Something You Should Know - The Importance of Small Talk & Why You Do What You Do
Episode Date: February 9, 2023Why do you have eyebrows? Like everything else, they must have a purpose – there must be a reason. Well, actually there are three reasons. I begin this episode by explaining what they are. https://w...ww.mentalfloss.com/article/58424/why-do-we-have-eyebrows When you think about it, every relationship you have ever had, started with small talk. Whether personal or professional, every encounter starts this way if it is ever to develop into something. Still, a lot of people claim to hate small talk and many of us feel as if we are not very good at it. Here to fix that is Debra Fine. She is probably the number one expert on small talk, and she is author of the book, The Fine Art of Small Talk (https://amzn.to/3wSdl3t). Listen and she will explain some powerful yet simple techniques so you will never be uncomfortable making conversation with anyone, anywhere, anytime. Ever done something and later wondered why you did it? Or wondered why you reacted to something the way you did? A lot of what drives our actions and reactions is under the radar and may seem mystifying. Here to explain why that happens and how it works is Helena Boschi. She is a psychologist and author of a book called Why We Do What We Do (https://amzn.to/3RE47kL) . Listen as she explains some of the mechanisms of the brain that cause you to do things or react to things that may seem hard to understand. If you take a liquid medication, it is pretty easy to just grab a spoon out of your silverware drawer to measure it. Bad idea. Listen as I explain a couple of common mistakes people make when taking medicines at home that can really mess things up. https://www.hmpgloballearningnetwork.com/site/pln/blogs/pln/michael-cawley-pharmd-rrt-cpft-fccm/december-31-2014/medication-errors-among-children-are PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! Dell Technologies’ Presidents Day event is here! The savings start now on select sleek XPS laptops and more powered by 12th Gen Intel® Core™ processors. Don't forget special pricing on the latest monitors, docks and accessories, plus free shipping on everything and monthly payment options with Dell Preferred Account.  Just call 877-ASK-DELL for these limited-time Presidents Day deals! With With TurboTax, an expert will do your taxes from start to finish, ensuring your taxes are done right (guaranteed), so you can relax! Feels good to be done with your taxes, doesn’t it? Come to TurboTax and don’t do your taxes. Visit https://TurboTax.com to learn more. Intuit TurboTax. Did you know you could reduce the number of unwanted calls & emails with Online Privacy Protection from Discover? - And it's FREE! Just activate it in the Discover App. See terms & learn more at https://Discover.com/Online Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know, why do you have eyebrows?
Well, there are three reasons.
Then, small talk.
It's really important to be good at it, and a lot of us just aren't.
We ask these rhetorical questions and don't expect an answer, so we fall into these ruts.
How you doing Mike?
Good.
How are you Deborah?
Good.
What's new?
Nothing.
What's new with you?
Nothing.
I mean, jeez, where are we headed with this?
That's where small talk needs a little help.
Also, if you use a teaspoon from your silverware drawer to take medicine, that's a problem.
And why you do what you do and think the way you think.
For instance…
The key thing to remember is the brain is negatively wired.
And when we hear bad news or gossip about other people or receive negative feedback,
it sticks.
It becomes very cognitively sticky in the brain.
And it takes quite a lot to dislodge this.
All this today on Something You Should Know. hospitality on your way there. All Porter fares include beer, wine, and snacks, and free fast
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Something you should know. Fascinating intel. The world's top experts. And practical advice you can use thing about why we have eyebrows I'd like to share.
And it turns out there are three reasons we have eyebrows.
First, they protect your eyes.
The shape of the brow ridge and the outward growing hair of the brow channel sweat, rain, and moisture away from your eyeballs so your vision stays clear.
They can also catch dust and shield your eyes from sun glare.
Secondly, eyebrows are essential for nonverbal communication.
Scientists who study facial expression say eyebrows are important
for expressing happiness, surprise, and anger.
Thirdly, eyebrows act as an ID card. Eyebrows stand out against the forehead
and can clearly be seen from a distance. Eyebrows don't change very much over time,
making them perfect for identifying people. And that is something you should know.
A lot of people will tell you, I've heard a lot of people say that they hate small talk.
It's boring, it's pointless, often awkward.
Well, maybe, but perhaps it doesn't have to be.
In fact, small talk may be quite valuable, even rewarding, if you look at it and do it the way Deborah Fine does.
Deborah is the author of the all-new revised edition of the book
The Fine Art of Small Talk. Hi, Debra. Welcome to Something You Should Know.
Thanks so much, Mike. I'm glad to be here.
So everybody has their own kind of idea of what small talk is, and it does have kind of a negative
connotation to it, like small talk means it doesn't matter, It's just small talk and it's like a bubble that
pops. It goes away. What's your definition of small talk? I agree with you that a small talk
is definitely demeaned as just a waste of saliva. However, I believe that small talk is the appetizer
for any relationship. When you look at your social
relationships, your romantic relationships, your business relationships, they probably started with
small talk and then grew deeper. And or that you started in a business conversation such as we are
having now. This is a business conversation. There has been no small talk. If we have any hopes of developing a friendship or a business relationship, then it reverts
back to small talk in order to accomplish that.
Small talk is the appetizer for relationships.
Yet, a lot of people, and I guess I put myself in this category, I don't really like, quote,
small talk in the sense that it just, as you say,
every relationship starts with small talk, but not every conversation with small talk ends up
in a relationship. In fact, most don't. So in essence, seems like a waste of time a lot of the
time. But I, you know, I don't have statistics to prove what I'm about to say, Mike. And I know where in your life, the person that is your romantic interest.
When you went on that first date, even if you started with a virtual via texting app,
if your skills in small talk were lousy when you came face to face, I bet it was an excruciating
date.
And I'm surprised that it took the journey into a real relationship.
The same goes in business. Mike, I think that
people do business with their friends and you cannot form or cultivate a connection or friendship
with someone without introducing small talk. Now, small talk doesn't have to just be about the
weather or sports. It can be something as simple as one of my favorite ways to get to know someone
is to ask someone like yourself or anyone,
what keeps you busy outside of your work? Because that's Mike, I Google stalked you before going on
this program because I'm always prepared with conversation. I didn't find out a lot about you
outside of your business and your work history. So if I had a chance to have a cup of coffee with
you before we launched into another interview or some business collaboration. I would say to you, what keeps you busy outside of your work in order to
foster some kind of true relationship with you? And I don't think that's a waste of saliva because
I would like to get to know you or anybody else I'm with unless they're a class A jerk or abusive
in some way, but that goes for your kid's teacher. Don't you want to know them
a little better beyond the parent back to school night situation? Don't you want to know the person
sitting next to you when you're watching the kid's soccer game and or you volunteer for an
organization that's dear to your heart and you either want to cultivate connections with fellow
volunteers and or bring in new volunteers,
well, Small Talk comes in handy for that, Mike. There's lots of ways you can use the tools of Small Talk in a sincere and genuine way to bring those connections into your life.
So let's talk about the tools of Small Talk, because I love that idea of asking someone what
they do outside of work. You know, I mean, I don't talk a lot about it in my business,
and that's why you didn't find much about it.
But that's a great question to ask because it makes people think,
and, you know, people love to talk about themselves.
So that's probably going to be a real conversation opener.
Right.
And also, I'm not opposed to asking what do you do,
especially at an industry conference or I'm not opposed to asking, what do you do? Especially at an industry conference
where I'm at a meeting, waiting for it to begin, and our vice president is about to
launch into whatever. Then you say, well, what do you do for the organization? Or what's your
connection with work? But outside of that, I could be at a party and meet someone's spouse,
partner, whomever, and just say, I will say to him, her, they, what keeps you busy?
It's the same idea.
What keeps you busy outside of work?
But now I'm at a party.
I'm not sure.
Do they stay at home with their kids?
Are they retired?
Are they in transition?
So just what keeps you busy?
The goal is to find something that you are willing to talk about about yourself without putting you on the spot.
I'm not going to ask
you, Mike, are you married? Because what if you say no? Where are we headed with this conversation?
And I'm not going to ask you, do you have any kids? People do that. Do you have any kids?
Whoa, whoa, whoa, slow this down. First of all, if they don't have kids, you're headed down a
rabbit hole. Secondly, if they do have kids, they probably won't shut up.
So either way.
So what are the other tools of small talk besides that rather great question?
But what else works?
Because as you say, sometimes as the conversation is going down the highway, you smack into a dead end.
And it's like, oh, now what are we going to talk
about? Or why did I ask that? Or boy, this is going nowhere. So how do you keep it on the rails?
Okay. So I have a couple of ideas and tools for that. Mike, one is what I call digging in deeper.
So I happen to be married. When my husband walks in at the end of my workday
today, he'll probably say to me, how was your day? Right? Moni, how are you? Right?
Isn't that everyone that's listening that has a spouse or partner, that's what we say
to one another. And it becomes rhetorical, Mike. It's like we just mean hello, right?
If I ask you how your weekend was, it means hello. If I say how's the project, it just means hello.
It's people aren't really asking for a response.
They're just throwing out these rhetorical questions.
So when my husband asks how my day is,
how's your day, Debra?
I'll say pretty good,
because I'm not certain he's interested, Mike.
If he then digs in deeper with one more question,
so what'd you have on your plate today,
Deborah? Or tell me about what you worked on today. Then I know my husband genuinely wants
to talk about my day rather than the fact that the Denver Broncos just hired a new coach,
which is what is on his mind only at this moment. So digging in deeper is saying to somebody,
how are the kids? Good. So
what's new with the kids since the last time we spoke? That's a digging in deeper question. How's
the project going, Joe? Oh, pretty good. So what's been the greatest challenge? That's the digging
in deeper question. How was your vacation? Oh, it was great. What did you enjoy the most? What was the highlight?
What did you think of the speaker today? Oh, good. So what was your number one takeaway?
I mean, I could go on and on, Mike, and I'm sure you don't want me to. So that's an example
of digging in deeper. And it's critical, especially these days, because in North America, we ask
these rhetorical questions and don't expect an answer.
So we fall into these ruts.
How are you doing, Mike?
Good.
How are you, Debra?
Good.
What's new?
Nothing.
What's new with you?
Nothing.
I mean, geez, where are we headed with this?
That's where small talk needs a little help.
So besides digging deeper, what else?
What else?
Playing the conversation game.
So if you ask most people what's been going
on, let me just throw that out there so your listeners can answer in their own heads or out
loud. What's been going on? Nothing. Mike, we didn't even rehearse that. That's amazing because
that's what most of us say, nothing or not much. Mike, I don't know you as I mentioned. I just
can't believe it. I mean,
I bet you a full day is busy and whatever else goes on in your life, you're busy, right? You're
busy. You got stuff going on. But we say nothing or not much for two reasons. Number one, because
we're lazy. We don't take the time to think of something else. We don't work hard and invest in conversation. The
other reason we say nothing or not much is because there is so much going on
that we can't think of what it is. So here's my suggestion. When you have the
time. Now today before we start our interview I believe you asked me how I
was. I sensed that you didn't mean it, that you wanted to get down
to business. And so I went, I didn't play the conversation game. I didn't do what I would have
done if you and I met for coffee. If you and I met for coffee and you said, how are you doing?
I would have said, well, I'm great. You know, it's been literally below zero freezing in Denver
the past week and the sun is out today and we're up to 45
degrees. That would be my answer to give you something to talk about. We could talk about
the weather or the weather where you're at. Now, let me take it to another step. Someone says,
how are you? If you want to connect with them because you're waiting for a meeting to begin,
give them a sentence. Well, I'm doing great. This weekend,
I'm really looking forward to a visit from my brother. Well, where does your brother live?
Why does he live a different place than you live? How did you come to live here?
If you don't give me something in a sentence, when my grown-up children, adult children say to me,
how's it going, mom? They probably don't mean it, Mike. Okay. They probably don't mean it. But when they say, how's it going? I always play the
conversation game. Oh, it's great. I did a podcast with this gentleman. He literally has over a
million downloads. I mean, you know, podcasts are so popular these days and everybody's got one,
but this guy has one that's concrete, that's solid, that's successful. It was amazing. And then I stop.
If they're interested, they'll ask me about it.
If they're not interested, they'll go, that's nice, mom.
You know, can you help me with fill in the blank?
So playing the conversation is critical.
When somebody asks, what's new?
How's it going?
How's the project?
How have you been?
Could you please give me an answer in a sentence so we now have something to talk about?
We're discussing small talk with one of the real experts on the topic.
It's Deborah Fine.
She's author of the book, The Fine Art of Small Talk.
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So, Debra, I sense that you have this arsenal of things
that you could probably have a pretty good conversation
with almost anybody.
But I think people also inadvertently kill conversations.
And how do they do that?
What are the kind of the poison pills of conversation?
Well, I'll give you that in a second, because what I do want to respond to is that I would be successful conversing with anyone.
Well, I'm pretty good at it.
But I do want to say if somebody doesn't want to talk to me, there's nothing I can do about it. And people need to
know that because most of us fear rejection so greatly that we don't start conversations with
new people or acquaintances because they might reject us. Listen, and oh, and we're looking for
the perfect icebreaker, Mike. So everybody's looking for the perfect icebreaker. And if we don't find it, then we don't launch conversations.
Let me tell you, I have hundreds of icebreakers.
But if you don't want to talk to me, Mike, because you're busy or you need to go or you
just don't, I'm too tall or whatever your reasons are for not wanting to talk to me,
there's nothing I can do to change that.
So everybody get over finding the perfect way to start a conversation and know that not
everybody wants to talk to me and it has nothing to do with me. Okay, so some conversation killers
to avoid. Well, here's one that happened. So I asked somebody, so, you know, bring me up to date.
What's new in your life since the last time we talked? Oh, it's been really rough. You know,
I got laid off from my job and the tech
market is difficult now. And this is my response, Mike. Have you thought, Joanne, about your resume?
Is it one page or two pages? And what's the objective, Joanne? I become an advisor, Mike,
despite the fact that Joanne did not ask for advice. She simply responded to a question.
She actually gave me information about what she was going through, and I chose to give her advice.
How often have every parent or every girlfriend done what I'm about to illustrate? Hey, Mary,
how's it going? Oh, good. I'm just so sick of my husband. He does this. He won't do that.
He's caught up in this, and I'm just sick
of that. I'm just so frustrated. And here's my response to that, Mike. Well, Mary, why don't
you just leave him? I mean, refrain from you. I mean, be done with him. Cut the cord. You know
what? Mary doesn't need that, Deborah. She's a citizen of the United States. She has the
freedom to leave her husband when and if she chooses. She doesn't need your unsolicited
advice. This is what she needs. Wow. That sounds rough. Gosh. Is there anything I can do? Wow. I'm
sorry you're going through this. Anything besides offering unsolicited advice to someone who has not requested it. Here's another one.
Women have a tendency, and that's a stereotype I know,
but I'm going to get to the men.
Don't worry.
We match each other.
So how was your vacation, Deborah, to Mexico?
Oh, it was great.
We did this.
It was so fun.
The weather was perfect.
And this is her response to that.
Oh, you went to Cancun? You went
to an all-inclusive? So did we. Oh my gosh, you can't imagine. It was fabulous. They had this.
Don't match each other. This isn't a contest. This is when you should say, so Deborah, I mean,
have you been there before? Or what did you like about it the best? Would you recommend it? I mean,
let's show an interest in me. Would you before you match? I mean, it happens with our kids all the time. So, Debra, what's new with the kids? Oh, well, my son lives in New York City and,
you know, he has a live-in girlfriend now. Really? Oh, my son, you know, he's been married. He's
been married a long time. They're having kids now. Okay, folks, this is not a contest. This is not a game. Why don't you ask me who he's living with? Tell me a little bit about
her. Tell me about your son. Why does he live in New York? That would be a better response.
When I listen to you talk, and I think when other people listen to you talk, you have a way about
you, a lightness about you, a confidence. I don't know exactly what it is, but that you can maneuver your way through any conversation
and have a pretty good time with it, it seems,
whereas other people struggle.
This is, I don't know if it's easy for you,
but you seem to enjoy it versus people who it's hard to summon up the courage.
So it's hard for them to see doing what you do from where they are.
I say turn it into a task.
That is what worked for me.
And I know it's worked for others because now I do have a history of 30 years of doing
this, of helping people.
So what I mean by turning into a task, next time you go to a baby shower,
next time your spouse dragged you to an event, or you were excited about an invitation and
ordinarily you wouldn't go ultimately because you're an introvert and you don't like these
kinds of things. Let me make a suggestion. Go armed with a task. Here's the task. I'm going
to talk to one new person. Really? So when I go to networking
events to this day, Mike, for my business, I tell myself, you'll talk to three new people or two
new people. I get to pick the number. I make myself look for two new people to talk to. I use
icebreakers to launch the conversation. We can talk about that in a second if you'd like, Mike.
You cannot get good at something unless you practice and invest time in it. I'm not
asking you to invest an hour of cardio a day. I'm asking you to invest, tell yourself, three times
this week at back to school night, at a lacrosse game, at a party that I'm invited to. Before the
meeting begins, I'm going to start a conversation with a person that I've never really connected
with or I don't know much about.
And it will come, Mike.
I promise you it will come.
But it will not come because you expect lightning to strike.
And I waited most of my life for lightning to strike, and it never happened.
So you mentioned icebreakers, and I think that's where a lot of people struggle is like you want to start a conversation,
and you don't know what to say because it's a
blank slate. So how do you begin? So let's talk about icebreakers. There is no such thing as a
perfect icebreaker. If someone is willing to talk to you, almost anything will work. That's not
offensive. If someone's unwilling to talk to you, nothing's going to work. But the best way to launch into a conversation is to use what I call
free information about the occasion or location. If I'm at a baby shower, I would say, hey,
how do you know either the mom, probably in my case, because of my age, I would say,
how do you know the mom of the future grandparent, grandmother? Or how do you know the mom-to-be?
What's your connection? What's your
connection to the host? That's free information about the occasion, location. If I'm on a trip
and on a train, I can say to somebody, are you from this area or are you from somewhere else?
Because the free information I have is they're either from this area or they're from somewhere
else. Free information about occasion, location.
How did you get involved with this charity?
If I'm at a conference in Orlando, I'll say, have you been to Orlando before?
That's the free information I have.
It almost seems like, as long as it's not goofy or offensive,
that, I mean, people are usually at these things to talk to other people. It's
not like this big formal opening statement kind of thing. It just seems like conversations would
be fairly easy to start because that's why we're all here. Yeah, like what brings you here is one
of my favorite ways to start a conversation. So wherever we are, except if it's a party, then I say, how do you know the host? But what brings you here? What's your
connection? I mean, if I see you talking to somebody, I pretend I don't know you or I approach
you. How do you two know each other? And everybody, this is such a conversation killer. Don't make,
do not make assumptions about people. Oh, is this your wife? Or is that your husband? Or I mean, is this your girlfriend? Please stop that. Just stop. How do you two know each other is the way to find out what they're willing to tell you. You know, it's just conversation, and there's some pretty easy ways to get it going and keep it going,
and I appreciate you sharing that.
Debra Fine has been my guest, and the name of her book is The Fine Art of Small Talk,
and there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks, Debra. Thanks for coming on.
Thank you very much. Thanks for having me today. I was excited.
Since I host a podcast, it's pretty common for me to be asked to recommend a podcast, Thanks for having me today. I was excited. Of course, a lot of podcasts are conversations with guests, but Jordan does it better than most.
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and went to prison for three years.
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it can influence a woman's partner preferences, career choices,
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There's so much for you in this podcast.
The Jordan Harbinger Show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
People who listen to Something You Should Know are curious about the world, looking
to hear new ideas and perspectives.
So I want to tell you about a podcast that is full of new ideas and
perspectives, and one I've started listening to called Intelligence Squared. It's the podcast
where great minds meet. Listen in for some great talks on science, tech, politics, creativity,
wellness, and a lot more. A couple of recent examples, Mustafa Suleiman, the CEO of Microsoft AI,
discussing the future of technology.
That's pretty cool.
And writer, podcaster, and filmmaker John Ronson
discussing the rise of conspiracies and culture wars.
Intelligence Squared is the kind of podcast
that gets you thinking a little more openly
about the important conversations going on today. Being curious, you're probably just the type of podcast that gets you thinking a little more openly about the important conversations going on today.
Being curious, you're probably just the type of person Intelligence Squared is meant for.
Check out Intelligence Squared wherever you get your podcasts.
Have you ever wondered why you do the things you do?
Or why you use the words you use to say the things you say?
Or why you decide to do this instead of that?
So much of this goes on below the radar, it seems.
We just do what we do.
But it's actually pretty interesting when you look below the surface
at why we actually do these things.
That's what Helena Bashi studies.
Helena is a psychologist and
author of a book called Why We Do What We Do. Hi Helena, welcome to Something You Should Know.
Hi Mike, it's great to be here. So explain a little bit about your work and what you mean by
why we do what we do, because I mean I do many things and I'm pretty sure I know why I do them,
but then there are also a lot of things I do that, you know, when I stop and think about it, I don't know why I did it.
Well, we live a lot of our lives and we do a lot of things without really thinking about why we do what we do.
We use language without being really intentional.
We make decisions and we don't know what's underpinning them.
We are frightened and we sometimes don't know why. And we tend to use habits and we don't really
think about the habits we have and why we have resorted to those particular habits.
So as soon as we start really thinking about why we're doing what we're doing and paying attention to our behavior,
even the small stuff, we become much more intentional about the decisions we take,
the behaviors we use, the language we deploy around us. Well, let's talk about language because,
well, the words we use are so important to how we get along with other people, how successful we are.
Using the right words matters.
So how does that all work?
Whenever we say anything, we need to remember that the brain is very visual.
And so the brain likes to try and convert words to pictures very quickly. So whenever we use a word like elephant or dog or tropical beach,
the brain starts to see these things straight away, not the word, but the visual association
of the word. But the brain doesn't see every single word. And so we've got to, if we want to try and different
words, of course, light up different parts of the brain. So when you're using very visual words,
the back of the head, which is our visual cortex, that starts to become more active. If we're using
words associated with movement, our motor cortex lights up more. And the same thing happens with words associated
with taste or smell. And those areas light up. So the brain responds to different words very well.
The brain also responds to words that carry a high emotional component. And that starts to activate lots of different areas of the brain. So when we
have words that are more sentimental or associated with the home or family, for example,
then the brain starts to activate the areas of memory, which are to do with personal memory,
as well as the visual cortex. So the more we really think about language
and the more descriptive or vivid our language becomes,
the more we're activating different parts of the brain.
You say something interesting,
and that is that the brain doesn't see or doesn't recognize the word don't.
And so that can cause a lot of problems. And so explain how.
So if I said to you, don't look behind you, Mike, you might immediately want to look behind you or
don't take this personally, Mike, you might think, oh, no, what's coming? We sometimes use words in
the opposite way to what's intended. So we say to young children, don't go over there,
don't play with that, don't spill that drink, don't touch that. And then we wonder why they're
being so disobedient, because the brain will turn as much as it can into something visual,
except when it can't. But the key thing to remember is the brain is negatively wired. So the brain tends to hook to negatively salient
information over positive. And when we hear things like any bad news or gossip about other people,
or receive negative feedback, it sticks, it becomes very cognitively sticky in the brain.
And it takes quite a lot to dislodge this. So for example,
if you're trying to give someone feedback in a meeting, and you think, well, I'll start with a
positive, I'll then give the negative, I'll end on a positive, and that's typically called the
feedback sandwich. What we don't take into account is that the negatively loaded information will
tend to stick much more strongly in the brain.
So the positive information that you've given, even though it's twice as much,
won't be held by the brain. And we tend to walk away from discussions like that and
conversations like that, only holding on to the negative. So language is quite a complex thing.
And we've got to really think about how we put conversations together, what we want to get out of the conversation, how we want someone to leave feeling at the end of a conversation.
Well, that's interesting.
So how do you maneuver what you say to leave people feeling a certain way?
Well, there are lots of different tools to use for different outcomes. So if you want someone to feel more motivated, then you need to focus on the behavior that you want praise and then we give them criticism at the same time.
Brain can't handle that because it holds only onto the negative.
So if we really want to motivate someone and make them feel good about something, the first thing we've got to do is be very specific about what's gone well so they know exactly what they did well and so that you get that repeated forevermore.
If you want someone to improve their performance, the best thing you can do is focus on what
you need them to do, but time it so that it's just before the next event.
We tend to put everything all together immediately after an event.
So that poor person can't do anything
with any implied criticism because they have nothing to throw the advice at. And even though
we mean it as a developmental piece of advice, that person's still holding it as a criticism.
So I would say simplify the conversation, separate the feedback, keep people feeling
motivated by focusing specifically on what went well, and wait until the next event before
advising them or guiding them into how to do something better.
So let's talk about creativity, because that topic comes up a lot.
And some people say, well, I'm not very creative, and other people say they are.
And is creativity a God-given thing, or is creativity, like language, something you learn?
Yes, you know, we aren't born with language.
We have to learn language.
But you could argue that we're all born very curious and to adapt to our surroundings.
And then you could argue. So very interesting experiments have been carried out with children.
And George Land was probably one of the most famous pioneers of this. And he wanted to see
how creative, and he calls it divergent thinking, where the brain just
goes off on a limb and starts exploring possibilities and one idea leads to another,
leads to another. And he decided he was working with NASA at the time, and I think this was around
the 1960s. He was working with his colleague, Beth Jarman, and he wanted to see how creative, how divergent would children be at the
age of five. And he followed them for 10 years to see how education would affect their creativity,
how teaching, how growing up would affect their creativity. And when he found that at the age of
five, children are naturally very curious, very creative, very divergent in their creativity. And when he found that at the age of five, children are naturally very curious,
very creative, very divergent in their thinking, and nothing really phases them. Children just
plunge headlong into something and give it a go. Now, by the age of 15, well, he did it again at
the age of 10, and he did it again at the age of 15. This ability to think divergently had reduced
massively. And you could point the fault at the education system or the way that
we narrow down our expertise. We think we become good at something, so we stop trying other things.
But he found that by the age of 15, I think 95% of children at the age of five were able to think divergently and creatively. But by the time they'd reached 15, it had gone down to about, I think it was around 12%, probably even less, which is terrible if you think about it. And so we get these adults who've had creativity bashed out of them. And then we tell
them to think creatively at work. And of course, they're not used to it. We're taught in education
to come up with a right answer. We're rewarded and praised for the right answer. We're told off
for daydreaming and letting our minds wander, which is what the brain needs to do. And so we
lose this ability to think
creatively. And then we put people in a room and we say, right, brainstorm. And of course,
when people are forced to be creative, you get the opposite effect because the brain then gets
anxious and it switches off. And a happy, relaxed, daydreaming brain is, of course,
a more creative one. And we don't create the right
environments to get the best out of people's creative potential. Let's talk about stress
because I think everyone has had that that feeling of being really stressed out and not being able to
perform well not being able to think clearly and And the more stressed you are, the less clearly you think,
and it's got to be taking a toll. So talk about what you see, the connection between stress and
the brain. We have a very ancient system inside us. We're designed to switch on our stress system
to deal with immediate stresses in our environment.
And then the stress system is designed to switch off again.
This system is not designed to switch on and off and on and off or stay on continually.
And you see the modern world, the world we're designed for is not the modern world.
The world we're designed for is when a saber-toothed tiger came into our immediate vicinity and we had to make a quick decision. Do I turn and fight?
Do I run like crazy? That's the world we're still designed for. But the world we're now in
is switching on the system. It's being switched on with modern stressors, you know, a boss that
wants to give us some feedback or 600 emails on our server or a friend who's rejected us.
Even anything anticipated, even if we don't know what's coming, it could be good, but just not
knowing is stressful and even anything imaginary. The brain doesn't have to, it doesn't have to be real for the brain to respond
as if the stressor were actually real.
Now, the big problem about stress, of course, is that we sometimes wait to feel okay again.
So anxiety rises, and anxiety, as we know, is contagious.
So stressed people make other people stressed.
And we wait to feel not stressed again, we wait for the
feelings of anxiety to disappear. But sometimes they don't. And so when we are feeling stressed,
the best thing we can possibly do is to do something, do something that is physically active.
So physical exercise is, of course, one of the
best things we can do. It's probably one of the last things we feel like doing,
keeping our hands and feet busy and active. Sometimes we have to do something, anything,
and then the feelings come later. And so how does memory fit into this discussion? I mean,
so much of who we are is our memories. And it's part of our brain.
So talk about memory. Memory is one of the most fascinating areas of the brain. And memory works
and memory is notoriously unreliable. We cannot really and people who think they've got a good
memory, may well have a good memory, but it's never going to remember exactly in absolute detail what happened.
Because every time we revisit a memory, we add something to it.
You know, the environment that we're in might trigger a memory, but we're now adding to that memory with a new experience.
You know, our memories, every time we replay them,
something else is being added all the time.
We embellish it and we add to it and we make more of it or we make less of it.
So the best way to make sure that we remember absolutely
is write things down in real time.
So if we want to have a good record of something,
make a note of it or record
it in some way so that you can revisit. I guess this is why people keep journals and they then
will remember the detail of what happens. The more emotional a memory is, the more it's highlighted
in the brain as a memory. But even then, we don't always remember exactly.
And memory does decay over time.
It's called decay.
And so it decays quite a bit.
And if we don't revisit memories, we don't replay them, then we do lose them.
So it's, you know, it's often good to go back and play memory games to keep the memory part of the brain really active and stimulated.
Because it's, you know, if we lost our memories, I mean, who would we be?
You know, it's horrible to think of a world where we couldn't attach to the memories that we formed.
And we rely so heavily on our memories.
But the one thing to remember, and this is Daniel Kahneman, who wrote the book Thinking Fast and Slow. He talks about this, and he says our experiencing self is very different to our
remembering self. So we have an experience, and we will have the experience in real time. But the
way we remember an experience is very different to the experience itself. And an experience is often remembered
in a way that's clouded by the last thing that happens or something that somebody said.
So we have to remember that the experience, when we recall a memory of an experience,
we're not recalling the actual experience, we're recalling the memory. And this is why we
need people around us who remember different things to us and who see the world differently to us, because they take from an experience something different to what we take. And so't really understand it very well, is this thing we hear now about the gut-brain connection. Can you talk about that? about because the brain, the cranial nerves, that we have 12 cranial nerves, and one of them
links the brain and the gut. And messages go brain to gut, gut to brain. But a lot of our
happy chemical serotonin, which promotes feelings of well-being and relaxation and feeling that all
is well with the world, that's called serotonin.
A lot of that sits actually in our gut and not our brain.
And most of the messages don't go brain to gut.
They go gut to brain.
People with mental disorders and diseases like depression or schizophrenia
often have gut problems that are comorbid with the psychological problems. So,
you know, the gut doesn't, it doesn't sit on its own. We can't look at the brain
in isolation. We have to look at the body and the brain as an entire system.
And so when people talk about mental health, I think we've got to look at the whole health. We
can't just look at mental health, because what we actually choose to
eat will affect our mental health. So we have to really think about what we're putting into our gut
and make sure that the food we're putting in, they're not containing empty calories,
they're actually going to do something of good for us. And to maintain the body's balance,
because everything, the brain and the body are designed
to stay in balance.
But when the world is out of balance, our systems go out of balance too.
So we have to find ways of consciously rebalancing our systems by being more conscious about
the food we eat, trying to get better quality sleep and taking regular exercise. The brain
loves the body to move. It's designed for the body to move. And real brain development started
as we started to learn to move. So we've, especially our memory, our memory really started
to grow. Our memory structure started to grow when we learned to walk. So the brain needs the body to
move and move often. And yes, the brain loves cardiovascular exercises, quick bursts of activity
where we're pumping blood around the body and we're creating more oxygenation in the brain.
But we do need to get regular natural movement into our day-to-day activity as well. Well, there certainly
is a whole lot going on when it comes to what we do, what we say, the words we use, how we feel.
I appreciate you explaining all this. Helena Bashi has been my guest. She is a psychologist
and author of a book called Why We Do What We Do. And you'll find a link to that book in the show notes.
Thanks, Helena. Appreciate it.
Thank you very much, Mike.
Medicine and kitchen utensils don't mix.
Dosing medicine is serious stuff,
and some of us are a bit too casual about it.
Millions of Americans are hurt every year
by medication mistakes that could have been avoided.
And two of the most common errors involve kitchen utensils.
First of all, using a kitchen spoon to measure medications.
People do it all the time.
And they wind up taking either too much or too little of their medicine.
You see, the people who make kitchen spoons are not required to make those spoons hold exactly a teaspoon of liquid.
And they seldom do.
It's better to stick with a dosing cup
or maybe get a syringe that provides the right amount.
Splitting medication with a knife is just a bad idea.
Assuming you've got the okay from your doctor to split the pill in the first place,
you really need to use a pill splitter because uneven cuts mean uneven doses. And that is
something you should know. You know, the success of this podcast is due in large part to word of
mouth marketing. People like you telling other people how much you like it and suggesting they
give it a listen. And I hope you will continue that tradition and tell someone you know about
something you should know. I'm Micah Ruthers. Thanks for listening today to Something You Should Know.
Hey, hey, are you ready for some real talk and some fantastic laughs? Join me, Megan Rinks. And me,
Melissa Demonts, for Don't Blame Me, But Am I Wrong? We're serving up four hilarious shows
every week designed to entertain and engage and, you know, possibly enrage you. In Don't Blame Me,
we dive deep into listeners' questions, offering advice that's funny, relatable, and real. Whether
you're dealing with relationship drama or you just need a friend's perspective, we've got you. Then switch gears with But Am I Wrong, which is for listeners who didn't take
our advice and want to know if they are the villains in the situation. Plus, we share our
hot takes on current events and present situations that we might even be wrong in our lives. Spoiler
alert, we are actually quite literally never wrong. But wait, there's more. Check out See You Next
Tuesday, where we reveal the
juicy results from our listener polls from but am i wrong and don't miss fisting friday where we
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Hi, I'm Jennifer, a founder of the Go Kid Go Network.
At Go Kid Go, putting kids first is at the heart of every show that we produce.
That's why we're so excited to introduce a brand new show to our network
called The Search for the Silver Lining,
a fantasy adventure series
about a spirited young girl named Isla who time travels to the mythical land of Camelot.
Look for The Search for the Silver Lining on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.