Something You Should Know - Real Reasons for Your Strange Thoughts & How Small Acts Change Lives
Episode Date: July 21, 2025“Let me sleep on it.” That always seems like a good idea when a big decision has to be made. But is there true wisdom in that advice? This episode starts with the answer. https://www.newswise.com/...articles/sleep-on-it-is-sound-science-based-advice# Ever feel like you are being watched? Ever walk into a room for something and forget why you did? Ever felt “in the zone” – like you could do no wrong? We all have these weird mental experiences but why? Do they serve a purpose? Here to reveal the explanation behind these and other similar things is Dr. Jen Martin. She is an award-winning educator from the University of Melbourne and author of the book Why Am I Like This?: The Science Behind Your Weirdest Thoughts and Habits (https://amzn.to/3C5wgdb) According to research, the average person will influence 80,000 people in their lifetime. That’s a lot of potential to do good. With simple acts and kind words you can do more for people than you can imagine - if you do it right. That’s according to my guest Tommy Spaulding. He is an author, speaker and former CEO of Up With People. He is also author of the book The Gift Of Influence: Creating Life-Changing and Lasting Impact in Your Everyday Interactions (https://amzn.to/3e0FXSl). Listen as Tommy tells inspiring personal stories that will motivate you to make a difference in someone’s life. What’s one phrase that a good negotiator will never use? Listen and as I reveal that phrase you want to avoid because it could come back to bite you. Source: Jim Thomas author of Negotiate To Win (https://amzn.to/3V0G4h4). PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! SHOPIFY: Shopify is the commerce platform for millions of businesses around the world! To start selling today, sign up for your $1 per month trial at https://Shopify.com/sysk INDEED: Get a $75 sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING right now! QUINCE: Stick to the staples that last, with elevated essentials from Quince! Go to https://Quince.com/sysk for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns! HERS: Hers is transforming women’s healthcare by providing access to affordable weight loss treatment plans, delivered straight to your door, if prescribed. Start your initial free online visit today at https://forhers.com/something DELL: Upgrade your learning experience during Dell Technologies’ Back to School event with AI PCs starting at $749.99! Discover a smarter way to learn at https://Dell.com/deals Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Since you're a listener to something you should know, you are, by definition, the curious type.
You like to discover new ways to improve your life.
And if I've got that about right, there is another podcast I want you to check out called
The Human Upgrade with Dave Asprey.
It's a podcast that can help you think sharper, feel better, maybe even live longer.
Dave Asprey is a best-selling author.
He's the guy who created the biohacking movement.
And his podcast explores how to optimize
human performance and longevity.
He talks with top experts about cognitive enhancers,
the right way to use nicotine,
and how psychedelics are being used to rewire the brain.
You'll also learn the science behind things like fasting, cold plunges, saunas,
and how blue light from your screens might actually be draining your energy.
Dave asks great questions, and every episode gives you something that you can apply right away.
So, if you're ready to start taking control of your biology,
search for The Human Up upgrade with Dave Asprey
wherever you get your podcasts.
Today on something you should know,
when you have a big decision,
is it really a good idea to sleep on it?
Then the science behind some of those weird feelings you get,
like the feeling you're being watched
or that feeling of being in the zone or in the flow.
Really interesting research has shown that people, when they're fully in the flow, they're
actually shutting off some of their really high-power thinking parts of their brain.
So you end up in this state where you're not actually kind of self-monitoring and judging
anymore.
You're just doing what comes natural.
Also, one phrase a good negotiator will never say,
and the power you have to change people's lives for the better.
Every morning you can wake up and you can think about the people in your life.
Who's going through a divorce? Who's got a son that's got depression?
Who's got a 50th wedding anniversary? We can have an opportunity to have an
influence on their lives or we can just walk on by.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
Hi, I'm Adam Gitwitz, host of Grim, Grimmer, Grimmest.
On every episode, we tell a grim fairy tale.
Not the cute, sweet versions of the fairy tales that your children have heard so many
times.
No, we tell the real Grimm fairy tales.
They're funny.
They're weird.
Sometimes they're a little bit scary.
But don't worry, we rate every episode Grimm, Grimmer, or Grimmest so you, your child,
your family can choose the episode that's the right level of scary for you.
Tune in to Grimm, Grimmer, Grimmest and our new season available now. Hi, welcome to Something You Should Know. I'm sure you've heard the advice that before you make a big decision, you should sleep
on it.
Well, there is actually some scientific support for the sleep on it approach.
Researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst briefly exposed a group of people
to the Iowa gambling test, which is a widely
accepted game of decision-making. After people briefly saw the test, half of the
subjects then took the test right away and the other half took it after a
good night's sleep. The group that slept on it did noticeably better. Rebecca
Spencer, author of the study, explains that sleep fine-tunes our memory and sharpens
learning.
She says, while we sleep, we're actually revisiting a lot of information that we've stored, giving
the logical data a better chance to take hold and prevail.
So in general, sleeping on a decision before you make it will bring a better decision.
And that is something you should know.
I think all of us have these strange experiences in life that we notice but can't explain.
And what I mean by that are things like the feeling of being watched, or that feeling
sometimes when you're just in the zone and you can do no wrong, or why it's hard to maintain eye contact with someone when you're talking
to them, or why you remember things in your life that actually didn't happen.
So why do we have these experiences?
Well there's some science behind it, some really interesting science, and someone who
has researched this is Jen Martin.
She is an award-winning educator at the University of Melbourne in Australia
and she's author of the book, Why Am I Like This?
The Science Behind Your Weirdest Thoughts and Habits.
Hi Jen, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thanks so much for having me. Delighted to be here with you.
So let's start with that feeling that I've sometimes had it that even though I think
I'm alone, I feel like I'm being watched. Is that a pretty universal experience, I imagine?
Yeah, no, I think it is. Research suggests that about 94% of people have had that experience
of you actually feel like you're being stared at.
But then interestingly, when you look up, you discover that it's true. So you sort of feel like
you have this sixth sense. And this has been studied for hundreds of years, that we have this
very intense feeling that someone's watching us. And of course, you know, that could just be,
it could be a self-fulfilling prophecy that because you're feeling uncomfortable, you feel like you're being watched, that you're kind of fidgeting, and that means that the
person sitting near you on the train does actually look at you, you know, there's, there's all sorts of
possibilities here. But there's a really interesting, some really interesting research that shows that our
brains might be absolutely hardwired to recognize when people are looking at us,
even when our eyes don't see them looking at us.
The idea came from a study of a man who was known in the literature,
in the scientific literature, as T.N.
And he has this very interesting condition as a result of having had two strokes.
So if you can imagine, his eyes are functional, there's nothing wrong with his eyes,
and his eyes still send, there's nothing wrong with his eyes,
and his eyes still send information to his brain, but the part of his brain that deals with that
visual information, if you like, has been damaged. So his eyes and his brain essentially don't
connect, so he doesn't actually see anything through his eyes. And the researchers did some
really interesting studies where they put a monitor in front of him
and showed him pictures of faces on that monitor. Some people looking directly at him, some people
looking off to the side, and at the same time they're measuring what's going on in his brain,
the part of his brain that's in charge of emotions and recognizing faces. And remember, this person can't actually consciously
see these pictures.
So to him, he can't tell you whether this picture
in front of him is a man or a woman,
whether they're looking at him,
whether they're looking in a different direction,
but his brain could tell.
So his brain knew when someone was looking at him,
even when he couldn't actually see it consciously,
which is just amazing.
So it may be that we've evolved to be so finely tuned to when somebody is looking at us that
we don't actually even have to see it with our own eyes.
Well, certainly humans do have pretty good eyesight and it has served us well.
During our evolution, it was obviously hugely advantageous for us to know when somebody was looking at us,
because we needed to be able to work out really quickly this person who's paying us attention,
you know, are they a friend or a foe? Is this somebody who's going to be able to help me?
Or is this someone who's about to attack me?
And so our brains are just really good at recognizing that.
And the other interesting thing to notice about that is, you know, when you look at a person,
obviously there's the colored part of our eye, but we obviously also have a very clear white
part around our eye. And that means that even from a distance, you're really good at working out
whether somebody is looking straight at you or they're looking in a different direction,
because you can see how much of the white of their eye is visible. No other primates,
so our closest relatives, the apes, none of them have that white patch around their eye is visible. No other primates, so our closest relatives, the apes, none of them have that
white patch around their eye. So that is something specific to being human that we always want to be
able to tell is this person looking at us or not looking at us. Something I've always been interested
in is that feeling of when you're working in the zone, when you're, everything just is working because I think we've all had that.
Some have it more than others, but boy, when it's happening, it's just magic.
Yeah, I know.
And don't you wish you could have it more often?
So tell, describe to me what being in the zone feels like to you.
It just, it's usually, you know, work related or sometimes it's you know sports but boy
it just it feels like you could just go forever and you can do no wrong. And isn't it a nice phrase
that it's been called being in the zone? That term was coined by a Hungarian psychologist back in
1990 and as you say when you're in that, you're just completely immersed in what you're doing
and you just lose track of time,
you lose track of anything that's going on around you.
And I imagine you feel the same as I do,
that you just feel highly skilled or whatever you're doing.
You sort of have this sense of mastery,
which is so rewarding.
What the research tells us is that there's absolutely a relationship between how difficult a
task is and how good at it you are. So if you're trying to do something that's just way beyond you and is really difficult
and you can't actually achieve it, you're much more likely to end up feeling really frustrated or anxious than you are
to end up feeling in a state of flow. But equally, if the task you're doing is really easy, you're
going to end up bored and disinterested. You're not going to end up fully immersed and engrossed. So it's all about this
sweet spot. You don't want to be bored, but you don't want to be stressed. You want to feel challenged, but you want to
have this sense of confidence that you can actually achieve what you want to achieve. And really interesting research has shown that people, when
they're fully in the flow, they're actually shutting off some of their really high-power thinking parts of their brain.
And so you end up in this state where you're not actually kind of self-monitoring and judging anymore. You're just doing
what comes, what feels natural. And so they've scanned the brains of jazz players, for example. So
picture someone sitting down at the piano, they're improvising. And, you know, these people actually are no longer
planning, they're not thinking consciously about what they're doing. They're not judging themselves, they're not
self-censoring. They don't feel any sense of inhibition. They're just playing. And we know that our brain waves change. We become
really quite different when we're in that zone. We get flooded with endorphins. And then the chemicals that we get
flooded with make us feel, you know, able to focus better. We get to link ideas. We become more creative. I mean, you
know, this is, this is a brilliant, brilliant place to be. And I know a lot of people train themselves to try and get
into the zone. I don't know how it is for you, but for me personally, I don't think I've got place to be. And I know a lot of people train themselves to try and get into the zone.
I don't know how it is for you, but for me personally,
I don't think I've got to that stage,
but I just enjoy it whenever I manage to feel that way.
Yeah, I know that when I'm in the zone,
it feels so natural and normal.
And I wonder why can't I capture this in a bottle?
Why can't I pull this out of my hat whenever I need it?
But like you, it comes when it comes,
and it doesn't come when it doesn't come.
Another one that I really want to hear the story about
is because, again, I think it happens to everybody.
You go get something in the kitchen
because you need to go get it, and you walk in the kitchen,
and you cannot remember why you came in.
And it's maddening, but it seems very universal.
I think it's absolutely universal,
and scientists have done some really interesting research
into how that can be.
You know, you're in one room,
you have very clear idea of why you need to walk
into the next room, And then by the time you
got there, which is what all of a couple of seconds later, as you say, you just have no idea anymore. So researchers have
done computer games and then in real life. So, you know, imagine people in a study, they're walking around, they've
been asked to pick up and put down particular objects. And the way they managed this in the study was that the people had
to put these objects into a box so they couldn't see what it was. And then as soon as they walked into another room, so
they'd walked through a doorway, they were two or three times more likely to forget what it was that they had in their
box, even if they'd only picked it up 20, 30 seconds before. But if they'd walked
through a doorway, they were much more likely to forget what it was. And so essentially there's,
yeah, the research shows us that this is now known as the doorway effect. And basically it tells us
some really interesting stuff about how our memories work. So you think about your memory,
obviously, your memory is
divided up into particular events. You don't, as we were talking about a little while ago, you don't have a
continuous, perfect recall of your life. It's not like our memories are kind of video recorders recording everything.
And so at any one time, you know, you have a certain amount of information because you're in a particular event. But then obviously, you know, you're going to
move on to a new event, and you can't hold on to all of the information from what you've just been doing previously. You
don't have enough space in your brain. And so essentially, once this particular event that you're in is over, your
brain discards some of the information that it doesn't think is relevant anymore. So you've got space to remember new, more, more relevant things. And so that
raises the question then of how does your brain decide when one particular event is over and a new one has begun?
And this research shows very clearly that walking through a doorway is clearly a signal to our brains, something new has
happened. What happened before, you know, that was relevant in the previous space that you were in. It's probably not relevant now. So get rid of the old information.
So you've got room for the new. And researchers found that even just imagining walking through a
door, not even physically doing it, was enough to make people forget things more easily.
We're talking about why you have the weird thoughts and habits that you have.
And we're talking with Jen Martin.
She's author of the book, Why Am I Like This?
The science behind your weirdest thoughts and habits.
Hey, it's Hillary Frank from The Longest Shortest Time,
an award-winning podcast about parenthood and reproductive health.
We talk about things like sex ed, birth control, pregnancy, bodily
autonomy, and of course, kids of all ages. But you don't have to be a parent to listen.
If you like surprising, funny, poignant stories about human relationships and, you know, periods,
The Longest Shortest Time is for you. Find us in any podcast app or at longestshortesttime.com.
From the podcast that brought you
to each of the last lesbian bars in the country
and back in time through the sapphic history
that shaped them comes a brand new season
of Cruising Beyond the Bars.
This is your host, Sarah Gabrielli,
and I've spent the past year interviewing
history-making lesbians and queer folks
about all kinds of queer spaces,
from bookstores to farms to line dancing and much more. interviewing history-making lesbians and queer folks about all kinds of queer spaces, from
bookstores to farms to line dancing and much more.
You can listen to Cruising on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
New episodes air every other Tuesday starting February 4th.
So Jen, let's talk about eye contact because I think that's something I've always found
interesting is like it's really tricky and it's hard to maintain and
Too much is creepy and too little is off-putting and it's it's weird
Yeah, eye contact is interesting isn't it so my my day job is to
Teach scientists how to communicate more effectively
So I spend a lot of my time teaching students how to give better talks. And of
course, one of the things that we talk about a lot when we're thinking about public speaking is making eye contact, that
it's really good. It encourages an audience to feel connected with you. It helps people to trust you. You know, making
eye contact with an audience is really important. But the vast majority of our students find that actually when they're thinking carefully about what it is
that they want to say next, they actually have to look away. They find it almost impossible to maintain eye contact
with somebody when they're, when they need to think. And so it turns out that actually, you know, that the more
we're, our brains are working away on a task, the more likely it is that we feel this really
intense need to look away from someone's eyes. Not because we're embarrassed or we're shy, just because actually it's
so mentally stimulating to maintain eye contact with someone that our brains just completely become overloaded. And so
if you need to be able to think clearly, you look away. So there's, eye contact is this
really interesting balance that we know, we judge people more positively, at least in Western cultures, I should point
out. We judge people as being more likable and more trustworthy if they make eye contact with us. But similarly, we can't maintain eye contact all the time. So as you say,
it's a really tricky thing. And seeing somebody's eyes, like we were talking about before, we're so
tuned to whether people are watching us or not, that eye contact has become this very important
kind of social signal. So I know it's common for people to talk about that sensation that time seems to
go by faster as you get older and I know there are different theories as to why people have that
sensation. One of them is called the proportionality theory and it's a really simple argument that
basically says a year seems to pass much much faster when you're 40 than when you were four,
because, you know, when you're 40, a year is only a fortieth of your life compared to a quarter of your life. But the
research suggests that it's, it's actually much more than that. And that's because when you were younger, you were
having lots of new experiences all the time. You know, you tried new foods for the first time, you're meeting new people far more often, you are doing new things all the time. And so you end up having these really
dense, full, rich memories because there was so much going on. But of course, as we get
older, we tend to become more creatures of habit. We tend to see the same people more
often if you've got a job. Even if your job has some variety, there's
going to be a lot more kind of habit and routine in your life. And so the memories that we make just aren't as
aren't as busy as not as much going on. So when we look back over our childhood, because we have these really busy,
dense, full memories, we feel like our childhood took a really long time. Whereas if you look back over recent years, probably you didn't have as much variety in your life.
And so the time feels like it's passed really, really quickly.
So the clear answer, if you want to feel like time
is not just disappearing really quickly as you age,
is to actively seek out more new and different experiences.
So, you know, go on a holiday, eat different
food, meet new people, listen to different music, whatever it is, but just bring some
novelty into your life. So I really like that idea. I mean, there's, look, I can talk about
any of these topics till the cows come home. They're all stories that I chose, particularly
because I think they're fascinating and knowing some of the science behind the questions.
Not only does it get rid of the kind of urban myths and the old wives' tales,
but it gives people some information on which to base their decisions.
And I think science is relevant to all of us, which is why I love what I do so much.
We all need to have access to science.
One of the experiences that you write about and you talk about that
I don't think I've ever experienced is is the idea that you remember things
that never happened and so what do you mean by that? Yeah well it's a really
interesting one because I think we all tend to think that our memories are
pretty much infallible you know we recognize that we can't remember
everything that goes on in our lives it It's just too much. So we tend to be aware that we remember
particularly emotional experiences or particularly joyful experiences. So we accept that our brains
probably don't remember everything. But surprisingly, I agree with you, there's actually
lots of evidence to show that we do construct
memories, you know, we fill the gaps and we make lots of mistakes. And so the research that I was
talking about was looking into researchers who've gone out, particularly trying to implant false
memories within people. And it turns out that it's not that hard to do, there's kind of a recipe
you can follow. And you know, these
psychologists ended up being able to convince people that they'd had a ride in a hot air balloon,
even when they never had, by kind of, you know, photoshopping photos and showing them pictures of
people in the hot air balloons and then getting them to kind of go through this, you know, imagined
exercise. But then, you know, so that's kind of, you think, Oh, yeah, well, that's okay. That would be quite nice. What
difference would it make in my life? But of course, this whole idea can have a really nasty dark turn, if you then read
about the research where people, researchers could get people to commit to crimes that they'd actually never
committed. You know, it's, it's kind of scary to think that if you, if
you're a little bit prone to suggestion, which is what the
research shows that you can be convinced you've done things
that you never, never did.
Why does silence calm me? I think that's pretty universal
that silence will calm anybody down. Why is it self evident? Or
is there something going on there?
I mean, I think there's two issues here.
One is that a lot of people don't allow space for silence in their lives.
They're always talking to people or listening to music or listening to podcasts or audio books.
But of course, there's also the point that people, many people don't get to choose to
live in quiet places.
So there was a report back in 2011 from the World Health Organization
looking at the burden of disease from noise.
And they came out with some pretty shocking statistics.
They reckon that at least 1 million healthy life years
are lost every year.
This was in Western Europe
from people having to live with traffic related noise.
So they found that one in five people
were constantly exposed to levels of noise
from the environment around them
that were considered really harmful to their health.
And so the research was showing that being exposed
to noise all the time or often,
which we call noise pollution,
it can cause high blood pressure and heart disease
and difficulty concentrating,
obviously sleep problems is not surprising.
And so the research looked, you know, what happens when we're exposed to silence.
And in fact, the earlier studies here, it wasn't even what people were looking for.
So it was about 15 years ago that people, scientists wanted to look at how music affects
people physiologically. So what does it do to our heart rate?
What does it do to our blood pressure? And so
they played people different types of music styles. And in order to allow people's, you know, so they were looking at
what sort of a physiological response people had to this music. And because they wanted people to kind of have the
opportunity to reset between, you know, the jazz and the rock or whatever it was, they had a two minute track of silence in between.
And the most interesting thing to come from this study
wasn't how people responded to the tempo or the rhythm
or the melody of the music.
It was the fact that people had a major response
to the silence.
So during this silence, people relaxed in a way
that they never relaxed when listening to music.
So our brains seem to really depend.
Our both our physical and our mental health seem to really depend on having access to quiet. And other studies have shown this in mice as well.
The idea is that if you're feeling stressed and overwhelmed and exhausted, if you can
find silence, then it's really good for you.
Your brain will respond very positively
to having some quiet in your life.
Well, I know I've said several times in our discussion
that this experience or that experience
seems pretty universal because I've talked to so many people
about most of everything we've just talked about.
And everybody has these experiences and probably has theories as to why we do what we do, but it's interesting to hear the
science behind it. Jen Martin has been my guest. The name of her book is Why Am I Like This? The
Science Behind Your Weirdest Thoughts and Habits. And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks for being here, Jen. Thanks so much for inviting me.
I really appreciate it.
Hey, everyone.
Join me, Megan Rinks.
And me, Melissa DeMonts, for Don't Blame Me, But Am I Wrong?
Each week, we deliver four fun-filled shows.
In Don't Blame Me, we tackle our listeners' dilemmas
with hilariously honest advice.
Then we have But Am I Wrong, which
is for the listeners that didn't take our advice.
Plus, we share our hot takes on current events.
Then tune in to see you next Tuesday for our listener poll results from But Am I Wrong.
And finally, wrap up your week with Fisting Friday, where we catch up and talk all things
pop culture.
Listen to Don't Blame Me, But Am I Wrong on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you
get your podcasts.
New episodes every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
Do you love Disney? Then you are going to love our hit podcast Disney Countdown. I'm Megan, the Magical
Millennial.
And I'm the dapper Danielle.
On every episode of our fun and family friendly show, we count down our top 10 lists of all things Disney. There is
nothing we don't cover.
We are famous for rabbit holes, Disney-themed games,
and fun facts you didn't know you needed,
but you definitely need in your life.
So if you're looking for a healthy dose of Disney magic,
check out Disney Countdown wherever you get your podcasts.
You influence other people all the time
to a greater or lesser extent, and in a positive
or not so positive way.
Yet, we often don't stop to think about how it is we influence others.
But actually, we're about to.
With Tommy Spalding.
Tommy is an author and speaker, former CEO and president of Up With People, and his latest
book is called The Gift of Influence,
Creating Life-Changing and Lasting Impact
in Your Everyday Interactions.
Hey Tommy, welcome.
Thank you so much for having me.
Sure.
So explain what you mean about how we influence others
and why this is important to talk about and understand.
So every human being on this planet
has an opportunity to influence people.
Research shows that there are actually 2.8 people a day
that we meet every day of our lives.
If you take that and multiply that by 365 days times 78 years
of our lives, which is average life expectancy,
that's 80,000 people.
So in our lives, we get a chance to influence 80,000 people.
And the question is, will you have a positive influence
or a negative influence on those people?
When I think about most of my interactions
throughout the day, I don't think of them as, well,
some of them maybe.
But I don't know that I'm influencing people so much
as that I'm influencing people so much is that
I'm just interacting with them and that's kind of how you get through the day.
But every morning you can wake up and you can think about the people in your life, just
10 people who's going through a divorce, who's going through bankruptcy, who's got a son
that's got depression, who's got a 50th wedding anniversary.
Everyone in our lives has a story.
We can have an opportunity to follow up with that story and get to know people
and reach out to people and have an influence on their lives.
Or we can just walk on by.
I mean, my son is 14 years old, Mike, and he's a hockey player and we dropped him
off at boarding school three weeks ago.
I never thought a million years that we'd be sending our 14 year old son
to boarding school, but he's passionate about hockey
and we dropped him off three weeks ago.
I didn't wanna cry, I wanted to be strong for him
because it was tough to drop him off
and I wanted to be strong for my wife, Jill.
When we went to the airport to fly home,
we had a little lunch at the airport in Minneapolis
and then I told Jill I'd meet her at the gate.
When I was walking to the gate
and there was a young woman at a table there at the coffee shop just bawling, I mean crying,
and she was writing a letter and I just walked on by. I got to the gate and I thought to myself,
that's one of my 2.8 people. That's one of the 2.8 people in my day that I could meet and I
could have an influence on. And so I just turned around, Mike, and I went right back to that coffee shop.
I didn't ask to sit down.
I just pulled up the chair and sat right down and said to her, rough day.
She just started crying.
She said she's from London and her boyfriend's from Minneapolis and they have this long distance
relationship and that's not working.
They're breaking up and it's hurtful and she's writing
them a goodbye letter. And so I kind of leaned into her and said, well, I just dropped off my
14 year old boy two hours ago and it's been a rough day. And I was just, we just basically
started crying and gave her a hug. But I never got this lady's phone number or contact information,
but I know that I made a huge influence in her life because I didn't walk on by.
I turned around and was there for somebody.
That's the kind of influence that we have an opportunity every day to have on the lives
of others.
I guess one of the reasons people walk on by when they see that is that often, or I
don't know how often, but sometimes when you ask somebody, are you okay, or sit down and try to talk to them,
they'll say, this is none of your business.
Leave me alone.
Yep, and when you meet those people, you say, you're right.
I hope you have a good day, and then you walk away.
I mean, there's three types of people in the world.
There's leaders, followers, and critics.
The world's full of critics.
This world's full of naysayers.
The world's full of negative people This world's full of naysayers. The world's full of negative people.
The people that you're talking about that just don't want to be touched or influenced.
You got to focus on the 95% of people that would just welcome a positive influence, a
positive smile, a positive gesture into their lives.
And so how do you initiate that without, again, looking like you're kind of butting into
their business? How do you approach that? What's the strategy? So when you have a genuine care
for people, that's first and foremost. And everyone has a story. I mean, every single human
being has a story. And most of us don't take the time to listen
to their story.
When you say, hi, how are you?
And they say, fine.
They say, well, what's going on in your life?
And they say, well, here's what's going on in my life.
My son's got depression, and I'm really struggling with that, and blah, blah, blah.
Everyone has a story, but we move so fast, we're so transactional, we forget to stop
and hear people's story.
And that's the first part of positive influence.
When someone says to you, my son has depression,
I'm struggling with that, or whatever, what is it you say
and what is it you hope to accomplish other than to just
let this guy know that you stopped to say hi or whatever?
I mean, what's the purpose other than that?
Yeah.
So if someone ever admitted that their son had depression
or someone opened up when I asked how their day was,
I would say to them, which is factual,
my older stepson, who's at West Point Military Academy,
struggled with depression and mental challenge,
mental illness. And I've lived through it for most of my life. at West Point Military Academy struggle with depression and, you know, mental challenge,
mental illness.
And I've lived through it for most of my life.
And by sharing that, it's vulnerability.
When they share something vulnerable and then I share something vulnerable, that's how you
have connectivity.
If you just talk about NSW, Mike, which is new sports weather, I mean, every relationship
you have, all you talk about how the weather is, how the New York Yankees are doing, it's transactional. To have deeper, more meaningful
relationships, you have to get vulnerable. And when you're vulnerable with people, it's contagious.
They want to be vulnerable back. And that's how you start forming more deeper, more meaningful
relationships. And that's how you have a real influence on the lives of others when you can share a little bit
about your story and have the interest in hearing
their story as well.
Do you ever find that it gets exhausting?
I mean, do you turn it off?
And sometimes when you walk through the airport
and you see someone like that, you go,
I'm just not in the mood today.
Absolutely.
I mean, when I get on the airplane,
the first thing I do is I put my AirPods on
because I don't wanna talk to the person sitting next to me.
It doesn't make me a mean person,
but I just signed a thousand books or did a speech
or worked with a client all day and I'm exhausted.
So you do have to turn it off and find that time with you,
but you have to be intentional.
You can't have a life-changing impact
in every single
interaction in your life, but most of us go through every day without having one. And what my challenge
is, it might not be 2.8 people for you, it might be one person or 10 people, but every day we have
an opportunity to have an influence in the lives of others, and it could be positive, it could be
negative, or worse, it could just be, you know, nothing. It could be positive it could be negative or worse. It could just be you know, nothing
It could be neutral because you haven't had any impact at all and the choice is ours
So when you talk to strangers when you talk to that woman at the airport who was crying
Writing that letter. Yeah, maybe that was nice in the moment and it helped her in that moment and maybe that's enough
I guess but there is something about this that seems kind of surfacey like
You know you're doing it to be nice and you're maybe even doing it partly for you
to feel like you're doing something but
It probably doesn't have a big impact on other people and maybe it doesn't have to
But there is that sense that this is kind of a surface relationship. You'll never see this person again. It was nice in the moment, but it was just a moment.
Not every relationship, I call them the five floors of relationships and the first floor
is transactional and the second floor is, you know, is more the small talk. You move up to the
fifth floor, which is deep, meaningful, lifelong relationship.
Not every relationship, not every person that we meet every day is going to go to that fifth floor.
The person at the airport that was crying, I just asked if she was okay and
just checked in on her.
That was just a one-time deposit, never see her again.
And that's okay.
But there's people in our lives that we'll meet every day and have a huge impact on.
I have a friend named Jerry Middle.
That's eight years old this year.
This man has called me or taking me out to lunch or breakfast every
week for the past 20 years.
He's invested in my life.
Besides my mother and father, no other human being has invested in me and had
an interest in helping become a good husband and father and leader more than Jerry.
I have a friend named Frank D'Angeles who was the principal of Columbine High School during the tragedy, the school shooting.
He's one of my five greatest mentors in my life.
And for the past seven, almost eight years, he's texted me every morning to tell me he loves me.
Every morning. And it's not some superficial text. He says,
Good morning, Tommy. I'm not sure where in the world you are. I'm here thinking about you. I love you
every morning. I mean, that's an influence when you check in with the people. So some
are more one time, you know, you're at the airport and you see a girl crying, check in
with them and then you're Jerry middle and you're taking me out to lunch or calling me
every week for 20 years. The choice is ours about what kind of relationship
we wanna have with people.
The benefit to doing what you're talking about is what?
The benefit both, I mean, the benefit to the person I get,
but what's the benefit to you
that makes this worthwhile and worth doing?
When I hear that question, Mike,
it refers me back to one of my favorite books by Adam Grant,
that there's three types of people in the world. There's givers, and there's takers,
and there's posers. Posers are what he calls people that pose as givers, but they're really takers.
For someone that wants to get something out of impacting others, they're takers. It's just a
fact that there's givers and takers in the world, but true givers, true servant leaders,
true heart led leaders, people that wake up every morning
and put others before themselves,
they don't ask the question, what do I get out of it?
When you influence people and give that gift of influence,
it's a gift.
And when you give a gift, you don't want anything in return.
But gifts are also received.
I mean, we receive influence.
And there's people in our lives.
I mean, who I am today is because hundreds of people
have invested in me, mentored me, loved me, coached me.
And that's a gift.
And I think we have to reciprocate and do
that to the lives of others.
That's what a true giver is.
And so to do this, I would imagine
that you have to be a little more intentional than walking
through the airport and hoping to see somebody crying
in the coffee shop.
Yeah.
So how do you do this as more of an intentional practice
rather than, oh, there's someone crying,
I better go put my arm around. Yeah. Yeah, sure
So every morning I do what I call an influence audit. I literally think about okay
who in my life has a birthday today or
For example, I did a I did a meeting last year and I worked with this client and I got to know him really well
And he was sharing that his daughter drowned
At their nearby lake.
She was a high, she was a high school kid and drowned and died.
And I said, what day was that?
I said, May 3rd.
Well, most people would say, God, that's terrible.
Well, I wrote in my calendar, May 3rd is a reoccurring yearly thing.
This happened years ago.
So every May 3rd, do you think that guy's having a hard time, Mike?
On May 3rd, it's pretty rough day for him, I would assume.
But most people would not do that.
They would just say, oh, that terrible that happened.
But every May 3rd, I reach out to him.
Hey, I'm thinking about you today.
You know, today's a hard day.
It's those little things in our lives.
So every day we have to have an audit.
Who in our lives are going through something?
And we know people, employees, customers, clients, family members. We know people that are going through something. And we know people, employees, customers, clients, family members.
We know people that are going through things.
It's sending them an email.
It's reaching out and let know you care.
What do you hear back when you send a card or a text or a call on May 3rd?
What's the reaction?
Thank you.
I have a friend named Scott and he runs a huge bank in Colorado and a few years
ago tragically his son was bullied. High school kid. His name is Teddy. He was bullied so bad they
posted stuff on the internet and they actually dared him to jump off a bridge and the kid did,
Teddy did, and he jumped off the bridge and was killed. And it was just tragic.
And this happened years ago.
And I called him all the time and told him I was thinking about him.
And that's the hardest thing to go through is losing a kid through suicide.
And when I met with him years later, he shared, you know, I have tons of friends.
I know they cared.
I know they felt sorry for me.
But it's interesting, not many people really reached out because what do you say during that situation?
I just turned 50 a few years ago and I had a dinner party and my best friend from high
school stood up. Everyone was giving toasts. I'll never forget. Cory Torre, my best friend
from high school said, when my wife left me 10 years ago, I was devastated. I had three
young boys. Tommy called me every day for
a year to tell me he loved me and tell me that he believes in me and my best days are
ahead of me. Every day for a year. That's commitment. That's what we have to do when
people are going through tough times. If we do that in the lives of others, that's the
true gift of influence. I remember an experience of when someone I know had a death in the family and I
sent, I sent a card and a condolence card and later talked to that person and they
said, you know, you're the only one that sent a card because I think because
people don't know what to do.
They don't know what to do, they don't know what to say, they
don't know what to expect back.
I think that's why a lot of people
don't talk to homeless people, because they're afraid of,
you know, is this person going to go nuts?
I talk to them all the time, and most of them
are pretty normal, or at least normal enough
to have a conversation.
But I think people struggle.
It's not that they don't want to be caring.
They don't know what's appropriate.
Right.
And when they don't know what's appropriate, here's what we say.
Hey, Mike, I'm so sorry that that's going on in your life.
If there's anything I can do, let me know.
If there's anything I can do, let me know. If there's anything I can do, let me know is a cop out.
People that say, hey, there's anything I can do,
let me know comes from the cowards.
And we all say it, I say it.
It's the most tragic thing we say to people.
Because Mike, what we're really saying is when someone says,
man, I'm going through a tough time, here's what's going on.
And you can say, oh, so sorry you lost your mom.
If there's anything I can do, let me know.
What you're really saying is, listen,
I really don't wanna do anything,
but I want you to think that I wanna do something.
I wanna say the right thing.
So I know you're not gonna ever call me up and say,
hey, there is something you can do for me.
So I'm just gonna say this nice gesture.
You're gonna say, hi, how are you?
I'm fine, and it's just gonna be transactional.
If there's anything you need, let me know. And they say, okay, no problem. And what you really need to say, hi, how are you? I'm fine. And it's just going to be transactional. If there's anything you need, let me know.
And they say, OK, no problem.
And what you really need to say is, so sorry you lost your mom.
You must be going crazy with the kids back and forth
with volleyball and softball practice and band practice.
I'm going to come over tomorrow at 5 o'clock and drop off a meal.
Oh, you don't have to do that.
I insist.
I'll go to Tony's Meats, pick up a meal.
I'm dropping off at 5 o'clock. I mean, boom, you don't have to do that. I insist. I'll go to Tony's Meats, pick up a meal. I'm dropping off at 5 o'clock.
I mean, boom.
You just do it.
Influencers don't tell people what
they're going to do for them.
Great influencers just do it.
And they make things happen and influence the lives of others,
even when they're not asked.
Yeah, I love that advice.
Because I've often preached that myself.
Because if you go to somebody's house after somebody's died,
oh, I'm so sorry your father died,
is there anything I can do to help?
No one in the history of mankind has ever said, yeah,
as a matter of fact, there is.
But the person obviously has things
they need to get the kids to baseball practice,
or they need to get the kids to school practice or they need to get the kids to school or they need some help with this or and you just and so
you like you say you just do it or say you know how can I help by doing this or
can I help by doing that or something but that that I so agree with that come
I thought you were gonna say I thought you were gonna say saying is there
anything I can do is a great thing to say? And I was going to go, oh man, really? But no, I agree. It's 100%. Is there anything I can do
is like the biggest cop out in the world? Yeah. Mike, it's all about showing up.
When we have such an opportunity to show up, and we show up for our kids' ball games, and
we show up for family dinner, and we show up for our immediate family. But when you can show up for our kids ball games, and we show up for family dinner, and we show up for our immediate family.
But when you can show up for other people,
I mean, right now, my son's at prep school,
boarding school, he's a month into it,
the kid's 14 years old, he's homesick.
And it's amazing, my friends in Minnesota,
my realtor that we bought a home there
is taking him out to Subway at night
and checking down on him.
So many people are pouring into our son Tate
knowing that he's homesick.
I mean, it's like the most amazing gesture.
It just gives me so much hope
that there's like good in the world.
And I think we need to return those great gestures
by investing in the lives of others as well.
Well, I've enjoyed this conversation because,
and I'm guilty of it too, that you know we're all busy, we
all have a lot on our mind mostly about our world and the people in it and what
we need to do and what we want and all that, that we often don't take time to
think how we can influence and impact others. And listening to you, because you
tell the story as well, gives people who have listened through this episode gives people
Reason to think about how they can help so here's here's where I really want to wrap this up is
This picture at the end of our lives that we actually got to meet all 2.8 people. That's 80,000 people
What if at the end of our lives before we die?
And we got to meet every single person that we had a human interaction with, whether it's short term or long term.
80,000 people is a lot of people.
Where would they fit?
They fit in a football stadium.
So what if at the end of our lives, every human being before we die, we walk on a 50
yard line of a football stadium and every single human being that we've had a human
interaction with, we've had a positive or negative influence is in that stadium, staying nearby.
And the question is, Mike, what's the sound of that stadium?
Are they booing because you've had a negative influence or even worse, Mike, is it silent?
Is the stadium totally silent because you just looked out at your phone your whole life,
you never looked up to see who's in front of you?
Great influencers impact lives every day.
Or at least every other day.
You could take a day off here and there.
Great, well thanks Tommy.
Tommy Spalding has been my guest
and the name of his book is The Gift of Influence,
Creating Life-Changing and Lasting Impact
in Your Everyday Interactions. And you'll find a link to that book at Amazon in the show notes.
Mike, you're a great interviewer by the way. You're a pro.
Anyone who knows anything about negotiating knows to avoid using the phrase,
okay, you owe me one.
That's when you do someone a favor with this vague promise
that you'll get repaid sometime in the future. According to negotiation expert Jim Thomas,
payback never comes. It's much better to negotiate something specific in return at the time you
agree to do the favor. That's when you have the power. Later, you have none. The best
way to do this is when someone asks you for something, instead of just giving it to them,
think of the negotiation as a trading request. Be specific in what you want in return, as
in, I'll give you X if I get Y in return. That seems fair. And that is something you
should know. While
you're at it and you're listening to this podcast, drop a rating and review on the
platform you're listening to. It really helps us. I appreciate it. Just leave a
rating and review. It'll take you, what, five, ten seconds. I'm Mike Carruthers.
Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
Hey, it's Hillary Frank from The Longest Shortest Time, an award-winning podcast about parenthood
and reproductive health.
There is so much going on right now in the world of reproductive health, and we're covering
it all.
Birth control, pregnancy, gender, bodily autonomy, menopause, consent, sperm, so many stories
about sperm, and of course, the joys and absurdities of raising kids of all
ages. If you're new to the show, check out an episode called The Staircase. It's a personal story
of mine about trying to get my kids' school to teach sex ed. Spoiler, I get it to happen, but not
at all in the way that I wanted. We also talk to plenty of non-parents, so you don't have to be a parent to listen.
If you like surprising, funny, poignant stories about human relationships and, you know, periods,
The Longest Shortest Time is for you.
Find us in any podcast app or at longestshortesttime.com.