Something You Should Know - The New Science of How We Learn & How To Prevent Arguments From Happening
Episode Date: July 31, 2023On a hot summer day, lots of things can get dangerously hot. Your street, the dashboard and steering wheel inside your car, even your patio furniture can get hot enough to burn you. Listen as I explai...n just how hot. https://www.rd.com/article/things-that-get-dangerously-hot/ Why are some things harder to learn than others? Why do some people seem to learn things faster? Are there ways to make learning something easier? Joining me to explain all this and other aspects of the science of learning is Daniel Willingham. He is a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia and author of several books including Outsmart Your Brain: Why Learning is Hard and How You Can Make It Easy (https://amzn.to/43Lkb8N). Arguments happen – a lot. Yet, what do they accomplish really? The fact is they often leave people more polarized and upset than before. What if people could resolve problems without arguing? What if we could prevent arguments from happening in the first place? That is what Linda Bloom specializes in. Linda and her husband Charlie are veteran marriage counselors and seminar leaders who have authored several books including An End to Arguing: 101 Valuable Lessons for All Relationships (https://amzn.to/3Y5J5yR).  There is this old advice I’m sure you have heard that when you are really upset, you should count to ten before you say or do anything because that will calm you down and prevent you from doing something you later regret. Is that really good advice? Listen as I explain some interesting research. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2168645/Angry-Counting-worst-thing--makes-furious.html PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! Indeed is the hiring platform where you can Attract, Interview, and Hire all in one place! Start hiring NOW with a $75 SPONSORED JOB CREDIT to upgrade your job post at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING Offer good for a limited time. Discover Credit Cards do something pretty awesome. At the end of your first year, they automatically double all the cash back you’ve earned! See terms and check it out for yourself at https://Discover.com/match U.S. Cellular knows how important your kid’s relationship with technology is, so they’ve made it their mission to help them establish good digital habits early on! That’s why they’ve partnered with Screen Sanity, a non-profit dedicated to helping kids navigate the digital landscape. For a smarter start to the school year, U.S. Cellular is offering a free basic phone on new eligible lines, providing an alternative to a smartphone for children. Visit https://USCellular.com/BuiltForUS ! We really like the Freakonomics Radio podcast! Check it out at https://freakonomics.com/podcasts OR search for it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you listen! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today on Something You Should Know,
just how hot does your car's dashboard get on a hot sunny day?
Then, the science of how we learn.
For instance, is cramming for an exam better than studying a little over several days?
If you do not care about remembering this content after the exam, you're actually better off cramming.
That said, if you want to remember content beyond the test, then cramming is terrible.
Also, when you're angry, is it really good advice to count to ten to calm down?
And how to stop arguing in relationships?
By asking for what you want up front.
It is a myth that if you loved me, you'd read my mind and you'd give me what I need to feel
loved and I wouldn't have to ask you.
And I think that in every great relationship, people are really up front about what their
needs are.
And it takes courage.
All this today on Something You Should Know.
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Something you should know. Fascinating intel. the world's top experts, and practical advice you can use in your life.
Today, Something You Should Know with Mike Carruthers.
Hi, welcome to Something You Should Know.
This episode is being recorded and published in the middle of summer, and many parts of the world are experiencing heat waves.
And when the weather is hot outside, other things heat up as well.
Some heat up a lot.
And here are a few things that can really burn you in the summer if you're not careful.
Blacktop.
A parking lot or a street that is black can get as hot as 140 degrees during extreme temperatures.
To put that in perspective,
humans begin to feel pain at 111 degrees. At 118 degrees, you can experience first-degree burns.
So if blacktop is 140 degrees, your feet and your pet's feet can get seriously burned.
Patio furniture. If your patio furniture is sitting in direct sun and you sit down on it,
it can be between 104 and 136 degrees in the sun.
Your car's interior.
According to a 2018 study,
the internal temperature of a car parked in the sun
can reach 117 degrees in just one hour,
making it deadly for anybody sitting in that car without air conditioning.
And the steering wheel.
The surface temperature of a steering wheel in one study reached 127 degrees
in a car that was parked in the sun for one hour on a 100-degree day. The dashboard averaged 157 degrees and the seats 123 degrees.
And that is something you should know.
As you no doubt learned from a very early age,
learning something new and learning something well can be hard.
What makes it hard?
Is it the process we use to learn?
Are some things just hard to grasp?
Maybe learning new things is supposed to be hard.
But some people learn things faster than other people.
Is there a right way to learn something?
Can you make learning easier?
Well, that's what Daniel Willingham is
here to discuss. Daniel is a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia.
He's the author of several books. One is called Outsmart Your Brain, Why Learning is Hard and
How You Can Make It Easy. Hi, Daniel. Welcome. Welcome back to Something You Should Know.
Thanks so much. I'm delighted to be here.
So this probably seems like a self-evident question, but the learning process, I think most people experience it as difficult. Learning something new is difficult. Why is it difficult?
Yeah, the thing that's really tricky about learning is that our brain kind of fools us. We naturally go for
sort of mental processes that feel in the moment like they're working and also are not all that
difficult to use, which sounds like pretty good poker. It sounds like a good strategy.
But these frequently end up being processes that are okay. They're not completely
useless, but they're not all that effective either. Let me give you the analogy that I like
to use. Suppose that you've got a friend who is trying to train athletically and they want to be
able to do a lot of pushups. So you go watch them train one day and you come on them and they're doing push-ups on
their knees and you say, wait, if you want to be able to do a lot of push-ups, shouldn't
you be practicing regular push-ups?
In fact, shouldn't you be practicing really hard push-ups like the ones where you launch
yourself off the floor and clap?
And your friend says, yeah, a couple of people told me that and I tried it, but I can hardly do any of those.
And look, when I do them on my knees, I can do them really fast.
And I, you know, it's easy too.
I can do lots of them.
So when we're trying to learn new things, frequently we end up doing the mental equivalent of pushups on our knees.
We do things that feel in the moment like they're really effective and have the added bonus of not feeling that difficult to do.
And again, it's not completely useless to do push-ups on your knees, but in the long run, it's not the most efficient way for you to practice.
And so give me examples of push-up on your knees for learning.
I think one of the most common is when people are trying to commit something to memory,
they'll read it again and again.
This is very common in students, but adults do this as well.
And reading over something is not very effective.
The reason it's not very effective is there's a difference between something being easy to recognize, something
feeling familiar, and the type of knowing that allows you to actually use the information,
talk about it. So let me elaborate on that just a little bit. Psychologists use the term
familiarity very much the way it's used in everyday conversation. When we say somebody
looks familiar who we run into on the street, we mean, I know that I've encountered them before,
but I don't have any more information about them. So familiarity, that judgment is made very,
very quickly by the brain. And determining that you have even more information about the person might take longer,
right? So, that sounds more complicated than it really is. We've all had this experience.
You see someone on the street and you say like, oh gosh, I know I know that person.
Now, let me think, how do I know them? And you start saying, do I know them from work?
Do I frequently see them at a store I go to? So essentially, you're sort of giving your, trying to generate memory cues for yourself
to see whether you can get more information.
And sometimes that works.
So notice that this feeling of familiarity comes very, very quickly.
And then slowly you can coax more information out of memory.
So we're used to the idea that when something is highly
familiar, probably you're going to be able to get more information about it. But that doesn't
always happen. And when you read over something again and again, what you're doing is definitely
boosting familiarity, but you may not be doing the type of memory. In fact, you're probably not doing the
type of mental exercise that's really good for this other type of memory where you have more
information besides, I know I've seen this before. So my experience is that learning is a lot easier
if you like what you're learning versus learning, particularly in school, some subject that you just don't like.
I mean, it's night and day, it seems.
Liking something is being interested in something is prompting you to think about it more deeply.
And it's the meaningfulness that's leading to the good memory.
So, for example, we've also all had the experience of someone asking you to watch a documentary
about making guitars or about type fonts or something that you're just like, I have no
interest in this at all, but your friend kind of forces you into it and you find yourself
completely fascinated. And when that happens, you are definitely going to remember it more closely. And that's because
you are paying attention. You're thinking about meaning the information is sort of organized and
you're connecting it to other things that you already know. That kind of thing is really good
for memory. What about when you know, when you're
learning something and you're having trouble with it, then you start to worry about having trouble
and it makes the learning harder because you're freaking out, you're getting all worked up and
anxious about the fact that you're not learning this right. Absolutely. I mean, I think, Mike, there are actually two ways that this can happen.
You're feeling anxious, as you said, freaking out. And we know anxiety can't be good for memory.
One of the things that anxiety is going to do is you can't really think very carefully about
what it is you're trying to learn because because you're sort of in mental overload,
thinking about how terribly this is going. And the fact that, you know, maybe it's math,
for example, you know, I'm never able to do math, and this is going to be terrible,
and I'm going to fail this course, and then I won't be able to get my degree, you know,
you have these cascading thoughts associated with anxiety.
And there's just no space for the math because you're just completely occupied with those anxious thoughts.
The second thing that can happen is you become obsessed with your self-image. You're thinking about yourself as a learner and the way you interpret your experience.
So if I think of myself as someone who's usually pretty successful in, suppose I'm at the office
and I'm trying, there's some new computer system we're using.
And I'm told, you know, we all have to use this, can't use the old one anymore.
You have to learn this new one.
And I think of myself as someone who's usually pretty good with tech things. Then when
things go wrong and I make a few mistakes with this new technology, I'm not very bothered by it.
I'm going to persist. I'm going to think like, well, you know, I have a history of success with
these sorts of problems. So, you know, if I hang in there, I'll get the hang of it. I'll figure it out. In contrast, if I think of myself as someone who's not very good
with technology, then I interpret setbacks very differently. Then I think, yep, see, here we go
again. This is what always happens to me when there's some technology thing that I'm supposed
to learn. I just can't do it. And then I'm very quick to want to give up and try and find some other way to deal with this problem besides overcoming it and learning it.
So it's like a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If you believe you're not good at learning technology, you're not going to learn technology very well because you believe you can.
I think that's right. Yeah, this persistence in particular,
persistence in the face of setback is, I think, a really big part of this.
In all kinds of learning, right? I mean, it's hard. When it's hard, the tendency is to want
to give up, which is the opposite of what you probably should be doing.
Anything that you want to learn is probably going to have some aspect of challenge to it.
Things are going to go wrong, and you just have to be ready for it
and tell yourself that you're going to stick with it nevertheless and keep going.
We're talking about the learning process.
My guest is Daniel Willingham.
He's a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia
and author of the book, Outsmart Your Brain,
Why Learning is Hard and How You Can Make It Easy.
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So, Daniel, what do you say to people?
And everybody says this when they're in school is, you know, I'll never use this again. And like when I try to help my son with his homework,
this is stuff I probably learned, but I don't remember it anymore.
So what was the point other than to get through school?
But we seem to learn a lot of things we really don't need,
so there must be another reason.
Yeah, I think there are a few reasons.
The first is that more of this sticks with you than
you probably realize. So, one thing that might stick with you is very general approaches to
problems. So, in mathematics, for example, you may not remember how to solve particular types of equations.
But there may be very high level ways of thinking about problems, constructing problems. This is a
theory that psychologists have worked with and there's been some... A lot of psychologists think
this is probably right because you do see benefits, broadly speaking of education, people
who've been to school longer are sort of more resourceful when they're trying to solve completely
new problems. And so this is one theory is that you get these, you learn these very broad
problem-solving strategies while you're in school. So that's one reason.
A second reason that you may remember more than you realize
is that there's a particular type of memory measure
called savings in relearning.
And what this means is you may not really remember
when you're trying to help your son,
you're confronted with a problem.
But if it happened that you needed
to actually learn this content now,
it suddenly became relevant in your work and you tried to actually learn this content now, it suddenly became
relevant in your work and you tried to teach it to yourself, you would be faster in mastering
it now than if you hadn't learned it in school.
I actually experienced this personally.
I took French when I was in high school and by the time I graduated, I was fairly competent in
conversational French, competent enough that I didn't have to take it in college. I tested out
of it in college and really had no opportunity to speak French again. And then I found myself
going to Paris about 15 years after I had spoken any French at all. And I absolutely did not remember my French.
So I thought this is gonna be terrible,
but plunged into an environment
where French was being spoken all the time
and trying to relearn it.
I think after about 10 days,
I was pretty close to where I had been in high school.
I'd had this very, very rapid relearning of my French.
So in other words, it was kind of, the French was in there.
It was sort of in my data bank,
but just hard to access and then rapidly relearned.
So that's a couple of ways of thinking about the idea
that content may be in there,
even if you feel like you've forgotten
everything. And then the final thing, I'll just mention this briefly, is that if we decide,
oh, there's no reason to learn this because you're never going to use it.
Most of the time when students are saying that, or even parents, we're deciding at a pretty young
age that this is something you're never going to need.
And therefore, there are certain lines of work that may be closed off to you.
And that makes me anxious thinking about someone who's 15 and saying, well, you don't need
algebra, you're never going to use it because that may really hamper their ability to take more advanced mathematics and then
close them off to a lot of careers.
Well, maybe it was you because we've talked before, but if it wasn't you, it was somebody
else that said something that made me feel better.
And that is that when people like me in school think math is hard, the other side of that equation is that it's hard for me, but it's easy for other people.
And that the fact is that math is hard for everyone.
It's just that the math geeks enjoy that hardness, whereas I don't.
I hope I said that because that's a lovely way of putting it.
And I think that's right. It is hard for almost everybody. There are people who just one of the things I'm emphasizing when I'm talking to my students,
when I'm talking to my children, you know, and it goes back to what I was saying earlier
about the push-ups.
It's like, yeah, I mean, doing this well is hard.
You should expect it to be hard.
It's not going to be fun in the sense that, to a party is fun, but there is satisfaction that comes with learning something and feeling like, yeah, that was really challenging for me, but I'm happy to learning that seems to work that if you want to learn something, here's how you start.
Here are steps one, two, and three.
Or is everybody and every subject too different?
I think there are general principles you can draw that are pretty universal. The first one is that it's much, much easier to learn things that are
organized than things that are not organized. And this relates to something I mentioned earlier,
which is that memory really loves meaning. Things that are organized are meaningful.
I'll mention briefly sort of a classic experiment on organization if that's all right.
In this experiment, subjects came in and they were handed a tree diagram.
And the diagram, the pinnacle of the diagram said minerals.
And then branching off of that below to the left and right were metals and
stones. And then branching off metals were different types of metals and then likewise
stones. So, there was an organization to it. And the subjects were told, listen,
we want you to memorize these words. You see they're in this tree diagram. Don't worry about
that. We're not going to ask you to reproduce the tree diagram. We just want you to memorize the words. Other people were given
exactly the same instructions, but the words were randomized. The tree diagram didn't make any sense.
The broadest category was not at the pinnacle. And then everybody got, I think it was 10 minutes to try and commit things to memory.
And then there was a delay.
And then everyone just tried to list the words.
And as promised, the organization was not part of the test.
But the organization made a huge difference to how many words people remembered.
It was like 65% versus 19% memory of the words.
And it shows how enormously important organizing things, making them meaningful is going to be.
So that's probably the other others, but I think that's probably the most important principle you can point to.
One thing you hear students particularly talk about this is when you're trying to learn
something or well, when you're studying for a test, which means you're trying to learn something,
is it better to cram the night before or is it better to, you know, study for an hour one night
and then the next night and the next night leading up to the test? And, you know, there's arguments
on both sides. What do you say?
Students cram and cramming does from a certain perspective work. If you, suppose you're going to study five hours for an exam, are you better off studying all of those five hours the night before
the exam? In other words, cramming, or are you better off studying one hour for each of the
five nights before the exam? The answer is if you do not care about remembering this content
after the exam, you're actually better off cramming. You're certainly no worse off and
you're probably a little bit better off. So, this is very unfortunate for teachers like me because it leads to students'
perception that cramming is really effective and they're not completely wrong. That said,
if you want to remember content beyond the test, then cramming is terrible because your memory
really will nosedive right after the test. And there's
lots of experimental evidence that this really happens. You're much, much better off if you're
trying to remember for the long term to distribute your time several days before the test.
And of course, students tend to be interested in just the test, which is why cramming is so popular. Well, I find this really helpful in understanding how we learn things, how to make things easier
to learn, and the whole learning process.
Daniel Willingham has been my guest.
He is a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia.
The name of his book is Outsmart Your Brain, Why Learning is Hard and How You Can Make
It Easy.
And you'll find a link to that book in the show notes.
Thank you for being here, Dan.
Oh, awesome.
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 person
Intelligence Squared is meant for.
Check out Intelligence Squared
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Since I host
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And I tell people,
if you like something you should know,
you're going to like The Jordan Harbinger
Show.
Every episode is a conversation with a fascinating guest.
Of course, a lot of podcasts are conversations with guests, but Jordan does it better than most.
Recently, he had a fascinating conversation with a British woman who was recruited and radicalized by ISIS and went to prison for three years.
She now works to raise awareness on this issue.
It's a great conversation.
And he spoke with Dr. Sarah Hill about how taking birth control not only prevents pregnancy,
it can influence a woman's partner preferences, career choices,
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People argue all the time, especially couples.
And when you think about it, arguing doesn't really do much good.
You may have noticed it tends to polarize people.
They get mad.
They say things they probably shouldn't and often escalate a difficult situation,
making it even harder to resolve than before.
So maybe we need to stop arguing so much.
So how do you do that? What do you do instead?
That's what Linda Bloom is here to reveal.
Linda and her husband Charlie Bloom have been psychotherapists,
seminar leaders, and marriage counselors for quite a while,
and they've authored several books.
The latest is called An End to Arguing, 101 Valuable Lessons for All Relationships.
Hi, Linda. Welcome to Something You Should Know.
I'm delighted to be with you, Mike. Thanks for inviting me.
Sure. So what makes an argument an argument, and why is it so bad? Well, an argument is different from having an impassioned discussion.
Because when you go over that very crucial line to trying to coerce somebody to think
differently about the subject or to behave differently, you've already grabbed some ground and it's really not respectful.
I'm all about people being honest and forthcoming and having their opinions and their attitudes and
their viewpoints and even with intensity and, you know, determination about the way they express themselves, but to be cognizant of where that line
is, where it goes over to being coercive of the other person, because that's where the damage to
the relationship takes place. So yes, people need to be honest and open and forthcoming with each other, but be careful not to be a bully about trying to put
your views on others. So where's that line? Well, everybody has to be careful to see because it's
different for different people. It's a felt sense. You watch their body language. You watch their
facial expression. You watch if they tense up and
if you're treading a little too close then you need to back off and modulate your tone and be a
little bit more congenial about the way you're expressing yourself so very often in arguments
and conversations where there's conflict people feel the need to get it off their chest. I just need
you to hear what I have to say. Is that a good thing to vent your feelings or is that best not
done? No, I think it's important for people to express themselves. And I think there's a lot
of people who are conflict phobic, who sit on their opinions, on their feelings, on their needs, and they are
not forthcoming nearly enough. I call it going on the record. And I think it's really important
with all the people who we want to have a close and trusting rapport to have an agreement with
them that if we have strong feelings about something, that we have agreement in place that
we can express it. I think that's what great relationships are made of.
So put a real life example to that advice. What would it look like if, say,
Bob and Betty are having a discussion? Okay. So Betty wants more cuddling and she wants more eye contact and she to feel safe and secure
in the relationship with Bob. She wants to feel loved and she wants to feel loved in the way
that is soul nourishing to her. Bob might think that because he's got a good stable job and he
brings a lot of money home and he helps with the kids and the housework,
that that's enough. But Betty, she may need to hear, I love you, Betty. You're beautiful, Betty.
Why don't we just cuddle for a little while? And when Betty doesn't get that need met,
she's going to eventually be irritable and not be a happy camper with Bob. It's his
enlightened self-interest that he asks Betty, are your needs getting met? Are you feeling the love
that I feel in my heart for you? And when Betty says, I really need more kisses, I want you to kiss me goodnight every night. That would be a clear example of Betty
being courageous to ask what she wants, being vulnerable and expressing a deep need that she
has to feel safe and secure in Bob's love. Because without her feedback, Bob doesn't know. He may be
going along blissfully thinking that she's as happy as he is
in the relationship, and she may be withering on the vine. And yet so many people think that if you
have to say, if you have to ask for love, then there's something wrong, that the other person
should just know, it should just happen, it should just be. And if I have to ask you to cuddle me, well, then it's like the magic's gone.
Well, it's a romantic myth.
And you don't have to be in your teens or your early 20s to go at effect of the romantic myths.
And it is a myth that if you love me, you'd read my mind and you'd give me what I need
to feel loved and I wouldn't have to ask you and I actually suffered in my 20s with this
myth running me and had no idea that it was my own fear of getting vulnerable and asking
and I think that in every great relationship, people are really upfront about what their needs are. And if you ask, you may get refused, you may get rejected, and it takes courage to tell ourselves the truth and then to speak openly with the people in our life about what it is that really composes a satisfying relationship for us. And it's so
individual. Some people don't need that many words of affirmation. Some people don't need that many
acts of service. Some people don't need that much touch, but it's very individual and people need to
know themselves well enough to know what it is that they need and then be brave enough to stick it out there and ask.
So I want to go back and talk about this idea of stuffing things because I think here's what
happens a lot of the time that people don't say anything because you want to avoid the argument.
You wrote a book about avoiding the arguments. So I'm doing the
right thing. I'm letting it go. I'm letting it pass. I'm not going to say anything. This is
avoiding an argument and that's a good thing. And then, but then later when there's 15 things
stuffed in there, it all blows up. And you're making a very important distinction here. If you can really let it go, great.
We call that clearing.
If you can clear it internally, it's a great gift to the people in your life that you're
not holding onto it.
But if you're conflict phobic and you're just afraid to bring it up because you're afraid of having backlash.
You're afraid of being accused of being a whiner or complainer.
Do you know that's not really letting go?
That's stuffing. And it's up to each of us to know whether we're conflict phobic and whether we think conflict is dangerous or whether we can modify our belief and see that healthy conflict,
healthy interaction, healthy debates and discussion are really useful. And always
try, try to let go, try to clear it. And if you can't, then you got to speak up and bring it up. You say that you shouldn't pick your battles, but that's been a pretty common advice, to pick your battles.
Not everything is worth a discussion, which is kind of what you're talking about.
Some things you can let go, as you're saying, but only if you can really let it go.
Only if you can really let it go. Only if you can really let it go. And some things are
more trivial than others. And it's very important to prioritize what the most important issues are.
We can't deal with every little thing. And that's where the pick your battles guideline comes from. But if you have a mentality of the discussion being a
battle, that's going to predispose you to a win-lose orientation rather than a
win-win orientation. So we want to promote having a successful interchange where both people get to win by having a deeper
understanding, different than agreement, a deeper understanding of each other's point of view,
of each other's needs, of each other's feelings. And that is a win-win situation because they feel connected when they feel understood.
What if, though, the discussion is about something that is really, you know, you believe this or you
did this and, you know, that there's a real difference of opinion, this was right or this was wrong, that it is a conflict. It's a real conflict. And it seems so easy to
turn that into a fight. Yes. And every couple, even the happiest couples, have irreconcilable
differences. And the research is so clear about this. When they interview couples, when they first
fall in love, they first meet, they first decide
if they're going to get married or move in together. 40, 50 years and more later, they still
have those same differences. They don't homogenize. And some things we just have to make room for.
And Gottman is a researcher that I really respect and he talks about the
five-to-one ratio as long as there are five parts of your relationship that are
smoking good you can have this one part that doesn't really work and couples
have to have some areas where they just agree to disagree but it's important not
to have too many of those areas it's important to try to work out the
differences in as many areas as you can and it's important not to be too righteous and opinionated
the way I see it is the way it is to have a little bit more flexibility a little bit more
open-mindedness that there are a whole lot of ways of viewing
the world and what relationships are made of and what we really need to thrive.
And so what happens, do you think, from all the work you've done, why does this so easily
go wrong?
What typically goes wrong? What happens that this is such a
problem? Well, I think that there's a very strong influence and a lot of it's unconscious
of the loyalty ties to our family of origin. So people tend to play out the way their folks handled differences, even if it wasn't very skillfully done.
And the loyalty to the family of origin is still running them.
They tend to do it the way their family modeled for them when they were imprinted as young children. And if we don't stop to evaluate whether the things we learn from our
families are really working for us or working against our own best interests, we're in trouble.
Because a lot of families didn't learn. I'm not blaming our parents. Our parents did the very
best they could. They modeled for us and taught us the best that they knew but they didn't learn from their
families so i sometimes tell the counseling clients i'm working with that you have to be
guilty of the sin about doing our family that we need to learn more and better over and above
what they taught us so let's talk about something that happens, I think, a lot in conflict. And
that's when you're talking about something, you have a complaint about the other person,
they leave their socks on the floor, they don't put their dishes in the dishware.
Complaints, things you do that really bother me. And so it's hard not, it's easy for that to turn
into an argument because it's, you're doing something I don't like.
People fear complaints, and I think that complaints have a bad reputation because they get confused with criticism.
And man, it's a thin line to entry point to what we are committed to and what we really need. So at first, you may have
to speak your complaints out loud to get comfortable with them and create agreement with another person
that your complaints are valuable
because you want the relationship to be better. But when you get skilled at this, you can do
identifying the complaint internally and not have to speak it to the other person.
So you don't have to hurt and wound them and invite, you know, blowback. But when we stop with a complaint, that's only the beginning. We need to keep going
because the complaint is the indicator of what would work for me better is. If we go back to
Betty and Bob, Betty would say, when she's just in complaining mode, Bob, you don't kiss me and hug me and cuddle me enough.
And Bob's going to feel kind of depressed and discouraged. He thinks he's a good husband.
And here is Betty with the complaint. But if Betty admits to herself that she needs more
affection shown from Bob, she will take the complaint to him in such a respectful way, and she will give what she
wants to receive. She'll kiss on him more. She'll hug on him more because she'll have learned from
the complaint of what's not working and gone directly to resolution.
But what about something that's more like, you leave your clothes on the floor and that drives me crazy.
And and then the other person says, well, that's just what I do.
You know, it's really hard for me not to do that.
So suck it up and learn to live with it, because it's it's going to be you're going to be disappointed if you think I'm going to clean my clothes up because that's just not what I do. Uh-huh. If it's absolute,
I think that that's disrespectful not to show caring of the person who is daring to get
vulnerable and tell you what's unhappy. But I heard in the little scenario that there was a little bit of room would you be willing to at least try
your best because I would feel loved respected and cared for if I didn't have
to pick up after you so much I'll pick after pick up after you some as showing
my care of you to relieve you of that responsibility. I hope that you will meet me
with trying to at least, I don't mean you have to pick up every single thing, but if you would pick
up more, it would mean a lot to me. It would strengthen our relationship. If you have a
relationship that is important to you, you want the other person to be happy, to feel
respected and cared for and loved.
And this is an indicator of a way that I would feel your care for me.
So in your example, and this is something I really want to get to, is this idea, because
as you just explained it, it was very emotionless. But that's not how people
talk to each other. People get angry. They get mad. What do you mean I don't pick my clothes?
And it would be easy to do it the way you just said it if there was no emotion in it,
but it's those angry emotions that sweep people into pretty nasty arguments. You're absolutely right.
It's indulging our anger that leads to the blame game.
And by the time people have been sucking it up,
maybe picking up their clothes off of the floor for years,
and they're over it now, you know, by the time they start really speaking up, they're so toxic
with all the stuff that they've stuffed down for such a long time that it comes out angry,
accusatory, blamey. What the hell's wrong with you? I feel like I have more kids in the family,
not just our literal kids, but that you're one of the kids too wants me to be in the mommy role,
you know, full of blame, full of make wrong. And for people to take responsibility for their part in how unskillful they're bringing it to the other person's attention,
it can be full of emotion, but not full of rage. It can be full of emotion, but not full of rage.
It can be full of emotion of, I strongly desire to have an up level in our relationship.
I strongly want to feel cared for by you, loved by you.
And you're picking up after yourself would mean so much to me.
Do you hear the emotion in my voice? But it's not angry. It's appealing to them in a strong way,
but not in a blaming and accusatory way. You've been at this a long time. What is one thing that you see that over and over again that
people do in relationships that really bother you? Oh, Mike, people settle for so much less
than is available. They make some gestures towards each other and it doesn't go very well
and it ends up in an argument. So they just shut it down rather than persisting.
It really takes a lot of grit, commitment, persistence,
fall down, get up, fall down, get up, begin again, begin again, begin again
to grow a great relationship.
Sounds like a lot of work.
It's a lot of work.
It's a labor of love.
And the only thing that makes it worth all that work is because the benefits are bliss.
Well, when you compare your way to the more traditional, you know, let's get mad, hash it out and argue way,
it seems like your way makes a lot more sense.
I've been speaking with Linda Bloom.
She and her husband, Charlie, are psychotherapists, marriage counselors.
They've authored several books, and their latest is An End to Arguing, 101 Valuable Lessons for All Relationships.
And there's a link to that book in the show notes.
Thank you, Linda, for coming on.
Thank you, Mike. I've really enjoyed our conversation. Have you ever heard the advice that if you're really upset, you should count to 10 before you say something, and that will help prevent you from maybe saying something you
shouldn't or getting really, really angry? Well, researchers at Ohio State University say that's
actually a mistake. Apparently, all counting to 10 does is enhance your focus on how upset you are,
and it usually backfires.
Those who count to 10 are more likely to actually act aggressively once they get up to 10.
The researchers say the best way to keep your anger in check in the moment
is to try some self-distancing.
In other words, mentally remove
yourself from the situation by trying to watch it from the point of view of, say, a fly on the wall.
Of the many techniques they tested, that was actually the most effective. And that is something
you should know. If you'd like to share your thoughts about this podcast with the world,
we invite you to
leave a rating and review on Apple Podcasts or whatever platform you listen to that accept
ratings and reviews, and most of them do. I'm Mike Carruthers. Thanks for listening today to
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Hi, this is Rob Benedict.
And I am Richard Spate.
We were both on a little show you might know called Supernatural.
It had a pretty good run, 15 seasons, 327 episodes.
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We've got writers, producers, composers, directors, and we'll of course have some actors on as well, including some certain guys that played some certain pretty iconic brothers.
It was kind of a little bit of a left field choice in the best way possible.
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