Something You Should Know - Why Your Knowledge of Relationships is Mostly Wrong & The Art of Saying No - SYSK Choice
Episode Date: May 11, 2024Why is it you see people on the news every once in a while who claim to drink and smoke and eat a questionable diet – and still live to be 100 while healthy people sometimes die young? This episode ...begins by exploring this phenomenon and reveals what your odds of living to 100 on the whiskey and cigarette diet really are. Source: Dr. Robert Butler author of The Longevity Prescription (https://amzn.to/392khSV) You have likely heard of these sayings: • Love conquers all • No man is an island • A friend in need is a friend indeed • You can’t judge a book by its cover These sayings all have to do with relationships (or lack of) with other people. But are they true? Eric Barker has taken a hard look into the research on love and friendship and he joins me with some startling findings. Eric is author of the book Plays Well with Others: The Surprising Science Behind Why Everything You Know About Relationships is (Mostly) Wrong (https://amzn.to/3vQdZi9) While it is sometimes hard to say no to someone, how many times have you said yes and regretted it? If you could use some help on getting good at saying no and not feel so guilty about it, listen to my conversation with bestselling author Michael Tougias, author of the book No Will Set You Free. (https://amzn.to/3sm5HfF) Bananas are more interesting than you might think. First of all, you probably believe they come from a tree. They don’t. Also, a bunch of bananas is not technically called a bunch. And there’s more. Listen as I dazzle you with my banana knowledge which can then use to dazzle your friends.  https://www.britannica.com/plant/banana-plant PLEASE SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS! Indeed is offering SYSK listeners a $75 Sponsored Job Credit to get your jobs more visibility at https://Indeed.com/SOMETHING NerdWallet lets you compare top travel credit cards side-by-side to maximize your spending! Compare & find smarter credit cards, savings accounts, & more https://NerdWallet.com TurboTax Experts make all your moves count — filing with 100% accuracy and getting your max refund, guaranteed! See guarantee details at https://TurboTax.com/Guarantees Luckily for those of us who live with the symptoms of allergies, we can Live Claritin Clear with Claritin-D! eBay Motors has 122 million parts for your #1 ride-or-die, to make sure it stays running smoothly. Keep your ride alive at https://eBayMotors.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The search for truth never ends.
Introducing June's Journey, a hidden object mobile game with a captivating story.
Connect with friends, explore the roaring 20s, and enjoy thrilling activities and challenges
while supporting environmental causes.
After seven years, the adventure continues with our immersive travels feature.
Explore distant cultures and engage in exciting experiences.
There's always something new to discover.
Are you ready?
Download June's Journey now on Android or iOS.
Today on Something You Should Know,
why do some people smoke and drink and then live to 100
while some healthy people die young?
Then the surprising science of how well you understand other people. When it
comes to meeting strangers, we only predict their thoughts and feelings
accurately 20% of the time. With friends that hits 30% and with spouses it only
hits 35%. So whatever you think is on your spouse's mind, two-thirds of the
time you're wrong. Also what you probably never knew about bananas and how to get good at saying
no and not saying yes to everyone. Here's a little litmus test if there's too much yes in your life.
Are you stressed from being overscheduled? Are you getting enough sleep and me time? And then lastly,
is there one important project you've wanted to do for years but never found the time?
All this today on Something You Should Know.
Mama, look at me.
Vroom, vroom.
I'm going really fast.
I just got my license.
Can I borrow the car, please, Mom?
Kids go from 0 to 18 in no time.
You'll be relieved they have 24-7 roadside assistance with intact insurance.
Mom, can we go to Nana's house tomorrow?
Go to Jack's place today.
I'll just take the car.
Don't wait up, okay?
Kids go from 0 to 18 in no time, don't they?
At Intact Insurance, we insure your car so you can enjoy the ride.
Visit Intact.ca or talk to your broker.
Conditions apply.
Something you should know.
Fascinating intel.
The world's top experts. And practical advice you can use in your life. 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.
Have you ever noticed, usually it's on the news every once in a while, you'll see someone who's over 100 years old saying that they drank whiskey and smoked a pack of cigarettes every day
for their entire life.
And yet they still live to be 100.
So what's the deal?
Is it really all just a crapshoot?
Well, according to Dr. Robert Butler,
who's author of a book called The Longevity Prescription,
these kind of people are very rare.
And if you follow the liquor and cigarette diet,
it's not a good way to ensure that you'll make it to 100.
We know that 75% of the factors that determine how long you live are up to you.
That includes where you live, how you eat and exercise,
how you manage stress, all those lifestyle things.
25% of the factors have more to do with your genes and chance, good and bad.
Some people do everything right but die young.
Some people smoke and drink and live to 100.
But the odds are, if you take care of yourself, you'll live a long and healthy life.
And that is something you should know.
We all have relationships in life. And they're all different. We have friends, lovers, relatives.
Some of us have more relationships than others. Some of us are happy with our relationships.
Some of us are not. Human relationships are complicated.
Necessary, but complicated.
Eric Barker has taken a really interesting exploration into how human relationships work.
He is the author of a book called Plays Well With Others,
the surprising science behind why everything you know about relationships is mostly wrong.
Hi, Eric. Welcome.
It's great to be here.
So as a way of explanation, you looked at some of the things that we've all heard about relationships,
like love conquers all, no man is an island, a friend in need is a friend indeed.
And you really put these things through a stress test to see if they're true.
So let's
start with no man is an island, which refers to loneliness. What did you discover?
What was really interesting to me is that before the 19th century, loneliness didn't seem to exist.
The word was used, but it didn't have the negative connotation. And this is work by
Faye Alberti at the University of York. And I was
kind of shocked by that. But what she found was that, you know, back then we were all embedded
in communities or parts of religions, nations, you know, tribes, groups. And so we always felt
connected to something. And this ties in with the research where John Cacioppo, who's done a lot of
the work on loneliness, found that lonely people actually don't spend any less time with people than non-lonely people do, which again, kind of
shocking.
But the issue here is that we've all felt lonely in a crowd.
It's not just being proximate to people.
It's how you feel about your relationships.
Loneliness is a subjective experience of how you feel about your relationships.
Do you feel connected to people?
So I was really shocked because much like I'm sure most people, I felt like loneliness was
just an issue of having people around you, but it's really more of a gauge of how you feel about
how your relationships, how meaningful they are. And the flip side of that is, is there are people
who spend time alone who don't feel lonely.
Absolutely.
And Vivek Murthy, the Surgeon General of the United States, in his book, he talked about
how solitude is actually a positive thing.
Loneliness is correlated with nearly every negative health metric you can imagine.
But solitude, on the other hand, when we do feel like those connections are there, when
we do feel meaningful relationships with other people, spending time alone is correlated with creativity, you know, with insight.
It's really powerful, but it's that difference.
It's not so much are you approximate to people, you know, it's how are you feeling about your relationships distinguishes loneliness from solitude.
And while loneliness is terrible, solitude is something that's great for us. Well, I find it really interesting, and I hadn't heard it before you just said it,
that until, you know, 100, 200 years ago, loneliness wasn't even a thing. And given
what a big thing it is now, it makes you wonder what happened in that period of time that made
loneliness such a big problem.
Well, it's funny. Basically, the first time, the word lonely was used in plenty of texts,
but it just meant isolated. It didn't have that negative spin to it. And it was actually first
in Mary Shelley's book, Frankenstein, where we saw loneliness as this bad thing. And that's
because in the 19th century, we saw this explosion
of individualism. As we all collectively became more successful, we were able to be more
individualistic. We weren't as reliant on our groups for survival. And then this even expanded
more in the 20th century. Robert Putnam has done work at Harvard showing how it was television
that in many ways kind of replaced
a lot of our relationships. And in the late 20th century, that led to the decline of bowling leagues
and elk lodges and all of these communal activities. They kind of fell to the wayside
as television as what is called a parasocial relationship. You know, that relationship with those characters on TV in many ways came to
replace relationships or at the very least, it cannibalized some of the budget that we all have
for social time. And what was it about Frankenstein that introduced the concept of
loneliness? Was it just the monster was lonely? Yeah. I mean, at, at, you know, he feels apart,
you know, he doesn't feel like a normal human being and he wasn't, no, exactly. And he's caught
in this terror. He's caught in this terrible position where he's, he's not, he's not really
human. He's not really alive in that way. And he feels cut off distant. He doesn't have good
relationships. And so it's, it's kind of funny that that started us down,
kind of the big shift towards individualism
that happened throughout the 19th, 20th, and now the 21st century.
Well, it's hard to get the ladies when you've got these little plugs
coming out of your neck.
You know, I think that's like a real turnoff.
So does love conquer all?
I don't know where that comes from, but it doesn't sound right.
It goes all the way back.
That goes actually all the way back to ancient Rome.
That's been around a while.
And we all know it's like the United States roughly has a 40% divorce rate now.
So obviously, you know, love doesn't conquer all.
And there's been a lot of negative shifts in, you know, in marriage where it's become, you know, less stable. Like I said,
40% divorce rate, but that is leveled off, but it's leveled off largely because fewer people
are getting married. But while that may be a negative, the interesting flip to this is that,
you know, before we had, we had culture, we had groups, we had everything that kind of held
marriage together, that acted as constraints and boundaries, but that also limited people.
So now there's a lot more variability in marriage. Now, of course, that leads to divorce. But on the
flip side, the positive is if people put in the time, if they put in the effort, if they're
proactive about sustaining and vitalizing their marriage,
they can have the best marriages ever. This was worked by Eli Finkel at Northwestern University,
that the people at the high end, the happiest marriages are now happier than any marriage in
history. It's just that now it's love has gone from conquering all to winner-take-all, where the people at the far end of the happiness are super happy,
but a lot more people are falling at the tail end as well.
So we need to work a little harder,
but if we do, we can have the best marriages ever.
So you looked at the phrase,
can you judge a book by its cover as it relates to people?
So explain what you mean by that and and what you
discovered we all we have this image of sherlock holmes you know being able to you know immediately
look at people and dissect them you know be able maybe to be able to detect lies to be able to
read their thoughts and feelings and i just wanted to see it's like can we judge a book by its cover
should we judge a book by its cover and basically when you look at the preponderance of the research, we're really bad at this.
When it comes to meeting strangers, we only predict their thoughts and feelings accurately
20% of the time.
With friends, that hits 30%.
And with spouses, it only hits 35%.
So whatever you think is on your spouse's mind, two-thirds of the time, you're wrong.
We can improve that a little bit by being more motivated. When we feel like there's a loss or
gain, our brains will ramp up a little bit. So people on first dates are actually better people
readers than we are in general. That said, there's kind of a low ceiling on how good we can get at
this. And what I found in the research is that rather than trying to
make ourselves better at reading people, because we're only so good at that, the better strategy
is actually to try to make others more readable, to get them to send stronger signals that we can
use to better understand them. Yeah, well, that sounds like that would be very helpful,
but how do you do that? Well, that's something that's really interesting
because we have to step outside of just kind of our individual focus. What we need to do is first
think about context. If you're just meeting somebody for coffee, they're not going to be
sending very strong signals about who they are. But for instance, what if you were to play
basketball with someone? You'd see them quickly making decisions.
You'd see, are they a team player?
You'd see, do they cheat?
You'd learn a lot more from seeing people interacting with their environment, interacting
with others.
That gives us a lot more information than when we're just sitting there, they're not
doing anything, and we can only work from what they're telling us.
A second powerful thing is to involve other people in the process. I think we can all, you know,
agree that if you only dealt with someone in the presence of their boss, you're probably not going
to see the full them, you know. So, interacting other people can show us different facets,
different sides of someone. Beyond that, we need to get past talking about
the weather. There's research that has shown that when people actually talk about controversial
topics, you get a more accurate read. People enjoy the conversation more, surprisingly.
But we get to see how reactive they are. How do they react to more emotional topics? We get past kind of the pat lines and the politeness.
We get a better read on who they are.
So by looking at context involving other people and talking about more controversial topics,
we can get people to send stronger signals by which we can better read them.
I find that number that you gave, that we only are right about 35% of the time of what our partner
is thinking or what kind of mood they're in. And is that, am I correct? That's what you said?
35%. Yeah.
It's startling. I mean, that's ridiculous.
It's, it's really funny, but how many times have, you know, have you or I been misread by somebody else we're talking to?
What's interesting on the flip side of that is while we're very poor at empathically reading others, one thing that we're actually surprisingly good at is first impressions.
When meeting someone for the first time, our ability to pick up pick up on who they are, you know, in general, is probably about 70% accurate.
There's a lot of research on what's called thin slicing, where if you show someone a short video, a few minutes long of a teacher in a classroom, just watching a few minutes with the sound off, just a few minutes of watching them, people can judge with a fairly high accuracy
how competent this person is and a number of other personality traits, about 70% accuracy
when we're first meeting someone. But the double-edged sword of first impressions is that
while 70% is good, it's much better than 35%. However, that's also a D in school. So 70% is
good. But the problem with first impressions
is that while they're pretty accurate, we tend to lock onto them. First impressions do stick.
So what we need to do to read people better is to be ready to revise those first impressions,
because otherwise they stick with us. And if they're inaccurate, it can be really hard for
someone to get out of that trap of how we have judged them.
We're discussing the science of relationships and why so much of what we believe about relationships turns out to be wrong.
My guest is Eric Barker. He's author of a book called Plays Well With Others.
Metrolinks and Crosslinks are reminding everyone to be careful as Eglinton Crosstown LRT train testing is in progress.
Please be alert as trains can pass at any time on the tracks.
Remember to follow all traffic signals.
Be careful along our tracks and only make left turns where it's safe to do so.
Be alert, be aware, and stay safe.
This episode is brought to you by Melissa and Doug.
Wooden puzzles and building toys for problem solving and arts and crafts for creative thinking,
Melissa and Doug makes toys that help kids take on the world because the way they play today shapes who they become tomorrow. Melissa and Doug, the play is pretend, the skills are real.
Look for Melissa and Doug wherever you shop for toys.
So, Eric, what in doing this research was the one or one of the things that you found
that you believed that you found to be not true if there is one?
You know, much like many many people I really love the idea
of reading body language and subconsciously they're all cues that we
pick up on that help us size people up but conscious reading of body language
is actually not supported at all by the research it's we're really bad at it the
truth is that if you want to try and look for cues to try and read people better, forget body language.
What we need to think about actually more is their voice.
Because when we can hear someone, but we can't see them, our empathic accuracy only drops off about 4%.
But when we can see someone, but we can't hear them, empathic accuracy drops off 54%. So the voice has a lot more tells in it than what we see in somebody's movements because the issue with body language is we can't be sure if they're shivering because they're cold or they're shivering because they're nervous.
We can't be sure if they're drumming their fingers because that's a habit they have or if they're bored.
We don't know what those things mean, especially with new people.
We don't have a baseline. So we can never really know. So we should really focus on the voice
over looking at body language. And when we're listening to voice for those clues, is it just
instinct? We just sort of know it? Or do you have to be trained in how to do it?
No, our instincts are generally pretty good when it comes to voice.
They didn't in that study with the 4% versus 54% drop off, they didn't give anybody training.
So our voice, you know, we are pretty good at picking up on voice versus the subtleties and
nuances of body language are very idiosyncratic. You know, they're not as consistent. So we can,
we can kind of trust our judgment a little bit better when it comes to voice.
Anything else that really shocked you when you looked at this?
Anything that turned the tables for you?
One thing that was really interesting that I found was in terms of detecting lies, we're
absolutely terrible at it.
We normally, we only detect lies I think at about a 52% accuracy. So,
basically it's a coin flip. And while college students lie in about a third of conversations,
adults lie in about 20% of conversations. We lie most to mom, but we tell the biggest lies
to our spouses. But lie detection is always proven really hard.
And most of the stuff we hear in terms of the polygraph, for instance, doesn't work.
Because measuring stress and anxiety, that's not a proven lie detection method. What does work
is that telling lies is actually pretty cognitively intensive. We have to think a lot.
You have to think about the true story. You have to think about the fake story.
You have to make sure you're not, nobody's catching on to you.
You have to update those models in real time.
So what actually works in terms of lie detection is upping the cognitive load.
Making the person think harder is actually what has been shown to make a big difference.
And how we can do that is by asking unanticipated questions.
When we ask questions that the liar hasn't prepared for, they'll slow down, they'll have to
think, they'll stumble on their words, and we're much, much more likely to pick up on someone who's
not telling us the truth. Again, it's one of those things you like to think you're good at. Like,
I like to think I'm able to tell like when my kids are lying
and, and I'm probably not anywhere near as good as I think I am.
Well, the tricky part there is that exactly what you're saying, where we don't get good feedback
about whether we're lie detectors usually is because we don't, if somebody lied to us and
it was successful, we never find out. Right. While the flip side
is very different. Liars, if they get caught, they realize, oh, that didn't work. You know,
they're starting, they're getting feedback on whether their lies worked. Should they give more
details? Should I say it like this? So liars are generally improving while we're generally
not improving. And that puts us at a great disadvantage.
So let's talk about friendship.
You looked at the idea of a friend in need is a friend indeed.
So what about friendship?
The friendship research was interesting, frankly, because there just wasn't as much of it.
I really had to dig because with the love chat, there's plenty
of research on marriage and relationships and kids and families, but on friends, not nearly as much.
And that shows through because that's an aspect of, frankly, for many parts of friendship.
Friendship doesn't get the respect it deserves. And it should because research by Nobel Prize
winner Daniel Kahneman
shows that friendships make us happier than any other relationship. And even within a marriage,
it's the friendship aspect of marriage that is the most rewarding in terms of happiness.
And the reason for this is because with most of our other relationships, there's some sort of an institution, a contract of sorts
that keeps us in there. Friendship doesn't have anything like that. Somebody doesn't stop,
your kids don't stop being your kids. You know, if you were to stop liking them,
your spouse doesn't stop becoming your spouse. If you don't like your boss,
doesn't cease to be your boss. But if you stop liking your friends, they're not your friends
anymore. It's friendship is completely voluntary. And so because of that, that fragility of friendship keeps its purity.
So we really enjoy friends because if we didn't, we wouldn't see them anymore. So friendship is
incredibly rewarding, but it kind of doesn't get the support and attention that it needs.
And we really should think more about it because like I said, it brings us more happiness than any other relationship.
My observation is that women do friendship better than men.
And you are 100% true. This is totally true, is that most men, especially as they age,
especially after they get married, men tend married, their spouse tends to be kind
of the center of their social world, whereas women are much better at keeping up their friendships.
And this has a lot of negative effects on men, including health, because there's a lot of
research that basically shows if you look at women recovering from breast cancer, a spouse has no effect versus the number of close friends they have predicts recovery.
Men recovering from a heart attack, spouse has zero effect, but their friends, the friends tell you how many friends they have says how likely they are to recover. Robin Dunbar, a professor at Oxford, he looked at
all the research on happiness, I'm sorry, on health. And he basically said, what will
predict whether you are alive one year after having a heart attack? He says, basically,
it comes down to do you smoke and do you have close friendships? Sure, nutrition, exercise,
all that other stuff is nice, but heads and tails above everything else,
don't smoke and have good friendships. That was able to predict who would be alive a year after
a heart attack. What's one other thing, because we're almost out of time, what's one other thing
that you found in this research that I find so fascinating that maybe surprised you. John Gottman, who's the leading researcher on love and marriage,
basically found that 69% of ongoing issues that couples have never get resolved. And what's
interesting about that is that it's true of unhappy couples, and it's true of happy couples.
We're often much too focused on trying to resolve conflict as
opposed to regulate it. There's a lot of things that will just never get ironed out and that's
okay. It's true with, you know, couples that are happy. If we focus on, we have to resolve.
Typically we don't. What, what, what drives marriages into the ground, you know, isn't
fighting, you know, fighting, yelling and screaming only ends marriages about 40 ground isn't fighting.
You know, fighting, yelling and screaming only ends marriages about 40% of the time.
The rest of the time, it's usually due to the fact that people aren't communicating.
They're not talking.
Gottman found that complaining is actually a positive thing in relationships because it raises issues and they're allowed to be addressed.
You can discuss them.
But when we don't raise issues, they can't be solved.
And in our head, things often turn very negative.
We start to assume that our partner has bad intentions.
They're doing it deliberately.
They meant to do that.
And when we start to personalize it, that's when things, he calls it negative sentiment
override, where basically instead of that positive idealizing, positive
bias of love, it turns to a very negative thing. That's bad. So we need to be talking. In any
relationship, you know, you need to be talking, but especially in love, ongoing communication
is essential. Gottman was pretty funny about it. He said, you know, if you've been in a long-term
relationship and you've never had a big fight, please do that immediately.
Well, this is really fun to pull the covers back on relationships and look at the science behind it as compared to what we believe about relationships and how those things reconcile or don't. My guest
has been Eric Barker. The name of his book is Plays Well With Others, the surprising science
behind why everything you know about relationships is mostly wrong. And there's a link to that book has been Eric Barker. The name of his book is Plays Well With Others, The Surprising Science Behind
Why Everything You Know
About Relationships
Is Mostly Wrong.
And there's a link to that book
in the show notes.
Thanks, Eric.
This winter,
take a trip to Tampa
on Porter Airlines.
Enjoy the warm
Tampa Bay temperatures
and warm Porter hospitality
on your way there.
All Porter fares include
beer, wine, and snacks,
and free fast-streaming Wi-Fi on planes with no middle seats.
And your Tampa Bay vacation includes good times, relaxation, and great Gulf Coast weather.
Visit flyporter.com and actually enjoy economy.
This is an ad for better help.
Welcome to the world.
Please, read your personal owner's manual thoroughly.
In it, you'll find simple instructions for how to interact with your fellow human beings
and how to find happiness and peace of mind.
Thank you, and have a nice life.
Unfortunately, life doesn't come with an owner's manual.
That's why there's BetterHelp Online Therapy.
Connect with a credentialed therapist by phone, video, or online chat.
Visit BetterHelp.com to learn more.
That's BetterHelp.com.
There's a word a lot of us have trouble with, and the word is no.
We can't say it, or we don't say it often enough.
I'll bet you've said yes to someone in the last week or so and wish you hadn't.
But you don't want to let people down.
You want to be the kind of person who helps out.
You're a team player. You hate to disappoint.
Well, Warren Buffett had a great quote.
He said, between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say no
to almost everything. So how can you say no to people and not feel guilty about it? Well, here
with some great advice is Michael Tougias. He's a best-selling author, and he has a book out called
No Will Set You Free. Hi, Michael. Thank you for having me. So No Will Set You Free, what does that mean?
Free from what?
Set you free from other people's agendas.
We're constantly being pulled in different directions and research has shown just how
uncomfortable people are saying no or no thank you to a friend asking a favor
or even a stranger asking a favor.
In fact, one study, strangers were asked to do all sorts of crazy things,
and the people who were recruited to ask them thought, oh, they'll never say yes to this.
But they did, not because they wanted to do it,
but they later said it was because they're so uncomfortable saying no.
They agreed to do things they didn't even want to do.
And I think there's a little bit of that in all of us.
Yeah, well, I think there's this sense that if you say no, if you adopt a philosophy of saying no,
that you're being pretty selfish and you're letting other people down, and gee, I don't want to do that.
Exactly.
And I do think that's where the origin comes from of why we say yes.
But if you take a step back and think, okay, if I say no, I'm leaving more time for the
things that are really important in my life.
And they may not just be your own goals and your own family. It could be
helping someone in need. And sometimes it could be as simple as someone who talks and talks and
talks on the phone. But you're not being selfish at all because you're leaving that time for what's
important to you or someone who's really in need.
And the people that you say no to, I think we think when we say no that they're devastated,
that they're going to hate us forever. And I suspect that's often not the case.
Exactly. There's even a phrase psychologists use for that very feeling that we have, and it's the harshness bias is what they use, that we think they're going to be devastated, and they're really not.
They rebound pretty quickly. You know, sometimes a simple no thank you will do. Other times where
you think this person's going to come back to you at a later date, I use an example of how a friend
wanted me to go to a Patriots game in the middle of the winter,
and that's just not my thing to sit in the cold stands and wait in line.
So I had to explain the reasons why I was turning down this really nice offer
and trust that his feelings would not be hurt.
And I said, sometime we'll watch the game at my house indoors
when you don't have tickets.
And he wasn't hurt.
He understood.
He goes, I get it.
So I think we tend to judge the reaction of other people a little too harshly
when they usually are respectful of your no.
And it's up to you whether you want to give a reason or not.
And, you know, Mike, some people are so uncomfortable your no. And it's up to you whether you want to give a reason or not. And, you know, Mike, some people are so uncomfortable saying no. I say,
in their early stages, don't even use the word no. Say something like, let me sleep on it.
Let me check my schedule. Anything to buy you more time. And for the person who's really
uncomfortable saying no, then you can get
back to them by email or in a text saying, oh, I can't make it, but thank you for asking.
But if you're going to say no, isn't it a little dishonest to say, let me think about it? You
already know you're going to say no, so why don't you just say no?
I say no now that I'm confident in saying no, but I think for someone who's really new to it,
and there's a ton of people that they just can't bring themselves to do it. So I'm like,
take baby steps. Use a fallback approach. Let me get back to you. Let me sleep on it. Let me
check my calendar. Let me check with my spouse, all these kind of
things that buy you a little more time until you're comfortable enough to say,
no, that just doesn't fit, or no, I prefer not to do that. But, you know, that's a few steps
down the road for somebody who's been a people pleaser their whole lives.
It does seem, though, that there are some people that are easier to say no to than others.
It's certainly hard to say no to your kids. It's really hard to say no to your boss.
It's very situational. I mean, I can say no to some people real easy. Other people,
it's very difficult. Yes. And another gauge would be that the need basis. Is this someone in real need? You know, say that person who asked me to
the outdoor football game came to me and said, I'm going through a divorce, I could use some company.
Well, then it's going to be a yes from me. There's real need there. He's reaching out.
So I think it depends largely on the situation. And kids are hard. It's hard to say no to kids.
I'm thinking of one example with my kids.
I wanted them to learn a little bit about the value of money.
Both my kids were young at the time, say, I don't know, six and eight.
They wanted this fan that squirted water,
and they had already bought something at the store, and I said no.
And they said, oh, this would be fantastic.
And I said, if you really want it, use your own money.
And they said, really?
And so I said, yeah, when you get home, you're going to pay me for this.
So they said, we really want it.
So when they got home, I made them pay me for it.
And to this day, they bring that up going, remember the time Dad made us pay for the fans?
But when I talk to them, they go, yeah, it was a good lesson.
We used that band one day, and then we stuck it in a drawer.
So you have to learn to your children, or you're going to find you've got a 30-year-old living in your basement.
So what's the advice?
Oftentimes I'll say yes to somebody thinking I
want to say yes and later think, God, I wish I'd said no. How do you decide in the moment,
yes or no? My litmus test is usually, I'll pause and I'll think about the time commitment.
And I'll think about, am I excited by this request?
If it's, you know, to do an activity or to go somewhere.
And if I'm not excited and not thinking this is going to bring me joy,
and it's a big time sucker and I have some other ideas for the use of my time,
I will say no because, you know,
the bottom line is you don't want to be living somebody else's agenda. You want to be living
your own path. And our time is the one thing we can control. And most of us,
that boils down to weekends and nights after work. And that's where you really need to be
firm on how you're
going to spend it. Well, there are also those requests that the implication is that if you say
no, you're not a good person, that, you know, you're supposed to volunteer here, you're supposed
to do this at the school, or you're supposed to do that. And if you say no, even though you may
have to, even though you may want to,
you're made to feel like, you're kind of, you're a bit of a disappointment.
And I'm not advocating turning down every opportunity to do volunteer work, but it's truly picking your spots and how it fits with your schedule rather than the requester's schedule.
Because usually the requester is doing it because they need the help now, and it fits with their schedule to have you do it on this time, on this date.
And you need to push back at times and say, no, I cannot do it next week.
My plate's full.
I might be able to take a look at this a month from now.
Why don't you get back to me? So there's different ways to go about it and not feel like you're not
doing your share when it comes to things. But the bottom line is only you know your own
stress level of how much your time is being pulled in different directions.
Since the title of your book is, you know, No Will Set You Free,
the implication there is that, you know, when you get good at this, that you'll feel better.
But I would imagine that in the process, if you're used to saying yes,
if you're a people pleaser and you start telling people no, you're going to feel lousy.
I think you're going to feel lousy. I think you're going to feel liberated.
I know I do.
When I say no to requests, I go, wow, good thing you did that.
You would have been miserable doing that request.
No, I mean, though, in the beginning, if you've been people-pleasing all your life
and now you're going to try to take a stand here and start, that in the beginning, it's going to feel kind of bad because you're the
person everybody can rely on. But when will you ever stop being that person? You know what I mean?
You have to start somewhere. And again, it might be with the baby steps of let me get back to you rather than a no.
But I think to take back control of your own life, you're going to have to set these boundaries. You know, I'll use an example of, say, a homemaker where nobody else is pitching in.
And she's raising, if it's a female, she's raising the issue of, hey, I'm doing all the work.
Nobody's helping with the dishes, the cleaning.
A way to get their attention, because none of your talk is working, is to go on strike.
That'll get their attention in a hurry.
And, yeah, it may be uncomfortable for a while when the dishes are piling up,
but people are going to notice,
and then you're going to have a sit-down meeting and saying, I need help here.
We need to split this equitably.
It can't always be me stepping up and doing the work.
I also hear this a lot in family situations. Say it's older parents and the siblings are chipping in, it almost always seems like there's one sibling
doing way more than everybody else, and the resentment starts forming. And you really don't
want it to get to that point, because then you're going to have issues with your brothers and
sisters that might form a chasm between you that never gets resolved. But if you step up in the
beginning and say, okay,
somebody else needs to pitch in at this point. I've done the last three weeks straight.
Well, there are those people, I guess, in everyone's life where you don't even want to ask them because they have set the boundary so clearly that you don't even ask because you know
the answer is going to be no.
And in some ways I kind of admire those people,
that they've made it very clear and consistent that, you know,
this is where the line is, and other people are just not as good at that as he or she is.
Yeah, there's no doubt about that some people are better than others.
I mean, I've come a full 180 to being the ultimate yes man
to now carving out time for myself.
And I still have the slip-ups when I kick myself later,
go, why did I agree to that?
But usually when the stress level's building in my life, it's my own fault.
I can't blame it on somebody else.
So, yeah, there are some people that do a better job than me,
and that's an issue for all of us.
But I do think the beginning is with those baby steps
and see what happens of saying, let me get back to you,
rather than giving the rote yes,
because you've been trained to say yes.
Those people have been doing it for years.
They've probably never said a no or never said, I'll get back to you.
I may not be able to fit this in.
And yet we do say no when we have to.
I mean, if somebody asks you to do something and you're going to be out of town,
you have to say no, and that's a good enough reason, but why can't the fact that you don't want to do it also
be a good enough reason? Yeah, no, it should be. It should be. But again, I think it's that
training when we were kids to be polite. You know, it just goes down the line in terms of society is telling us all the time, go for it.
You know, seize the moment.
And that's true as long as the moment's going to bring you joy.
But there's a flip side, too, and that's having time for yourself.
Here's a little litmus test if there's too much yes in your life.
Are you stressed from being overscheduled? Are your closest friends and family members
expressing feelings of neglect? Are you getting enough sleep and me time? Are you able to enjoy
your favorite pastimes without watching the clock? and that one fit me pretty good.
Do you leave tasks unfinished and often need last-minute help?
And then lastly, is there one important project you've wanted to do for years but never found the time?
And wouldn't it be awful to be towards the end of our years and go,
wow, I always wanted to do this one thing
and just never found the time because I was pulled in a million different directions.
To me, that would be the ultimate regret, that you didn't have the wherewithal to say no
so that you could focus on the one thing you always wanted to do.
Well, and there is that image, too, that saying no is very selfish, that you're being, it's
all about you, and you're not willing to help other people, and he's always saying no, and
you need to be more help.
And it's true.
And if you're always saying no when it's your turn to step up, you know, if it's a family
member or someone in need,
that is being selfish. But if you're saying no to all the little things that are pulling at your time, then you're actually creating some space to help the person or the cause in need that's
important to you. I mean, it could be as little as saying no to some things, not to another person, but to some things that are chewing up your time, like social media or long-winded phone calls.
And, you know, the list goes on and on that you're not saying no to another person, but you're cutting back on it. I had a friend who said, yeah, you know, through the COVID pandemic, I got in this
habit of Zooming once a week with this friend, but these Zooms went on forever. And I said, well,
you know, that's because you agreed to the schedule. It was going to be every Wednesday
at 7 p.m. Say, let's get off the schedule and we'll do it as our time allows. So you haven't
said no to that friend, but you've definitely said no to every Wednesday.
You're going to listen to this person ramble on for two hours.
What else?
Anything else in the research that people would be interested in hearing about no
and why it's better to become more of a no person and maybe a little less of a yes person?
You know, I looked up some historic no's where people are under pressure to say yes and go with the group.
And I'll give one example.
John F. Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis.
You know, when we discovered the missiles in Cuba, the consensus at his executive meetings,
you know, his closest advisors, the military, was to immediately strike Cuba right away
with a massive airstrike, take out all the Soviet installations.
And, you know, the pressure was enormous on this 45-year-old president, but he delayed.
He didn't say no right away.
It was very interesting.
All this is on audio tape, too.
He secretly recorded the meetings.
But thank God he didn't get pressured into the yes, which is where everybody else at these meetings was heading.
And then by the second and third day, he's starting to push back.
Well, if we do that, don't you think this and this will happen?
And pretty soon it became a firm, no, we're not going to do that right away.
We're going to take another step first, and that would be the maritime blockade.
So I always admire the people that are able to withstand the pressure,
the peer pressure, and say, no, let me think about this, which is in essence what Kennedy did,
and then came to the conclusion of, no, I disagree with all of you,
and we're going to take this in steps, because there's no turning back if we go full at it.
Yeah, well, but the thing I have trouble with about that, let me think about it, is
if you know you're going to say no, you're really kind of giving them false hope and
sucking up the time that they could be looking for somebody else to do it while they're waiting
for you to answer, and you know all along your answer's going to be no, so you're really making it harder on them.
That's a good point, and I think that's true.
So I think when you're comfortable saying no, you're going to want to say it right off
the bat.
But for the people who are very uncomfortable and have really never said no before, just
getting the word out of their mouth, no thank you, was almost impossible
for them. I've talked to some of these people, and I said, well, then go to plan B, which is
buy yourself more time, and then you can deliver the news. Right, well, and it depends on what
they're asking, and it depends on a lot of things, but you could also telegraph, I guess. You could
say, well, I probably can't, but let me
think about it. So you're at least letting them know that this is most likely going to be a no.
I think that's a great early stage step if you can't come right out and do the no. And maybe
you're unsure yourself. Maybe you're not even 100% sure. Maybe it's a maybe. And so I agree that that's not a bad
approach of saying it doesn't look good, but let me check a few things and I will get back to you.
You know, as I think about it, many of the times that I've said yes and later wished I'd said no,
I had a sense at the time. At the time I was asked, I probably knew that I didn't really want
to do it. And I ignored that and said yes anyway. And maybe I and everybody else needs to pay
attention to that. Michael Tougias has been my guest and the name of his book is No, We'll Set
You Free. And you'll find a link to his book in the show notes. Thanks, Michael. Okay. Bye-bye now.
What do you call a bunch of bananas?
Well, I call them a bunch of bananas, but technically that's wrong. A group of bananas, the way you see them in the supermarket, is called a hand,
and the individual bananas are called fingers.
Bananas grow in clusters with tiers.
Each tier, or hand, can have up to 20 bananas on it.
A bunch of bananas refers to the entire cluster with all the tiers.
Commercially, that's referred to as a banana stem.
And since we're getting so technical, why are we getting so technical?
The banana tree is not really a tree at all.
It's actually a giant herb, and the banana is the fruit of that herb.
Bananas are believed to be the first fruit ever cultivated by human beings. They didn't come to this country until 1876 and were first seen at the Philadelphia Centennial
Exhibition.
And that is something you should know.
If you will tell your friends about this podcast, then they too can impress their friends with
their knowledge of bananas.
So please share something you should
know with someone you 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 for hilarious shows
every week designed to entertain and engage and, you know, possibly enrage you. In Don't Blame Me, But Am I Wrong? We're serving up for 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 catch up, chat about pop culture, TV, and movies. It's the perfect way to kick off your weekend.
So if you're looking for a podcast that feels like a chat with your besties, 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.
Hi, I'm Jennifer, a founder of the Go Kid Go Network. At Go Kid Go, putting kids first is Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.