 seven, a cantankerous person is, well, you know, it's Jim. Do you know Jim? Jim, he's just, that's the way he goes.
Starting point is 00:27:52 But the guy that flip flops between, you know, Jim and John is the more difficult one. So by just, okay, everybody's Jim now, everyone that's ambivalent is Jim and I lower my expectations and therefore I don't, I don't get surprised when that happens. Yeah. I mean, that's how I see it. That's kind of how I deal with my own kind of ambivalent connections is just to be, to recognise that like I don't have to like, they can react however they're going to, but I don't have to actually engage with that in the same way that I did before. Like I can choose to kind of discount their kind of unpleasant side because it's, you know, that's their
Starting point is 00:28:27 problem with the way that they're conducting their relationships is not a reflection on me. What do you mean when you talk about the personality myth? Yeah, so this is the idea that I think a lot of us have that you're like, you kind of think either you're like a super social person or you're not, and there's not much that you can do about that. So, you might just think it's like my shyness, my introversion that just stops me from talking to strangers or enjoying parties or making new friends when I move house to a different city. The research shows that that's actually not true.
Starting point is 00:29:09 A common idea is that introverts just aren't going to enjoy being gregarious, but actually, when you give introverts challenges, to go out and chat to someone in the park every week, every day, who has a cool dog or cool hair, or just make conversation with the barista in your coffee shop. So things that they would normally find a little bit uncomfortable, like to start with, they have this strong prediction that they're really going to hate those interactions. Everyone, including extroverts, tend
Starting point is 00:29:40 to be a bit pessimistic about how much they're going to enjoy talking to a stranger. We kind of assume it's going to be more bit pessimistic about how much they're going to enjoy talking to a stranger. We kind of assume it's going to be more awkward than it really is, but introverts kind of think that because of their personality, that's going to be especially true for them. And then you look at how they feel afterwards and they enjoy it just as much as the extroverts. They actually really benefit from the social connection in exactly the same way. How much truth is there in the introversion, extroversion, introvert, extrovert dichotomy?
Starting point is 00:30:15 I'm sure that you've dug into this and looked at the data and sort of debunked the bro signs. Yeah. I mean, so I do think like, um, people do kind of fall along that spectrum. Um, I guess most so I do think people do kind of fall along that spectrum. I guess most people are ambiverts. We're a little bit extrovert, a little bit introvert. I think most people enjoy socializing and recognize that fact, but also enjoy a bit of solitude as well. Once those loneliness neurons have stopped firing and you've got your fill, you
Starting point is 00:30:45 can go away. You just don't have the same appetite as someone who is a pure extrovert. I do think there are individual differences along that dimension, but what the research shows is that no matter where you lie on that dimension, you do benefit from just becoming a bit more social than you currently are, or most people do. So even extroverts can benefit from being a bit more social, but especially introverts can. And our personalities, they're not necessarily hardwired in our genes. We do have genes that influence whether we're introvert or extrovert, but it's not like they seal our fate, like people can move along that spectrum just by kind of practicing, uh, being more gregarious, being more, um, uh, kind of dominant in certain situations, like, you know, we're not, it's not like our genes kind of
Starting point is 00:31:42 determine our personality, like 100%. What would you say to the person who feels that the, the prototypical avatar for the, I struggle to make new friends. I find it hard to be gregarious. I'm not the loudest person in the room or maybe, you know, just get a little bit of anxiety. I'm in my own head. I'm very thoughtful.
Starting point is 00:32:03 Um, what, what do you say to them to help them get out of their own skin a bit? Right. So I totally think it depends like how they feel about that, like how they kind of evaluate the effect that's having on their life, like I think, you know, like I was saying earlier, some people probably do just have less appetite for social connection, and if you're actually pretty happy with the way you are and you don't feel frustrated, then there's no need to change your behavior. But I think lots of people do feel frustrated and would benefit from acting more
Starting point is 00:32:38 socially, and they believe that they can't because of their personality. And so I would say to those people, actually, that is where the personality myth is really a barrier and that you need to overcome that by just kind of slowly pushing yourself out of your comfort zone. And you know, like, I think the best way to do this, it's kind of proven in psychology, is to set these implementation intentions. So it's all very well to be like,
Starting point is 00:33:04 oh yeah, I'm gonna be more sociableable today. Like that's a really vague goal. It's not going to help you achieve that goal very much. So it's much better for you to kind of identify like when and how you're going to go about that. So it could just be that you're telling yourself like when I'm at the supermarket and I see someone struggling to carry their groceries, I'll just offer to give them a hand. Instead of just asking straight for my coffee, I will just try to ask the barista how their day is going, just make some kind of small talk. What the research shows is that when you do that repeatedly, even over quite a short time span of, say, five days, even by the end of that five days, people are already changing the way they perceive those
Starting point is 00:33:52 interactions. So, they no longer expect those interactions to feel awkward, and they expect to enjoy them, and then they do enjoy them. So, I think it's just something that we do have to practice kind of day after day and recognize that, um, you know, it's a learnable skill. It's like learning a musical instrument. Like you have the potential to be sociable. You just have to put in a bit of work to practice those skills. Wow. Five days to make, to start to reframe that. I suppose so much of what people are worried about is some odd catastrophic outcome.
Starting point is 00:34:32 I'm going to ask the barista at Starbucks, how their day's going. And, and then the police are going to come in or they're going to laugh at me or it's going to be weird or whatever it might be. So it's almost like, I guess, exposure, uh, training, you know, it's just totally is, you know, it's like overcoming any kind of phobia. Um, so, I mean, you can't ever guarantee that there's never going to be someone who is unfriendly, but like what I love about these experiments where they've got like, you know, hundreds, sometimes thousands
Starting point is 00:35:04 of people to enact these behaviors is hundreds, sometimes thousands of people to enact these behaviors is that it is so rare for people to have a really bad experience. In the first couple of studies, just no one reported having hostility kind of thrown back at them when they tried to talk to strangers on the Chicago buses and trains or on the London Underground. Even the London Underground has a really bad reputation for people being really unfriendly and isolated and not wanting to make conversation. But people responded much better than anyone had expected. And I think each person, maybe, on the train is sitting there, some are happy in their own faults.
Starting point is 00:35:47 Others are kind of feeling a bit lonely and they're just waiting for someone to kind of strike up the conversation, but they're not brave enough to do it. So a lot of people are actually super grateful when you're the one who kind of takes the first step and kind of, you know, open your mouth to speak. Why is overcoming egocentric thinking so important? Yeah, I mean, so this is one of the kind of barriers where like we, I guess the work on like the personality myth kind of shows that like we're all better at making connections than we think we are. But that doesn't mean that there's not room for improvement. And so egocentric thinking is one of the ways that sometimes we do needlessly create misunderstanding between people.
Starting point is 00:36:31 So essentially, all neurotypical people they have the capacity to, they have theory of mind, which means that you can put yourself in another person's shoes and take their perspective and recognize that they might have different opinions or knowledge from what you yourself have. Now, the problem is that even though we have that capability, it's quite hard cognitively to do. So far more often than I think scientists had expected, people don't apply their theory of mind. They act super-eco-centrically and just assume that the other person that they're talking to can see what they can see, knows what they
Starting point is 00:37:19 know, thinks what they think, has the same beliefs, can understand their intentions even when they're super ambiguous in what they're saying. I think we're quite robust in our interactions, so there's a lot of correction that goes on in any conversation when there's a bit of misunderstanding and then it soon comes out by asking the right questions or just by elaborating that allows the two people to fully get on board with what they're saying. But just by being conscious of this fact that you might be thinking egocentrically and just checking, does the other person actually understand what I'm saying? Are they familiar with the terms I'm using?
Starting point is 00:38:04 Do they have a completely different political opinion that I just haven't given them a chance to express? Um, you know, just doing those kinds of little light safety checks in your conversation can just like smooth over the conversation so you're not making those kinds of fundamental errors. Yeah. What else did you learn about the art of conversation? Presumably a lot of what we're talking about with regards to human connection is
Starting point is 00:38:25 going to be mediated through it. So it's a pretty key skill to develop. Right. Yeah, it is. So, I mean, asking questions is fundamental. Something that is kind of well-known is that you should ask more questions when you kind of meet someone for the first time, like don't talk about yourself. But I think what we often misunderstand is the importance of the follow-up
Starting point is 00:38:45 questions. So you could go into a conversation and you could just be like asking, it could be like an interview almost, you're like, what do you do? Where'd you come from? Do you have a wife? Like, you know, like what's your paper at sport? Like, fine, like you're showing an interest in the other person, but it does feel a bit formulated. Whereas if they tell you something a bit quirky and then you drill down on that and you just follow up by asking what they meant or why that thing is so important to them, what joy or pleasure they get out of this activity that they've just described. Those are the ones that really matter. So you look at
Starting point is 00:39:22 people on speed dates and the amount of follow-up questions that people ask really predicted whether they would actually be selected for a second date. I mean, if you asked enough follow-up questions, it doubled your chances of getting a date, basically. So it's well worth bearing that in mind. The other thing that we should really bear in mind is that it's good to ask questions, but we also need to be quite generous with what we're telling the other person to. So self-disclosure, like revealing your own kind of deeper thoughts and feelings is super
Starting point is 00:39:57 important as well. And we have this kind of bias in our conversation where we think it's always safer to just talk about the superficial stuff, like those kinds of questions I was talking about earlier, like what profession do you do, where did you grow up, what did you do at Halloween, that kind of stuff. But actually, when scientists have forced people into these conversations, where they, like two strangers have to ask super probing things like, do you have an intuition about how you're going to die? Or what is the most embarrassing thing that you've done in your life? Or what's your biggest mistake and why would you wish that you could correct it? Not the usual kind of stuff that we would talk
Starting point is 00:40:41 about like within 20 minutes of meeting someone., that is called the fast friendships procedure. And like, I mean, the name says it all, but I mean, it really puts people on this fast track to intimacy, like within about 45 minutes, those people feel closer to each other than they do to some of their oldest friends, which is kind of amazing. Just take us through high level what the fast friends procedure consists of. Yeah. So, I mean, it's kind of asking those probing questions, but I mean, basically the, it was developed by Arthur Aaron, a psychologist in New York.
Starting point is 00:41:22 And essentially he just got these participants to kind of total strangers to sit down with 36 of these questions that got progressively more kind of intimate. Like there's nothing kind of dodgy or sexual there. But I mean, it's just asking people like to kind of to look inside themselves and reveal something that they might have felt
Starting point is 00:41:44 too embarrassed or vulnerable to talk about. So, fears, dreams, you know, another one that I love is like if you had a crystal ball and it could tell you anything about your life or your future, what would you want it to tell you and why? So So it's kind of getting people to really tell something that might have been secret beforehand or something that they're scared about potentially. It's a kind of ambiguous prompt in that it's not forcing someone to go in any particular direction, but what you choose is super revealing about what's going on in your inner life. Then he tested how close these participants felt at the end of this 45-minute conversation
Starting point is 00:42:39 and compared that to people who just went through normal small talk on, like, what's your favourite film? Talking about your favorite film could be super revealing, but most people just aren't going to go into enough detail or depth to really make it sufficiently profound to build that connection. So the people who went through the fast friendship procedure, at the end,
Starting point is 00:43:07 he tried to get them to estimate how close they were to each other with this psychological test of their relationship strength. And then he compared that to how people normally feel about their old friends from their childhood or from university. And he found that already the kind of average friendship between these two strangers was roughly at the same level. How funny. It's, you know, when you see those Netflix documentaries, and it's some person that was part of a famous historic event, they caught a ball at a sports game or their daughter went missing on holiday, or they did whatever. And they're always in some dusty warehouse somewhere.
Starting point is 00:43:49 And I always thought when these people were being interviewed, I was just presumed that they told this story a million times, that so many people were interested in their story and had asked them these questions. But then you see on these Netflix documentaries, people get very emotional and tear up and struggle to complete their sentences
Starting point is 00:44:12 and stuff like that. And that made me think, well, actually, they probably haven't had that many people to tell this life story to. How many people in your normal day-to-day existence actually decide to go to that place and give you a canvas to talk about deeper things that maybe you don't usually think about or talk, maybe you've never talked about it
Starting point is 00:44:36 before, not because it's like shameful, but just it's a bit odd or no one's ever seemed to be patient or giving you the space to be able to do it. And yeah, that kind of made me think, like, you know, this is evidently one of the biggest things that's happened in someone's life and it's still so emotionally charged. I have to assume that that's because they haven't got that. This isn't the hundredth time they've said it. Yep.
Starting point is 00:44:57 Exactly. I mean, so like when you kind of question people about stuff like the FOSS friendship procedure, um, most people, when you ask them, why are you nervous about talking about these topics? The psychologist would be like, you've told me that you think it's going to be awkward, but why do you think it's going to be awkward? And then people just assume that no one cares, no one wants to hear about their inner life or this kind of event that was so profound for them. And I guess it's almost because that event was so important for their life that the rejection would hurt so much more if they told it. If a person
Starting point is 00:45:38 was just like, oh, yeah, anyway, you know, you'll never guess what happened to me yesterday. Like, you know, like, maybe that me yesterday. Maybe that will happen in some cases. With all of these things, there's no hard and fast guarantee that it's going to go in the way you want. But the numbers are really in your favor. These conversations are, on average, going to be so much more rewarding for you than you expect. Like that's what the research shows that if we were just a bit braver, we would find like so much more reward from all of our social connections. The other thing to consider is who says that a person's negative response to you opening up is a you problem.
Starting point is 00:46:20 Like you want to be around people to whom you can have deep conversations and talk about important things and play with new ideas and open up parts of yourself that you don't do typically. And it's so strange this ability to make ourselves the bad guy in, in scenarios, especially social snow. Oh, that's because of me. I'm so awkward. I'm so stupid.
Starting point is 00:46:40 I, you know, I'm so clumsy. Um, that you're, hang on a second. Like if someone had said to you this thing, would you have been interested? Actually, yeah, probably that'd be pretty cool. It'd be pretty cool to find out about, you know, that the, this thing that they've held with them from childhood, that's very powerful to them. I would have been interested and I would have asked questions. Okay. And why did that other person not?
Starting point is 00:47:01 Well, I don't know. They just don't, they're socially ungainly. Okay. So it's not you that's done the social for part. It's actually them in their response to you. This is a them problem, not a you problem. Yeah, that's exactly it. I think like, um, also it could be, and I think this comes back to the, uh, egocentric thinking that we were talking about. It could be that the other person really was interested in what you were saying, and they assumed that you knew how interested and how much they cared, how interested they were and how much they cared. And they just weren't communicating
Starting point is 00:47:37 that correctly because of this egocentric assumption that it must have been written all over their face. And so that's what comes out of that research on egocentric thinking is that we're really bad at judging how strongly our emotions are being communicated because we feel them quite strongly. We assume that other people will also be able to read them. And that's true in all kinds of situations. Like if you're lying, you assume that the other person can tell when you're lying,
Starting point is 00:48:02 but you're not really giving away so many tells that they can. If you're at a dinner party and you find the food pretty disgusting and you feel super self-conscious because you're worried the host is going to kind of see that disgust all over your face, scientists have actually set people up to have that exact experience. And it's completely undetectable. No one can guess better than chance whether someone's eating something disgusting or whether they're eating something really delicious. And so I think that's happening here in these conversations.
Starting point is 00:48:40 Sometimes people just aren't letting you know what you really need to hear, but they might still be feeling it. So there's no point in us like beating ourselves up over not getting quite the response that we expected because we just don't really know what that person was feeling often. How can people express appreciation more effectively? Yeah, I mean, that's so yeah, that is something that we can all do to strengthen our connections is to just avoid this ambiguity that people have.
Starting point is 00:49:11 Like, we are generally not very good at saying compliments because we just don't do it enough. Like, I think there was some, I can't remember the exact statistic, but like we bite back the majority of the nice things that we think about other people, because we assume that they know already, or we think we're going to be so clumsy, we're going to sound like really ingratiating and fawning sycophant. Fawning is yeah, you think it's going to be awful. So, so we
Starting point is 00:49:43 just think like, okay, I'm just not going to say anything at all, that will be better. And again, it's going to be awful. So we just think, okay, I'm just not going to say anything at all. That will be better. And again, it's like you're protecting yourself, because by expressing a compliment or appreciation or gratitude, you're kind of making yourself a little bit vulnerable. But those fears are totally unfounded. People, they just really love to hear good things about themselves, as you would. And like, as he is, again, it's like, like you said, like, if you just turn it around and think, well, like, would I want to hear that, like, I look great today, or that I said something really smart, like, of course you would, so I just assume the other person wouldn't. So, yeah, just we can do it more often, expressing gratitude and appreciation. What the research shows is it benefits the other person a lot, but it also benefits the person expressing those good feelings. So actually, once we've said something kind, we feel better ourselves.
Starting point is 00:50:39 And even it's good for us physiologically, like it actually reduces our stress response. So there was this study that was inspired by Shark Tank, the TV program where students had to kind of come up with a product, give a presentation like in pairs. And the researchers told like just one person in each pair, like just, you know, express gratitude to the person who is helping you with this. And then they measured how they responded to giving the presentation itself, like how their blood pressure, their cardiovascular system responded. And what they found that both the
Starting point is 00:51:18 person expressing and receiving the gratitude tended show like a more muted stress response. So they just, um, they were still like kind of charged and excited, but they weren't going into fight or flight essentially. Wow. How cool. Yeah. That's something that I've noticed since moving to America. Uh, you may say that Americans have too much enthusiasm and that may be true. Uh, but I think that Brits have the equivalent scarcity as
Starting point is 00:51:47 Americans have abundance. And there was this, when I first moved out here two and a half years ago, um, I got invited on a really big podcast. It was the, it was Tim Poole's show on the day that the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict came down. So it was going to be, I think there was 300,000. Tim Poole's show on the day that the Kyle Rittenhouse verdict came down. So it was going to be, I think there was 300,000 concurrent live viewers at one point, it was fucking insane.
Starting point is 00:52:13 And I'd got invited to go and be on the show and it just happened to be the day that I was there, I'm like, Oh, I guess I'm commenting on the Kyle Rittenhouse thing now and I'd only been in the city for two weeks, maybe three weeks. And I'd made some friends before, but largely these were just friends that I'd got an in between me leaving the apartment, the Airbnb I was staying in and going down to get picked up by the car that was coming to get me two different guys rang me that I'd met over the last sort of three weeks. And both separately, both basically said the same thing. Hey man, just wanted to let you know, I know you might be a bit nervous about tonight,
Starting point is 00:52:46 but you're going to smash it. Like I've got pizza and me and the missus are going to sit on the couch and we're going to watch it. It's going to be so cool. How are you feeling? I'm really happy for you. And I was like, this is such a lovely gesture from someone that didn't need to do it, from someone that you kind of barely know.
Starting point is 00:53:02 And it felt really alien. And that was one of the big, Oh, wow. You know, that you can say that you can behave in that way. The sort of zero sum Puritan tall poppy Brit in me sort of bristled a little bit and didn't really know how to take it. But yeah, it's, um, it's a, it's a really big deal. I suppose the other side of expressing appreciation is self compassion. And you looked at self compassion too.
Starting point is 00:53:30 Yeah. So I think self compassion is like super important in kind of all the things I'm talking about. Because it's like you were saying that we often like, if there's any awkwardness in a conversation, like we just tend to put the blame on ourselves. If there's any awkwardness in a conversation, we just tend to put the blame on ourselves. If you have met a stranger and you say a few clumsy words, or there's that kind of weird silence where neither of you knows what to say, or you don't quite know when to finish the conversation, you think, that was wholly my fault.
Starting point is 00:54:02 I should have been more socially fluent and able to just like seamlessly kind of, you know, exit that conversation and go on to the next one. You know, the other person's feeling exactly the same way. So that is a phenomenon called the liking gap, which means that when we both have a conversation with a stranger, like each person tends to go away thinking that they liked the other person more than the other person liked them. No way. So that shows up in the data.
Starting point is 00:54:31 Yeah, yeah. It's really consistent. The liking gap. Yeah. So that in itself, I think, should lead us just, you know, once we know those statistics, like we can just stop like beating ourselves up so much. Because actually, what's happening there is that it's like, again, it's like egocentric. We're so conscious of how we've behaved. That's like kind of burning in our minds if we think we've said like a faux pas. So we assume that it was equally important for the other person, but they really aren't taking much notice of that.
Starting point is 00:55:09 Like they don't really care if you're like the perfect conversationalist who's always got something like super witty and apposite say like what they are more likely to do is just think about the overall kind of emotional tenor of the conversation. Just vibes. It's just vibes, man. It's always been just vibes. Exactly. Like, was I laughing a lot? Like, did they kind of validate what I was feeling? Like, were they curious about me? You know, that's what really matters, like your warmth,
Starting point is 00:55:36 not your competence. So we can all be just a bit more forgiving of ourselves. And like, sometimes we will say a faux pas, but most often we won't. And it's just not worth the kind of mental energy to become too fixated on that. Because even if you did, the other person, so that's the other thing that even when you make a definite faux pas, you turn up to a dinner party and you're
Starting point is 00:55:58 the only person who hasn't brought wine or cake or anything, you ask people to rate how they would judge another person for doing that, like how negative they would be. And then you get them to rate how they think the other person would judge them for the same thing. And consistently, people assume that the other person is going to be twice as negative as they would be for the same
Starting point is 00:56:25 thing. So even if you make a faux pas, it like really isn't such a big deal. Like it's just, it's so forgettable. Isn't it interesting, you know, the fundamental attribution error bias. So somebody cuts you off in traffic. It's because they're a dangerous wanker. You cut someone else in traffic. It's because you need to really get to work because you're late and there's an important meeting that we have this sort of, um, we often attribute other people's actions to their personal motives, whereas ours are more to do with external events and we're not, you know, we, we're able to not be as culpable.
Starting point is 00:57:01 And it's like a reverse fundamental attribution error in social situations whereby we will always be the awkward, clumsy, social faux pas victim. And everybody else is a competent, smooth, James Bond talking person that, that, you know, won't forgive us, but that we would forgive them. It's a very odd way that we sort of turn the bar stool upside down. Yeah. It's, I mean, it's crazy actually, because like, if you ask people like, how smart are you compared to the average person?
Starting point is 00:57:32 Like most people overestimate how intelligent they are or like how good a driver are you or, you know, 70% of people say that they're better than average. Right. Exactly. And yeah, if you ask people, how smart do you think other people think you are? So you're kind of shifting that to like, to a question of social judgment, then people are really underconfident.
Starting point is 00:57:57 So it's like we, we're constantly kind of thinking the best about ourselves, but also assuming that other people are thinking the worst about us. Wow. How interesting. Yeah. I am. I learned a lot about this comfort with vibes and imprecision, even though I I'm quite obsessive about precision when it comes to speech, when I started the
Starting point is 00:58:22 show, I thought that my goal was to be kind of like a ruthless indexer of information, kind of the ultimate blinkist app for whoever I was speaking to. And it was just to break down all of the different things in this new book or whatever, and then that would be it. And it had to be said in the most precise and accurate way possible.
Starting point is 00:58:41 And then as you go on, when I think about the sort of conversations that I enjoy listening to or the ones that I enjoy having, it's more just about vibes. It's was it fun? Did it flow well? Was it charming? Did we have a laugh? Did everybody feel comfortable and casual? And that's really what it is. And in an equivalent way, I did a live tour toward the back end of last year. So it's standing up on stage in front of between 500 and a thousand people and I'd seen a few friends do performances, much bigger ones, comedians and stuff, and their mics would break or the lights would go out or someone from the audience would yell something and you might think, oh that's going to ruin the flow of the show or that might get them off their game or oh my God, how awkward that the mics died. And it made me so much more warmly disposed to them to see how they dealt with
Starting point is 00:59:35 something that went wrong and they did it in a charming way. Or maybe they said something wrong. They forgot the line or they tripped over or they spilled water on themselves. And all of those, there was no such thing as a social faux pas. There was simply dealing with an occurrence in a charming or an uncharming manner. And if you dealt with it in a charming manner,
Starting point is 00:59:54 even if you did it to yourself, it made me like, it's called, what's it called? The Pratt fall effect, which when someone messes up, if you end up liking them more, as long as they can kind of style it out in a not totally socially ungainly way. So yeah, oddly social faux pas can be a breeding ground for perhaps social excellence in a way. Yeah, totally. I mean, I totally think it's like you said, it's like how you respond to the error. The perceived error is more important than the
Starting point is 01:00:26 error itself. And even stuff like people really overestimate how important showing a few nerves are going to be in an interview or on stage. But when you question observers, what did you think of this performer? And some of, like some of them might've been like touching their face a lot because they were nervous or like, you know, biting their nails, whatever. Um, those people were actually considered to be much more likable than the people who gave like a super smooth performance. And I think it's just so relatable. Like you see someone who is feeling probably like
Starting point is 01:01:05 how you would be feeling. And even if you don't show it on the outside, like you're going to have those nerves. So like your empathy is just kind of kicking in and you are kind of rooting for them to do well. And we see that more generally, like there's this phenomenon called the beautiful mess effect, which is a bit like the pratfall effect, but this is like, we try to hide like our kind of failures and errors and vulnerabilities. Like, you know, you don't want to tell people if you're feeling like, um, like you look a bit shit today, or you've got some kind of complex about part of your body, the athlete's foot's come back or something. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 01:01:44 Exactly. Or you're like, uh, you know, you like come back or something. Yeah, right. Exactly. Or you're like, uh, you know, you like made a real fuck up with your job. And it's like, you know, it's really embarrassing. It was like a schoolboy era that you have to own up to. And people assume that like, um, confessing those vulnerabilities is going to make them look weak. People are going to feel a bit repelled by that. to make them look weak, people are going to feel a bit repelled by that. But actually, people often, far more often than you think, they're going to appreciate your courage and
Starting point is 01:02:13 honesty and authenticity for just owning up to these things. We much prefer someone who's honest than someone who we think is hiding of hiding something. So there was this study looking at giving people profiles of potential dates. Weird profiles, I don't know how they set this up exactly to look natural, but the potential dates had to say whether they'd ever done some pretty immoral acts, like had they ever hidden an STD from previous lovers and had sex with them anyway. People who said they had done that were considered to be a better potential date than people who refused to answer the question. So obviously someone who had never done it was preferable, but at least admitting to your immoral behaviour was much better than just trying to avoid the question completely.
Starting point is 01:03:15 What about the novelty penalty? What's that? Hmm, yeah, so that is... I mean, it's like so familiar for most people, I think. Like, you know, when you've been on like, you've had an amazing experience, like, you've, you know, been on a great holiday and you get home and you want to tell like all of your friends about it. And then like you're 10 minutes in and you can see their eyes glazing over. Like you're just not getting the interaction that you want.
Starting point is 01:03:47 That's the novelty penalty because essentially people often prefer to hear stuff that is already a bit familiar to them rather than something that is totally new. The researchers found this in this quite complex setup where they gave people YouTube videos to watch, and then they got one person from the group to describe the video. And they found that people much preferred hearing about a video they'd already seen compared
Starting point is 01:04:17 to hearing about a video that they hadn't seen. And it's totally bizarre, because it's like you'd think it would be boring to you to hear repeated back to you what you've just observed. But the problem is, maybe our storytelling skills just aren't up to scratch. So we're leaving a lot of gaps in the narrative. And so it just isn't that obvious, like, why should I care about this? You forget to say what really attracted you
Starting point is 01:04:46 to that experience and why it was so personally important to you. You give maybe some of the irrelevant details while skipping the emotional content. And so that's what we need to do, I think, to be better conversationalists, to avoid the novelty penalties to, again, lean into that self-disclosure and not be afraid to say why of why something matters to you.
Starting point is 01:05:08 To get a bit of personal investment. I had a guy called Mr. Ballin on the show a couple of weeks ago. He's probably one of the best storytellers on the internet. He does strange, dark, mysterious sort of true crime adjacent stuff. And it was really cool. He explained, he does this story. It does a number of stories, does one of them. And then he explains his approach to storytelling using the story that he just
Starting point is 01:05:33 told and breaking down why he said things in this way. And a really cool insight that I learned from him was the power of omission. So when you're telling a story, there's one about a lamp, this guy who is in a marriage for years and years and years, and then this lamp in his living room starts to behave very strangely. And it turns out after he's protracted story of all of this stuff that he was hit in the head during a high school football game and was knocked out for five seconds, but lived an entire different life. And then came back around and was no longer
Starting point is 01:06:12 married to this person for two decades. Didn't have his kids, didn't have his dog, didn't have his house, didn't have anything. And had imagined this entire other life that he felt he'd lived for decades and decades. But he doesn't say that bit until the very end. So, there's this sort of ever escalating anticipation of, he's getting sort of stranger and stranger and stranger. But if he'd opened up the story by saying something like, I'm going to tell you a story about a guy who was hit in the head in high school. Like, that completely punks the game and takes you to the end before it started. Um, so just thinking about how consciously and, and dexterously he looks at the art of storytelling, not just conversation,
Starting point is 01:07:00 but of storytelling and yeah, what are you including and what are you excluding? And maybe saying, you know, this is how it made me feel. And this is why it was really important to me. Like create some fucking stakes in whatever it is that you're talking about. Why should someone care? Yeah, exactly. And I think so what we kind of maybe underestimate is that what people will care about is like, um, the emotions that we're feeling and like you know if they're connected to us they kind of want the best for us so if something was super
Starting point is 01:07:32 important they kind of really want to understand that bit what they don't care about is like your kind of journey tour from the airport or like you know like maybe they don't even care much about the details of the location itself that you've been to if you're on this amazing holiday. What they really care about is like, like, you know, did that fundamentally change your perspective on your life? Yeah, exactly. What is important about truth and lies and secrets? Um, so this really surprised me.
Starting point is 01:08:06 Um, and it's the fact that like honesty just is almost always, uh, valued, even if you're delivering bad news to people, even if it's not necessarily like reflecting well on yourself, um, even if it's the kind of situation where you would normally tell a white lie to save someone's feelings if it's the kind of situation where you would normally tell a white lie to save someone's feelings, like kind of sugarcoating some negative feedback, there are very few situations where telling a lie is ever going to pay off, which seems kind of amazing in that I kind of assumed assumed that like things like white lies are kind of a social lubricant, like you just need them to kind of get along each day. But these researchers
Starting point is 01:08:51 in the US kind of they set people out on a mission to kind of either be as honest as they could be in every single interaction for a few days or to be as kind as they could be in every interaction for a few days or to just carry on as normal. What they found was that the well-being of the people who were kind or honest were pretty much the same actually. But what was especially noticeable was that the people who were being sometimes brutally honest with people tended to report that their interactions were far more meaningful. They felt that they learned a lot more about those people
Starting point is 01:09:32 and that those people learned a lot more about them when they were saying some uncomfortable truths compared to people who were going around with the specific intention of trying to be as kind as possible and to make people feel as good as possible. So that's changed the way I deal with a lot of my interactions now. It's not a pass to be just rude and nasty, because I think in almost every case, there's going to be a kind way of telling the truth or a pretty blunt and nasty way of telling the truth.
Starting point is 01:10:10 So it's always better to try to frame what you're saying in a way that can be constructive, that will help the other person to learn from what you're saying rather than just being too overgeneralizing in a way that is not helpful for their growth. So yeah, be specific, try to be constructive, try to offer advice or your own time and resources to help them to deal with the kind of negative feedback you're giving. But overall, people will appreciate far more than negative feedback that can be useful over a white lie that isn't going to help them to learn and to grow. How can people overcome the discomfort of telling people the truth, even if it's going to be painful for the truth teller? So I think that is just practice. Actually, I think like we're a bit like with the kind of overcoming the awkwardness of talking to strangers. I think it's about
Starting point is 01:11:04 a bit like with the kind of overcoming the awkwardness of talking to strangers. I think it's about recalibrating our expectations. And you can only do that by kind of repeatedly performing this action and recognizing that the outcomes are, you know, on average, far better than you expected. And over time, you just naturally start to recognize that the kind of little bit of awkwardness that you're going to face is worth it for the kind of rewards at the end. Yeah. I suppose it's the same sort of exposure training thing that I can tell the truth and the whole world doesn't blow up. Right.
Starting point is 01:11:36 Okay. Well, maybe I can do it again. Um, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's exactly that. And I guess I start out with like small kind of like the low hanging fruit, I guess is one way that I would deal with all of these social dilemmas is that, you know, you, you build up maybe something that's going to be much harder. I wonder if there's a, I spoke about this a couple of months ago.
Starting point is 01:12:00 There's a website still up called a hundred days of rejection. And it's a kind of exposure therapy, social exposure therapy. And each day you do something, um, you ask the barista at the coffee shop, if you can have this for free. You see if a stranger will give you a hundred pounds, you do just a sort of ever changing group of different things. And some of them, it's so toe curling, like so awful and painful to do. And I think so much of what you're trying to do there is just teach yourself this thing that you are adamant is going to be socially
Starting point is 01:12:33 explosive is probably totally fine. And, you know, with the truth as well, I suppose the other side is that if you're holding onto secrets for too long, ultimately you're the one that's going to pay the price. Yeah, sure. The other person, you know, might be upset about it, but it's you that's got to vacillate about this complex house of cards that you've built up trying to keep said secrets away from someone.
Starting point is 01:12:58 And you can relinquish that by just saying it. Yeah, exactly. I mean, I think you'd written about this in one of your newsletters actually, that it's like, it is better to have like an authentic, meaningful connection with someone who likes you for who you are, than to kind of, no matter how good the relationship seems to be, if you know that you're hiding something really important, and you're always scared that they're going to reject you for that thing that you're hiding. That in itself is something that is going to lead you to feel that kind of existential isolation. You're surrounded by people but you don't really feel emotionally
Starting point is 01:13:36 connected to them. So yeah, I totally agree with that. And actually, then there's lots of good research anyway showing that when you keep secrets and your mind keeps on going to these awful things that you're hiding, you actually experience it almost like a physical burden. So when people are primed to think about a secret that they haven't told the people they love, they actually physically overestimate how steep a hill is going to be to climb or like if they like throwing a ball into a target, like they'll overthrow because they kind of assume that their strength isn't as great as it would have. No way. As it really is.
Starting point is 01:14:15 Yeah. So it has, it's like embodied cognition that changes the way you navigate the world, like everything feels more tiring than it should be. Hang on. navigate the world, like everything feels more tiring than it should be. Hang on. So someone that is holding onto a secret when given a ball that they need to throw at a target on average, they overthrow the ball compensating for a
Starting point is 01:14:37 perceived weakness. Yeah. And, and that is a, what was the term? It's like embodied cognition. Embod embodied cognition. Dude, you find the best studies is so much fun. Uh, yeah. How crazy to think about that, that yeah, this sort of inner fragility that they.
Starting point is 01:14:58 Have manifested in themselves, the shame that they probably have about not being able to say this thing. Oh, well, my, my real world strength must be equivalently like feeble, therefore I must throw the ball harder and they end up overthrowing it. Yeah, and so what happens then is if you get them to like reveal the secret to someone, even just to one of the researchers, then like that embodied cognition kind of vanishes. So they suddenly start to be more accurate in their movements or in perceiving the kind of physical challenges ahead of them. So you're saying baseball players and cricketers should be as honest as
Starting point is 01:15:37 possible because it's a performance enhancer. Right. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Who knew? I learned a new word from you, which was confelicity. Ah, yep. Yeah. Who knew? I learned a new word from you, which was confelicity. Ah, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:15:49 Yeah. Yeah. I love that. Yeah. Or Mitch Freude is the kind of German equivalent. So it's the, we have Schadenfreude, which is our kind of joy at someone else's misfortune, but Mitch Freude or confelicity is our is our joy at seeing someone else's happiness and success and achievements. This is so relevant when we think about celebrating our own successes.
Starting point is 01:16:15 We tend to hide a lot of our achievements because we don't want to seem like we're bragging, and we assume that the other person is going to judge us harshly for talking about our promotion or that kind of professional award we won or even just a personal best at the gym. We hide these kinds of things much more than we should because we assume the other person is going to feel envious of us. What the research shows is that when people find out that you've had these good events in your life and you decided not to share them, it's actually super insulting because you're treating them a bit like a spoiled kid who has to win up monopoly every time you play it or they'll have a tantrum. It feels incredibly paternalistic to find out that your best friend or your
Starting point is 01:17:03 colleague or your brother didn't tell you about something good in their life just because they thought you might react badly. So it drives a wedge in our connection in that way because it's just fundamentally offensive to be treated in that way. But then, yeah, we're also missing the fact that most of these people would feel confelicity. Rather than being en yeah, we're also missing the fact that most of these people would feel
Starting point is 01:17:25 confelicity, like rather than being envious, they're just going to be happy for you. And sharing in that happiness is just another way for you to be able to bond and to kind of share an emotional experience that kind of confirms that you share the same values in life. Well, the other thing as well is if you share something which is genuinely meaningful to you and that you're proud of in a charming way, obviously you can shove it down people's throats and then in which case the negative response is probably you deserved it, but if you do it in a charming way and someone doesn't take a thing that's meaningful to you. Positively and it doesn't positively reinforce it.
Starting point is 01:18:06 Hey, guess what? That person shouldn't be in your life. Like they suck as a friend. They suck. And the same as the, you open up to somebody, you try and tell them something that's really meaningful or something that's shameful or something that you're scared of and they don't respond in the right way. That's not a you problem.
Starting point is 01:18:23 That's a them problem. Yeah. I mean, to me, all of these things, it's like a classic case of someone being a frenemy, like an ambivalent connection. Like, if they're not responding to you when you're like opening up to them, whether it's about a failure or a success, or just like a really meaningful experience,
Starting point is 01:18:43 then yeah, like there's something kind of, there's something going on in their life that is wrong. Um, but you don't have to feel embarrassed about the fact that their response was inadequate. Hmm. It is. I need to do a little bit more thinking about this sort of reverse fundamental attribution error, which is what you're kind of developing is a kind of self-confidence in social self-confidence that I will make errors,
Starting point is 01:19:13 but I know that I'm coming into this playing the rules of the game remotely appropriately and trying to put my best foot forward. And it takes basically all of the pressure off you socially. You go, look, I didn't mess up. Like I just, you know, I didn't mess up. Like I just, you know, I did the thing. It's this person that's incapable of receiving or returning in an apt manner.
Starting point is 01:19:34 Yeah, I mean, I think that's ultimately it. Like we should be able to expect from the people in our social networks that they are gonna respond positively to you sharing your life with them. It's having that confidence to realise that if they're not going to do that, then maybe your social network is better off without them. Or at the very least, you just don't have to value their opinions so much. The good news is that we overestimate how likely it is that
Starting point is 01:20:07 people are going to react in all of these negative ways. Like most people who really have your best interests at heart, they're going to be like, they're going to respond in the way that you would want them to. What is there to say about envy then if, if confelicity and feeling joy in other people's successes is something that's good, what did you learn about envy then if, if confelicity and feeling joy in other people's successes is something that's good. What did you learn about envy? So, I mean, I think it's perfectly possible for someone to feel like a bit of envy.
Starting point is 01:20:35 And confelicity at the same time. And like, that's how I feel sometimes, like, you know, my friends who are authors and if they have like a huge success, like I am like genuinely really delighted for them. I would never want to take that away from them. But I would also like it for me. Yeah, that's it. And actually, there's nothing wrong with feeling envied. Scientists kind of say there's like malign envy where like you want to take that, tear that person down. Well, that is obviously an unhealthy reaction. But benign envy, when someone else's success is just making you realize, is reaffirming what your goals are going to be for yourself and it's like a source of inspiration, that is totally something, that's a totally natural reaction and it's something that you should
Starting point is 01:21:25 that's a totally natural reaction and it's something that you should be listening to and then putting into action. I think it's, you know, envy can be a really strong form of motivation. You don't have to put yourself in competition with that particular person, but it's good for you to just identify like, yeah, I still want to achieve that goal. And the fact that this other person has achieved that goal has just proven that to me that is probably going to be as good as I expect it to be. Isn't it cool. I really liked this idea of being able to balance being happy for your friend's
Starting point is 01:21:53 success with wishing that you could have it as well. I don't think that that's something that's negative. I had Neil, Neil Strauss guy that wrote the game on the show a couple of weeks ago, and he told me the title of his new book. And I think a good rubric for whether or not a title is great is does the person that you tell it to think, fuck, why didn't I think of that? And like, that's the kind of envy energy I think, and the title of this book is the power of low self-esteem and I thought, God, that's so cool. That's so, it's like this oxymoron.
Starting point is 01:22:28 It's intriguing. It's short. I love it. I was like, fucking, God damn it. Like, why didn't I think of that? And you know, that's, I don't think that I would judge myself for that kind of envy. And you can even with this, you know,
Starting point is 01:22:44 going back to the transparency, the openness, the, the, the honesty thing, I think I said it to him at the time. And you know, that almost calling out the emotion and going, bro, I mean, God damn it. I wish that I'd said that that's, that's so smart. That's really, really cool. I'm really happy for you. That's going to smash it.
Starting point is 01:23:02 Like, you know, that's all of the things that we've just spoken about in a single sentence. Right. Exactly. And I think that's a totally healthy reaction that I think sometimes like in the past, we would feel a bit embarrassed about saying that we feel like envy for someone. But it's like, you know, that's also kind of a mark of that person's success. It's a low key compliment. Yeah. I think it is a compliment. Yeah. like, and I would take that as a compliment myself. Someone said they were like a little bit envious of me. Like, as long as I knew that they were also feeling happiness for me as well,
Starting point is 01:23:32 like I would totally take that as a compliment. Yeah, envy, envy with happiness, good envy with negativity, dangerous, need to be careful. Right, yeah, exactly. Why is asking for help important? Right, yeah, exactly. Why is asking for help important? So a lot of us kind of, and it's again, because we're scared of seeming like vulnerable and weak, we're just scared of asking for help. We assume that we're going to, you know, be perceived badly for that, but also we think we're going to be a burden on the other person that they're not really going to want to help us anyway. So we're kind of struggling alone. It makes
Starting point is 01:24:08 our life a lot harder. But a little bit like when I was talking about when you don't share success because you assume the other person is going to react badly and they feel insulted by that. Well, actually people feel a bit the same if you don't ask for help when it would be totally natural for you to do so. If you've got a really good friend who would be able to take you to the hospital when you're ill and you pay loads of money for a taxi, they actually feel a lot worse for the fact that you didn't ask them, it's an insult to them. So, by asking for help, it can actually be a really good way of cementing a relationship and making that person know how valued they are. That can even be true not in those kind of emergency situations,
Starting point is 01:25:00 but even just with the kind of little things in life that you could maybe do for yourself, but it just feels good when someone else is going to help you out. So asking someone to cook your favorite meal for you just because you know it's going to feel super comforting to have it from that person rather than doing it yourself. There's a Japanese concept called am I that describes that kind of favour request where you're perfectly capable of doing it. It's a little bit inappropriate to ask for help, but you ask anyway. The idea in the Japanese concept is that actually that can enhance lots of relationships and make people feel especially good about themselves and they enjoy caring for you.
Starting point is 01:25:51 That's what the research shows. It's not just in Japanese culture, it's also in American culture. By asking for favors, you're underlining the close nature of your relationship and people actually like you more for it. And amazingly, that even happens with strangers. So if you, the kind of scientists set up this experiment where they gave people these difficult maths questions and at the end of the kind of test,
Starting point is 01:26:21 one person had finished before the other one, if one of the participants asked the other to just kind of help them with the remaining questions, that actually increased the bond between the two participants. And you didn't see that increase in the bond if the teacher was the one who kind of told the participant to kind of to offer that assistance. You actually had to ask for it yourself to underline how, almost like how much you respected that other person for how smart they were and how much you appreciated the help and then that. Yeah. It's a low key comment on their competence. Would you mind helping me carry these bags out?
Starting point is 01:27:01 You look like the sort of person that is sufficiently physically robust that you can carry some bags with me. Uh, Hey man, would you mind taking me to the hospital? I consider you to be the sort of person who is sufficiently thoughtful and cares about me enough. You're a sufficient, good, helpful person that you will do this thing for me. And I suppose as well, I'd seen some, I'd heard about some studies around this topic, but not as precisely if you just explained them, but I seem to remember something to do with doing a favor for someone is not seen as favorably as asking for someone to do a
Starting point is 01:27:40 favor for you. And I think that part of that, if that's true, part of that is implicit in the, I ask David to do me a favor is that, well, in future, you know, the debt cycle has begun between the two of us. So yeah, implicit in me asking you to do me a favor is that I will do you a favor as opposed to just coming out and then doing something for you that you maybe didn't ask, which then places the debt in your hands. Hang on a second.
Starting point is 01:28:10 I know you just unnecessarily brought around some food for my bird feeder, but what are you gonna ask me to do next week? And I didn't kick this off in that way. Whereas by requesting the other person to do it, they have the option to not enter into this never-ending vicious, re-gifting loop of favors. Yeah, exactly. I just think you're showing to the other person that you kind of fundamentally think they're a decent person. And like you said, there is an element of
Starting point is 01:28:47 this feeling. We don't want to feel in debt, but we don't mind giving generously and not expecting anything in return to another person. So I guess, again, it's this asymmetry. We might do a favor totally altruistically, not expecting anything in return, but we're worried about the fact that we might need to have that kind of, yeah, to cash in at some point. The debt will be called. Yeah, exactly. What role does the gratitude gap play? Yeah, I mean, that's really important in So basically, when anyone does something altruistic, they can benefit psychologically and even physiologically from having performed that
Starting point is 01:29:38 act of kindness. I call it in the book, it's a bit cheesy, but it's like the gift of giving. So actually, people who are generally altruistic in their lives, they might be volunteers or just they are super helpful with running errands for their family, all of that kind of thing, they live a lot longer than people who are a bit more selfish in their lives. If you're always looking after yourself rather than other people, you might expect that those people would be prioritizing their own health and so would be healthier. But no, actually, prioritizing the people around you actually has these knock-on benefits for your own health and well-being. So, being a generous person is really good, but you have to be able to see some benefit from what you're doing. If someone does an altruistic
Starting point is 01:30:27 act and they don't see that they've actually helped the other person, they experience none of those benefits of having done the deed. In fact, it just makes them feel kind of used and stressed out and frustrated. And the problem with the gratitude gap is that we maybe just don't express our gratitude as much as we should do, because we assume that the other person kind of knows how. It's self-evident. Of course, I'm so grateful for the thing.
Starting point is 01:31:02 Why wouldn't I be? I think I would say that. Yeah, it's exactly that. And so we're not giving them the full benefits of what they've done to help us. Even, even though we probably do secretly appreciate it. What is a tactic for overcoming the gratitude gap? So just expressing gratitude more explicitly, I think, is always important. But also, we should be careful about how we express gratitude. Any kind of sign of gratitude is probably
Starting point is 01:31:35 going to be perceived pretty well, but you can make it a lot more powerful if you change the way you frame it. And what a lot of us do mistakenly when we talk about gratitude is we do tend to emphasize too much the benefits for us, which as I've just said, it's fine to say, to show that the act has had a good effect on us, that it's been useful. But what makes it even more beneficial to the other person and makes them feel especially good about themselves is when you to the other person and makes them feel especially good about themselves is when you turn that reflection back onto them and talk about the specific qualities that you appreciate about what they've just done. Like you were saying with that friend who's given you that lift to the hospital or the
Starting point is 01:32:19 airport, it's really good for you to tell them that they've saved you a lot of time and money and they've made your journey a lot more comfortable. But it's even better then to make it explicit, the fact that you appreciate the fact that they are the kind of person who would do that, that you recognize that they are generous and giving and that they have your best interests at heart. You really appreciate those qualities. So it's the combination, I think, that's powerful. Often we focus just on one or the other, but it's much better to say both, like the effect on you, what you value in that other person. What about healing bad feelings? Yeah, there's, uh, we, uh, like a not very good at dealing with like disagreements.
Starting point is 01:33:16 Like I think we all know that fact that, um, kind of rifts can easily happen between people who are super close. Um, and often over the craziest things that become amplified in importance. And it's only when months or years have gone by that you look back and you're like, why did I let that small disagreement come to dominate what was actually a great relationship? There are a few different ways that we can overcome that overly microscopic attitude to our and a forensic attitude to the rights and the wrongs of a situation. One of those is just to take a distanced perspective that helps you to zoom out from the situation
Starting point is 01:34:04 and to recognize what is really important. And so, you know, often then you'll realize that, you know, you're arguing over something that fundamentally like might need to be discussed, resolved, but it's not so important that it's worth actually destroying what could be, you know, a very fruitful, authentic, genuine relationship for months or years to come. And so psychological distancing can work in many ways, but it could just be imagining what an objective observer would think about the situation at hand. So maybe imagining that you were actually talking about this with a marriage counselor or whatever, or just like some friend or relative who isn't directly biased towards one person and they disagree with the other.
Starting point is 01:34:52 It could just be imagining that you're looking back on this situation in 10 years' time. What do you think would really stand out as being important when years have passed and this situation has long since been finished and over, there's a study looking at married couples. So newlyweds, for the first year, the researchers did nothing. They just questioned them about how often they were disagreeing
Starting point is 01:35:20 and how much they liked each other. And they had quite a few disagreements, these married couples, and their liking for each other over that first year went downhill. Not dramatically, but at the end of the first year, they did not like each other as much as when they first got married, which I think is quite relatable. But then at the end of this first year, they got people to do this self-distancing exercise. What they found was that those participants, their relationship satisfaction was stable.
Starting point is 01:35:57 They still had these disagreements, but they resolved them a lot more easily. Whereas people who hadn't been taught that intervention, um, they just continued on that downward trajectory. So actually that one small psychological intervention, I think it's saved like a lot of marriages. Just take people through the self distancing thing again, just so that they've got it as a easy takeaway.
Starting point is 01:36:22 So essentially it's like, you know, like even in the heat of the argument, but definitely like afterwards when you, you know, you're both kind of thinking about what's just been said, it's to try to look at the situation from some, some new perspective. So rather than just thinking about how you feel like in the present moment, it could be imagining that you're looking back on that situation in 10 years time, when enough time has passed that you can be a bit more objective about what's just occurred. So just literally just thinking, how will I feel about this in 2034?
Starting point is 01:37:00 Or just imagining that you're like an objective observer. So just like thinking, you know, what would this kind of neutral party think about this disagreement, my arguments, like his or her arguments, like what would they, how would they appraise this? And you know, what importance would they lend to all of this?
Starting point is 01:37:21 And you know, it really works. Like people really do just take that step back or step into the future and recognize that actually it helps them to just recognize what's important and what isn't, essentially. So it doesn't mean that you're just instantly going to forgive the other person, but it means you can be more constructive in what you say. You're not going to be so petty to kind of, you're not going to resort to kind of those knee jerk insults that you might do if you're still really immersed, purely immersed in the, the feelings of the fight itself. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:58 Your 13th law in the book is something that I landed on after we probably did maybe between 300 and 500 life hacks on this podcast over the space of six and a half years. And it was a huge series and it was how to make a good toasted sandwich or this new protein powder we'd found or a great meditation app or some new time blocking technique or whatever, you know, everything that we wanted. And, um, the number one hack that I had is basically the same as your 13th law, which is text your friends when you're thinking about them. So, you know, a lot of the time you'll just be going about your day and some
Starting point is 01:38:37 memory will pop up or you'll wonder, I wonder what such and such a person's doing. And, you know, this person that has no idea that you're in their thoughts arises, you think something nice about them and it goes away. And maybe in some karmic way, they do end up benefiting from it. Uh, but I've just taken to using that as a trigger to immediately text that person. And honestly, one of the most like simpy texts ever, if you can't think of something cool, but Hey, man, just thinking of you
Starting point is 01:39:05 hope everything's well, uh, like, like that's a, or singing your praises. Uh, cause you know, talking about them over dinner, say, I really love that he's got this new song out. Or he, did you see that thing that he did? Or he just got married or he's got a kid. I'm really happy for him or whatever it might be. And, um, it's so good. It makes me feel so good to do that.
Starting point is 01:39:23 And, uh, yeah, text your friends when you think about them is just out of 500 life hacks, it's my favorite one. Yeah, me too. I mean, and I think it's like, again, it's like this kind of liking gap phenomenon, it's like all of these different psychological barriers that we've spoken about is that people tend to be quite resistant from doing that because they are kind of worried that it's tend to be quite resistant from doing that because they are kind of worried that it's going to be really awkward and the other person, especially, you know,
Starting point is 01:39:50 you haven't seen someone for a while, it's difficult to know exactly what to say. So you just avoid saying anything at all and you let the kind of friendship fizzle out even further. But the research shows, you know, when you send those messages, people genuinely really appreciate it. They're going to enjoy receiving that message a lot more than you assume they're going to. And you're going to feel a lot better, like you said, than you might have assumed that you do. Friendships change all the time, but actually just keeping people in your thoughts and in your life. That's one of the best things we can do to craft that social connection that we crave. Is there a favorite study that you came across from the book that
Starting point is 01:40:33 we haven't spoken about yet? Um, I think the connection just, um, went away, so I didn't hear the question. Is there a favorite study from the book that we haven't spoken about yet that you found? Yeah, we've covered such a lot. Um, yeah, so I guess one thing that I do kind of love, and it's just such as like bizarre, but amazing study. Um, so basically like what the research shows is that the foundation of social connection is this thing called shared reality. We know that there's this phenomenon called homophily,
Starting point is 01:41:22 and we're people who are similar to ourselves ourselves, similar music tastes, similar religion, same kind of worldview on politics. People who speak the same language or dialect came from the same place. Those things are important. But what really connects people and makes you actually want to be best friends with someone rather than just kind of vaguely know them
Starting point is 01:41:46 as an acquaintance is knowing that they have the same inner experience of the world. So, do they find the same things funny? Do they laugh at the same time? Do they get the same chills at the same time in the same song? All lot of these are intense, visceral reactions to the world. And so there are psychological studies that kind of just try to prime that and they're really dumb kind of imaginative questions like if Jennifer Aniston was like a household object, would she be like a screwdriver, a cocktail shaker, or like a pencil case. And like the answers are like pretty much meaningless. But if you tell someone that they both chose
Starting point is 01:42:34 like a toothpick for Jennifer Aniston, like they sense that they have this kind of shared in a world and that makes them like that of a person a lot more. And I just love that, but actually there are these tiny little clues that we're experiencing all the time that are just helping us to bond. It's bizarre, but it really works.
Starting point is 01:42:55 Like, I mean, and obviously that is such an artificial kind of experiment. Like I'm not saying that we should all play these kind of imagine if questions to like connect to strangers, but I think it shows how actually, how much of our kind of connection and like clicking with someone can really depend not just on like those
Starting point is 01:43:13 kind of big similarities in your like background education, all of that, but like, you know, it's just those kind of immediate, impulsive responses to the world around us. And there's actually then a bunch of neuroscientific research that shows that there's a literal truth in the feeling that someone is on the same wavelength as you. And these researchers in the US got a bunch of class
Starting point is 01:43:41 of students to watch a series of YouTube videos, some of which were like, you know, music video, comedy, documentary, whatever, and scan their brains as they were doing so. And I found that just from the similarities in the brain activity, as people responded to those videos, they could predict who was friends with who. And it was really because they had this very similar streams of consciousness. Like, yeah, their interpretation of framework is similar to someone else. This isn't necessarily happening between the people. It's that they are similar kinds of people.
Starting point is 01:44:13 So when they get a shared stimulus, person A, C and F all move in the same way. Well, why? Well, it's because they've conditioned themselves and quite likely if you're going to observe the YouTube video in that way from all of the kids in the same way. Well, why? Well, it's because they've conditioned themselves. And quite likely if you're going to observe the YouTube video in that way from all of the kids in the schoolyard, you're probably going to get on with the ones that think like you and talk like you and have the same sort of views. Right. Yeah, yeah, you click exactly. And so, you know, it's like, I think like, you know, sometimes again, because we're so reserved, we can avoid allowing people to
Starting point is 01:44:47 see inside our stream of consciousness. So if you're too cautious about revealing what you think or feel, there's just no way of constructing that shared reality. The other person just doesn't know if you're thinking in the same way as them or not. And so I think that's why things like self-disclosure are so powerful because you're just, you're offering many more opportunities for you to recognize. Like in what way do your kind of views of reality coincide? Hell yeah. David Robson, ladies and gentlemen, David, I love your work.
Starting point is 01:45:18 I love the fact that you're digging into all of these fascinating psychological studies. Uh, James Smith shamelessly repurposed a bunch in his book and then I've been using them on my live tour. So I very much appreciate that. I've been subscribed to psych.org, psyche.org for ever since we last spoke. Where should people go? Do they want to keep up to date with all of the things that you're doing, get a new book, et cetera? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:42 So there's my website, www.davidrobson.me. You can kind of pre-order my book or order it anywhere where you'd get your normal books, like Amazon, you know, bookshop.org, whatever, wherever you go. But I do have like links on my web page as well. I'm on Twitter or X at D underscore A underscore Robson. I'm on Twitter or X at D underscore and underscore Robson. My Instagram, which I'm just kind of trying to build up is David A. Robson. So yeah, you know, I love hearing feedback. I love having questions.
Starting point is 01:46:13 So go in touch. I'm looking forward to seeing what you do next, mate. Thanks. Oh, offense Oh, yeah, oh, yeah Offense

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