The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - No.1 Neuroscientist: Age 30 to 50 Will Be Your Unhappiest, Here's How To FIX IT! - Dr. Tali Sharot
Episode Date: January 9, 2023Is the cup of life half full or half empty? Would you call yourself an optimist or a pessimist? What if you weren’t actually in control of this, but instead through the process of evolution your bra...in had been hardwired to be optimistic? Neuroscientist Dr. Tali Sharot calls this the ‘Optimism Bias’, it’s the belief that the future will be better, much better, than what has come before or even your current situation. This trick of the brain can effect how you remember the past and how you predict and plan for the future. In this episode, Dr. Tali Sharot discusses her groundbreaking work and the impacts it can have on all areas of your life, from relationships to career decisions. If you want to understand the mysteries of your brain this is a conversation not to be missed. Tali’s books: https://bit.ly/3XcChxF Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one. Just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to Jack
and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly to to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. You say that children
don't impact our happiness positively. I mean, that's a data. What are you going to do?
And that kind of got me worried, I have to say.
Dr. Tali Sheret, a leading expert on human decision-making, optimism, and emotion.
And her TED Talk has received over 14 million views.
I'm going to talk to you about optimism.
Kids and children, they're happiest and the most optimistic.
Then it goes down and reaches rock bottom in your midlife.
I'm 30 now, so I'm heading right down to rock bottom as we speak.
Any advice?
Yes, absolutely.
One of the startling things is you talk about how one tiny move up on the optimism scale
is worth an extra $33,000 a year in salary.
It's quite something.
So optimists, this is what they usually do. If something went well, they usually interpret that as something about them
that caused this positive outcome. Pessimists do the exact opposite. I got the job, but really
because they didn't have any other candidates. Is that negative explanatory style the road to
depression? There's a really tight link between depression and pessimism.
The question becomes, well, how do I enhance optimism?
So there's a few ways to do it.
I was thinking that everything you do is for happiness.
The happiness is actually one of three factors that matter.
So one is happiness.
The second is meaning.
And then there's a third
factor that's also really interesting, which is...
Tali, on the back of your book here, The Optimism Bias, it says you're one of the most innovative neuroscientists at work today.
How would you sort of define or categorize your own professional background?
So I'm, I guess I call myself a cognitive neuroscientist, which is really a mix of psychology and neuroscience.
And I'm mixed in behavioral economics as well.
So it's really a mix of all of that.
So I'm interested in how,
why human behave the way that they do
and why do they have the thoughts that they have
and the feelings that they have?
And I think to understand that,
you do want to understand what's going on inside the brain,
but then there's other fields
that give you a lot of really interesting insight,
including psychology and behavioral economics, even things like law as well, sociology, philosophy. So it's really a kind of interdisciplinary adventure.
And you studied both neuroscience and psychology at university and post grad?
Yeah. So I did my undergrad in economics and psychology. Right.
And in fact, I did that because at the time, neuroscience was not available for an undergrad degree in Israel in the whole of the country. So that wasn't even an option. Yes, this was a
kind of a long time ago. And then for my PhD, I did cognitive neuroscience, which is neuroscience
and psychology mixed together.
What was compelling on a personal level to you about studying those topics?
Why of all the things you could have pursued, why those things?
Very early on, I was just really interested in human behavior, right?
It's about understanding yourself, but also understanding other people around you.
And, you know, I think it's one of the most intriguing topics. And the brain was kind of a mysterious kind of organ that is orchestrating all of that. So I think it was just an interest in the world of life and the nature of human beings that um i'm sure
there's so many of them but were there any like real fundamentals that were um debunked or reversed
as it relates to your own personal perspective whether it's about personal responsibility or
about um i don't know agency or autonomy about how much control we have about how much influence
we have over our happiness were there anything foundational that had a real impact on your personal life?
You know, there's one thing that recently is just something that I recently changed my mind on.
And that was actually while writing
the current book that I'm writing,
which I'm writing together with Cass Seinstein,
who is the co-author of Nudge.
And it was actually, in fact, about happiness.
Because, and I remember this clearly,
I was in a workshop at the LSC, and they did a survey. They asked, who thinks that happiness
is the most important thing, right? That everything you do is for happiness. And everyone had to stand
on a scale. If you think it's all about happiness, stand here. And if you think it's not at all,
stand here. And I was standing here. I was thinking anything that we do, we do for happiness and that all that matters.
And while writing this book, actually, we both came to the conclusion.
And for me, it was a change of mind.
The happiness is actually one of three factors that matter.
So one is happiness.
The second is meaning.
A lot of things you do because it gives you meaning,
and it doesn't necessarily give you happiness. Sometimes the two go hand in hand, right? But
sometimes it doesn't. So you could do work that's meaningful, and it doesn't necessarily give you
happiness, and sometimes it does. And then there's a third factor that's also really interesting,
which is called a psychological rich life, which is basically variety. A lot of people
just do things for diversity, for variety, to try a lot of different things. And again,
sometimes it goes hand in hand with meaning and happiness, but sometimes it doesn't.
And that kind of explains why many times we make choices that we understand is not necessarily
going to gain us more happiness, but it will gain us some other thing, one of these two other things that together, I think, is what brings a good life.
Right. And that is something I think I changed my mind on, that we're not actually motivated for
happiness, probably defined as a good feeling, kind of joy.
Why variety? Why do humans care about having variety
in their life? I mean, there's kind of the unconscious evolutionary reason. Give me that one.
So I think it's exploration, right? To move forward, both as an individual and as a society,
we have to explore a lot of different things.
Some of these things are not necessarily going to give you happiness immediately
or for you at all.
But a lot of times, if you explore a lot of things,
you will find something that is going to be very important,
maybe for yourself, maybe for our species.
I always give kind of, you know,
the really simple example of our ancestors
leaving Africa to explore the rest of the world, right? They had,
I mean, why would they do that? I mean, either they thought there was something better for them
to find, right? And it was probably very hard to do. But that's just kind of an example of
exploration, right? You're trying different things. And I can see it in my own life, right? I often
do something and then I kind of,
okay, I had enough with this, let's try something else. And so variety is kind of a factor that I'm
trying to maximize. It's kind of a balance, right? It's exploration and exploitation, right? So you
need to do a little bit of exploitation because if you found something that works and something
that you're good at, you don't want to just leave it be. But on the hand if you just stick with one thing you may be missing a whole other a lot of different
things it's like farming and hunting it's like the analogy from that book who moved my cheese
when i think about um variety my brain was going well i know some people that get so caught up in
their comfort zones that they never go exploring and so so the thought that we'd be motivated or fulfilled by
variety, by new things, by adventure, seems to sit in conflict with a lot of people that I know
that are like stuck in a situation and maybe not happy, but there's more comfort in the known than
they are leaving that place and venturing out. Right, because exploration is risky,
because there's uncertainty.
You don't know what's going to happen.
Risk means that there's a high likelihood
of both good and bad,
and you just don't know where it's going to go.
And so that can cause fear.
Uncertainty is a state that usually people don't like
and don't enjoy.
And that's definitely something that keeps you in place.
And in fact, one of the kind of points that we make is that it seems that people are not making enough change in their life.
That a lot of times if people think about changing something in their life, maybe it's a relationship, maybe it's a profession.
It could be something stupid like, you know, the color of your hair or something like that. There is a great, fun little study that was conducted by the Freakonomic, Stephen Levitt.
What he did, he wanted to see if on average making a change when you think you might want to make a change.
This is not just like, oh, I think you should get divorced when you're not even thinking about it.
But when you're thinking about a specific change, on average, are you more likely
to be happy if you go ahead with a change or not, right? And this is a tricky thing to study because
normally you could say, well, let's test people. Let's ask them how happy they are before and after
they decide to make a change after they made a change. And then also let's do the same for people
who didn't make a change and see who's happier. That's not going to work because people who just
to go on and make a change,
they probably had more reason to do it, right?
So it's not kind of a good experimental design.
So he wanted to randomize whether people are going to make changes or not.
So what he did is he had people go online and he asked them,
are you thinking about a change?
And it could be small and it could be big.
And they said what the change was.
And then he had them flip a virtual coin.
So heads, you go with a change, you know,
you take the new job, tails you don't.
The likelihood that people would change
if they got the heads, the change was 25% more
than the people who didn't.
So basically people were thinking about a change,
they did it, they flipped the coin.
If they got the change,
they're more likely to have a change.
And indeed people who went actually and committed and did the change were happier than people who didn't.
So that kind of suggests
that we're probably not making enough changes
than we should be,
potentially because it's scary, right?
Trying something new is scary
and sometimes it's not
going to work I think that's so much in friends of mine and I got lots of dms from young people
who are in a situation where they're it's certain but it's miserable and they have a they have a
potential option to like go through that dark chasm to this potentially better place but they're
choosing to stay in that certain miserable situation, whether it's a relationship, a job, whatever it might be.
And I've always felt that our relationship with uncertainty
has a huge sway on our overall outcomes.
And what I mean by that is people who are okay
with jumping into that sort of dark hole,
where there isn't certainty about their outcomes
and just persisting because they'd rather not be in certain misery
end up having better lives. But I don't know how to get people to have a better
relationship with uncertainty. I mean, that's a compelling argument. I can say to them, but you
know, just stats and facts, because I've read your books, aren't enough. There needs to be some kind
of emotional pitch to them to get them to dive nose first into uncertainty. Any advice?
Yeah, that's a really good question.
First of all, I mean, you're absolutely right. There's individual differences on how comfortable we are with uncertainty and how comfortable we are with taking risks. So I think probably
it would be something like, to some extent, helping them through the change. So it might be difficult
to change people's relationship with uncertainty in a global general way, but perhaps every single
time when there's a specific issue in front of them of what they want to change, kind of like
helping them along the way with that change, holding their hand and, you know,
so to speak, is probably the only thing that you could do, right? To be like, I'm here for you,
whether it's a friend or a mentor. In their mind in that moment, the thing that's causing the resistance, you describe it as fear, right? Yeah. So what's the opposite of fear? Is it hope? You know, it's not an opposite.
Okay.
But I think it is something that will be likely to drive you to take that step.
And it's not so much just hope, it's optimism, which kind of takes us to some of my research. So, okay, what's the difference between hope and optimism?
So hope is you want
something to happen in the future, right? I want to get that job. I want to find that relationship.
Optimism is believing that I'm likely to get that job. I'm likely to find that wonderful
relationship. And it's absolutely true that if you're optimistic, you think this is going to go somewhere good, then you're more likely to go ahead and try that, which makes sense, right? Because my expectation is going to change my actions and my actions is going to change for this competition because I think I'm likely to get something.
Then I go ahead and I try.
If I think, well, there's no chance I don't try.
And so, of course, I'm not going to get it.
So it's a bit of a self-fulfilling optimism.
And so then the question becomes, if I go back to your question, then the question becomes, well, how do I enhance optimism?
Right.
So there's actually, and that's, it's a good idea because enhancing optimism will cause you to take more risk. I want to learn how to enhance optimism in all of my team members,
my companies. So there's a few ways to do it. One way is a sense of control. We do have,
we are more optimistic about things that we believe we have control over because we do think
that when we have control,, because we do think that when
we have control, that means we can steer the wheel in the right direction, right? And so if we can
cause people to get a sense that they have control, and if it's about your team, is for example,
let's say there's a project that you want someone to work on. So you can just tell them
to do that project, or you can have them choose to
do that project, right? And you can guide them to the choice that you think is correct. But if they
believe that they made the choice, that enhances a sense of agency, enhances the change of the sense
of control, and they become more committed to that option. So you can give them, oh, well,
there's two options, two projects you can work on,
which one do you prefer? And again, you can frame it in a way that maybe perhaps will make them more
likely to choose one over the other. But once they made the choice, it's amazing. We've done
studies on this, where we give people options, for example, going on holiday, do you want to go to
France or Rome, right, Thailand or Hawaii? If they make a choice, there are two things that
are exactly, they want it the same. They really want to go Hawaii. They really want to go to
Florida. But once they make a choice, seconds after making a choice, they now believe that
Hawaii is much better than they did just a few seconds ago before making a choice. And that
Florida is not that great, right? Because once you make a choice, immediately your preferences
change. You rationalize why that choice was great, and now you're more committed to it.
So that's true for holidays, but it can be true for work as well, right? Should I go work on
project A or B? If I make the choice, I become more committed, and it doesn't work if someone
else makes a choice for you. If someone else makes a choice for you, don't get into this
rationalization mode where you have to rationalize your choice because it wasn't your
choice. And once I feel I have control, then kind of that also enhances my expectations of how good
it's going to be. But it also boosts your happiness, right? Because I read about the
study in care homes where they had an agency floor and the other floor where people didn't feel like they had a lot of agency and choice over their lives.
And there was a pretty significant impact on levels of happiness, right?
Yes. So what they did is they gave them some plans. Is that the study?
Yeah.
Yes. Yes. Yes, absolutely.
So when we feel we have control, we have agency that enhances well-being.
When we feel our agency has been restricted, that causes anxiety, right?
And this is one of the reasons
that people are quite anxious on planes.
It's not just because we fear the worst,
but because we have no control at all, right?
No control about when are we gonna get there?
What are we gonna eat, right?
And that causes a lot of anxiety.
So by enhancing agency and control,
you are lifting people's wellbeing, happiness, happiness and reducing stress and anxiety.
Yeah. And those, you know, that study with the plants, it works with kids as well.
Right. You can give kids some plants to take care of or have kids make their own salads.
They'll be more likely to eat it. So that's just, you know, a few examples.
What could, I mean, we're not part of the innovation team at any airline or anything,
but I was just wondering in the plane example, what could we do then to reduce anxiety for
passengers? I was thinking, you know, if we told them for takeoff, listen, if any of you need to
land for any reason, we'll land. It's not that we necessarily will. But as you say, in that study
with the care homes, it's about giving them the perception that they have control versus actually giving them control yeah okay so there's there's a couple
of things that they do and some of them work um for also some other reasons but in a in a funny
way it also enhances a sense of control so one thing that the airlines do that i think is great
is when you can see the um the the equipment's um the pilot view you know yeah we can see yeah um that for some i
mean obviously you don't have control but first of all it reduces uncertainty i mean i really like
to look at that like what height am i in what's the speed am i going so that's and and although
you know you don't have control that gives you a sense of reduced uncertainty in some weird way
also enhances a sense of control i have to have to say i was on a plane one day flying you don't have control. That gives you a sense of reduced uncertainty and some weird way also enhances a sense of control.
I have to say, I was on a plane one day flying.
I don't want to say the airline, but I was flying.
And I woke up in the middle of the night on the plane
and it was turbulent.
And I was convinced that we were going down.
I was convinced.
I looked out the window
and we were getting closer and closer to the clouds.
And I did my quick math.
We're flying from New York to London.
We're roughly three hours into the flight. We're going down. That means we're going
down in the sea. And I have about 10 minutes on that plane where I have complete certainty. I'm
like, we're getting closer to the clouds. Why would we be getting closer to the clouds? And
then I click on the little thing that you've described, the little flight map thing. And it
says we're at 33,000 feet and we're not moving. And I go, I'll go back to sleep. It's the clouds
are getting closer to us. Yeah. I mean mean whoever thought that was a good idea obviously understand psychology um the other
thing that that i that i like that they do um is actually they did and i mentioned that in in in
one of the books and it's not really related to control but it relates to another really important
part of psychology which is so normally at the beginning, you know, you're about to go to get on the flight
and they have to go over all the safety instructions. And normally no one would listen,
right? Because it was all about in the state of emergency, then you have to do this and that.
And no one wants to think about the state of emergency, right? So you kind of like shut down. You're like, okay, Twitter, Facebook.
And so what they did is they, and especially Virgin did this, they switched it.
So it was very entertaining, very light.
And it was all about the destination.
It was all about, it wasn't about being in the sky and having an emergency state, which is negative. And I don't want my attention to go there. I don't want to think about it. It was about let's think about when you land, and it's going to be the islands and the beach and so on. entertaining, positive, humorous video. And the number of people that watched that,
that attended has gone up really tremendously.
And in fact, people started watching it at home
before they even got on YouTube.
So that's another really interesting thing.
And that goes to another principle
that we find a lot in our work,
which is that people take in positive information
about their own future,
much more than negative information about their own future.
So if I'm starting, if I will tell you,
I think your podcast listening numbers is gonna go down,
you'll be like,
well, she doesn't know what she's talking about, right?
But if I say, oh, I think this is great
and it's only gonna go up more and more with time,
you'd be like, yeah, she's probably right and become more confident. So
that's on average, people tend to take positive information to update their beliefs more than
negative. It doesn't mean that we don't listen to negative information about our own future.
But on average, we see that you learn more from unexpected positive information about the future. That somewhat confirms some of the things that I read in your second book,
The Influential Mind, where I remember I was watching a YouTube video
where you were in it and they were X-raying.
Is that what they call it when they look at someone's brain?
Scanning someone's brain.
Scanning, yeah, like in an MRI.
Yeah, like an MRI scan.
And they were scanning someone's brain as you told them that you agreed with their beliefs
versus when you told them
that you kind of disagreed with their beliefs.
And when you agreed with their beliefs,
their brain lit up and seemed to be really receptive.
And then when you told them
you disagreed with their beliefs,
their brain seemed to kind of just be frozen.
And this is really useful
for when you're thinking about having a conversation,
trying to influence
or have a conversation with your partner or get through to someone that starting with agreeability or something where you make them feel heard and seen and understood is a good way to open them up to information.
Yeah. So this relates to something that's known as a confirmation bias. to look for information that confirms what we believe and to use information that confirms what we believe
to become even more confident
and even more kind of in our belief.
And yeah, so we did a study
where we had people come into our lab in pairs
and they had to make a financial decision together.
In this case, they had to assess the value of a real estate.
So they made the decisions
and we did scan their brains at the same time.
And they were just in two separate scanners, but they could interact over the Wi-Fi.
And they saw like a real estate and they had to say how much it's worth and they could
see what the other person said and if they agreed with them or not.
And it's exactly what you said.
I'm agreeing with you.
When they agreed, your brain is like, when they agreed, and they
gave them more information about how confident I am, and so on. So when someone agreed, the other
person's brain showed activity that suggested they were encoding the information coming from
the agreeing partner, they were using it to update their beliefs, and they were becoming more
confident. But when someone disagreed, they kind of as exactly like you said, they shut down, they weren't listening, they weren't using this information.
You know, they were like, well, they don't know what they talk about.
And they were, that's it.
And as you said, we feel that like in real life all the time, you know,
and it's a problem because really our kind of instinct when someone disagrees with us
is usually to say, well, listen, you're wrong. Let me explain. I'll explain why you're wrong here. Look at the data, look at the figures and so on. And what happens, the person in front of us is shutting down. A lot of times what they're doing is that the other person is starting to think about other reasons why actually they're right and the other person's wrong. So while I'm talking, you're trying to think about what are you going to say to, you know.
But if I start with something where we have common ground, then you're more likely to listen to me.
You're more likely to see me as an agreeing partner and be more open to what I'm going to say next.
And there's one example that I really like is actually about vaccines. And this was before COVID.
So it was about childhood vaccines. And this was before COVID. So it was about childhood vaccines.
So a lot of parents don't want to vaccinate their kids because of the alleged link to autism.
And so usually they would go to the doctor's office and the doctor said, well, look,
there's no link between the two. And here, I'll show you the figures, the data, the science.
And it didn't really work. The parents usually didn't change their mind. So instead,
there's a group of scientists that said, let's see if we can go a different route.
We won't actually mention anything about what we disagree, which is the relationship to autism.
Instead, we will simply highlight what we already agree on, which is that these vaccines protect
kids from potentially deadly disease, which is not something that the parents disagreed on.
But that seemed to have been forgotten in the debate, right? While they were focusing on what they disagreed on. So by focusing on that, on what they agreed on, which is
the vaccines will protect kids from deadly diseases, they were three times more likely to
change the parents' intention of vaccinating the kids. So I think this means, you know, if we're
kind of in a conversation about, shall we invest in this company or that company, and we're kind of
disagreeing about something, is there a different route to get to, you know, the decision that we
want without focusing there? Are there other things that we agree on that would take us to
the same point? And then there's another method, which is just to highlight
the commonalities between us. That's also helpful. You know, perhaps there's something, I mean,
we have a goal in common. We have a motivation in common. Maybe there's something in our background,
which is similar. And that also always makes people more likely to listen to you
and to use what you're saying. It's so true. I was actually, as you were saying,
I was thinking about a tweet I saw the other day where Mark Cuban was having an argument with
someone else on Twitter. And Mark Cuban was going back and forth with this person. And he started
his response to them with wrong, full stop, and then made his point. And you see that a lot where
someone will start a sentence with, I disagree, full stop, and then make their point.
When that happens, and I'm just going to be completely honest, because who cares?
I'm somebody that is imperfect and full of fault.
When someone does that with me, when they literally start a sentence with wrong or I disagree, it's instant combat.
And like, I'm well aware of it.
So maybe it doesn't come up as much in me. But I remember, I can go back, I can remember three years ago
where I was when someone said to me,
when we were having conversation
and they went, wrong, full stop.
And then they made their point,
regardless of what comes next.
It's combat the minute you do that.
The minute you kind of close the door
and like pull up the drawbridge,
which is exactly what that sentiment does.
It's combat from then on.
It's like, it's this war of proving that you're right
and that's not helpful for either party right it takes someone with a certain self self-security
i guess and um not not fragile ego to be able to to be able to be greeted with that um sort of
conflict and turn to what we have in common and what we agree on first.
But it's a real, it's a real powerful skill for someone to master. So if you'll disagree with me,
for me to, you know, I learned this as well with my relationship, because me and my partner,
we might not agree on something. We might, we might, we have like very fundamentally different
beliefs about the world. She's very spiritual. I'm very sort of scientific in how I think. But I know that I get through to her when I first understand how she's feeling. I don't have
to agree with it. But even if I understand how she's feeling and kind of like validate it,
anything that I say next seems to get in behind. Does that make sense?
Yeah. So I mean, the difference is that what you're doing in the last kind of example is you're using what we call theory of mind, right?
Theory of mind is our ability to kind of think about what other people are thinking or feeling.
So basically take the point of view of the other person, right?
And there's a huge variability in the ability of people to do that.
There's like tests, relatively simple tests, actually, that can measure your ability to do that. And so if you do that, the likelihood that you will
answer by wrong is very, very low, right? The reason we start by wrong, you're mistaken,
is because we do the opposite. We come from our point of view, which makes sense because our brain
is here and our eyes are here, right? So it makes sense that we come from our point of view. It's like, this is wrong. This is not right. Right. But of course,
the best way to get your message across is to try to see things from the other person's point of
view and then think like, okay, what can I say from that point of view? Not from my point of view,
from that point of view. Super difficult to do. I gonna give an example so my um my partner was um
upset about something and feeling stressed about something which is just to do with her environment
and my first response was very like logical and scientific like and also psychological like kind
of like it's just in your head which i know it's kind of gaslighting that's not exactly what i said
before i get cancelled but it was referring to the fact that i i think you can you is kind of gaslighting that's not exactly what I said before I get cancelled but it was referring to the fact that I think you can you can kind of think your way through this like
as if I was trying to help her feel empowered and not letting her environment get the best of her
now that didn't work the response there was like not good my next approach was to completely
understand how she's feeling and kind of go around her side and say to her do you know what you're
only going to be here for five minutes anyway, and then it'll be fine.
And that completely worked. It was like, she was glued on me as I said that. And she
looked at me and nodded and went, yeah, you're right. The first approach of trying to apply
logic and like, no, no, no, you know, didn't work. But then when I said to her,
I understood, but then offered a solution from that place of understanding, she was really open
to it. And that was like an hour ago.
So it's very front of mind for me.
Yeah.
So I think this is a problem a lot of times with like campaigns,
like political, but also different campaigns
where people try to get a message across using data, figures, logic,
which are important.
I mean, we need all the science and we need all the data to know what's true. But once you know what's true, the data is not
enough to convince people of what is true. And in fact, the things that work are things that
you were talking about, which is emotion works really well. Stories, anecdote example, right?
For in science, the worst thing we can do is use one anecdote, right? So we don't want to get a
conclusion based on one anecdote. But in order to get our message across, in fact, a single anecdote
is really helpful, right? And to my mind, we actually have to embrace that. That's the way
the human brain works, right? So, I mean, I think if we just go ahead and say, well, I don't like
that. I don't like how the human brain works, So I'm going to give them data and figures anyway. Well, the message won't get across. Right. So we really need to embrace if the candidates for the Republican Party and Dr. Carson was another.
And they were debating and the debate turned again to the vaccines and autism question.
And so they were asked about, you know, Trump says that there's a relationship between childhood vaccines and autism.
Dr. Carson is a pediatrician. And he was asked, well, you know, what do you think about this? And Dr. Carson said, look, this is not true. We have a lot of data. We have a lot of science. And, you know, I'm sure that if Trump convinced. And of course, he wasn't convinced. But then what he did, he used the absolutely opposite approach, which is he told a story,
a story of someone who worked for him who had a little baby.
And he said the baby got the vaccine and he used like to induce emotion.
He used, like he said, it was a horse-sized syringe, right?
And after a few weeks, the baby got autism.
And now, I'm not saying that we should communicate false information using anecdotes and emotion.
But me, I remember I was actually watching that, and my son was a few weeks old old and he was next to me on the sofa. And I'm a scientist
and I know all the data and I, you know, but still my, and I know that he was wrong, but my reaction
was like, Ooh, maybe I should think about this twice before I decide whether to vaccinate my
little son here. And I felt like that for at least, I would say like a few minutes, a little
bit more. And kind of that feeling made me think, look, if I'm thinking that because all because Dr. Carson just said there's
data and figures and science and Trump just told a story that got me feeling quite anxious and he
was much more influential. What about everyone else that's watching? You know, people who are
not neuroscientists who don't have training in science. And it really kind of hit home how powerful it is. Now, you could use these
techniques, obviously, to spread misinformation and to do harm, of course. But if Dr. Carson
had used some of these techniques as well, he could say there's a science. But together with
that, you know, maybe using some kind of anecdote, maybe use some
hope, hope and optimism emotion, right? Something like that. He would maybe have caused many,
many people who are watching it to vaccinate their kids and therefore to save lives.
So I think there's like, you know, if you don't understand human behavior and you don't use it
because maybe you don't like it, you know, you're like, like that that's how the brain works you'll be missing on something right this
is why conspiracy theories flourish on social media right because all i need to do is get one
anecdote one low context video one picture one screenshot of something and post it on facebook
and regardless of the science whether it's climate change or vaccines whatever that one little
screenshot from a telegram group that says something happened to one person somewhere out of eight billion
becomes way more sort of um believable and plausible and um powerful than all of the science
and i've seen that over the last couple of years it's why like the missing for me it feels like a
bit of a losing war really because we're bringing like facts and figures to an
emotional fight and the facts and figures just will never win like even below the you know social
media channels now we're putting the little tag on posts to say well actually politico says this
isn't true it's like who gives a crap it hits somebody in the feelings um but it also speaks
to the you know you talk a lot about this in your book the influential mind it speaks to how as
business people or in sales or whenever we're trying to be heard and understood or influence others,
coming with facts, figures, graphs and charts is not going to be as compelling as coming with a really great emotional story.
I've always impressed upon people as much as I can that like your facts and figures and charts and graphs really don't really matter when you're trying to convince people.
And that's what your book really speaks to.
Right. And it's terrible for a scientist, of course.
Yeah, it's really.
Because all I do all day is, you know, gather data and do analysis.
But yeah, so it's an interesting question.
So why do these stories, why are they so effective?
And so I think there's two major reasons.
One is they are, well, three actually. One is mostly they induce emotion. And what emotion does, it gets you to focus because emotion tells your brain this is important, right? And it gets a whole brain noticing. It's like a little red kind of light in your brain going, emotion, pay attention, right? So if you say something that's emotional, people are going to pay attention and they're going to remember better.
So emotion enhances the likelihood that you will remember things.
Then the second reason is, if you think about it, how humans, how did we learn, right?
If before we had science, before we had all these ways to get so much data, we would live in like relatively small groups and we would learn from observing
others, right? Observing like a friend or someone who lives nearby. It was learning from stories.
That's how we evolved to learn from a small N, right? Only now do we have, you know, these
techniques and big data that we could really figure things out. But our brain is still a brain
of these humans that didn't have the internet, that didn't have all the math that we have now.
And so we're still learning from stories. That's kind of our instinct. Now, we are sophisticated
creatures. We can overcome this. We can look at the data and we can learn. But really, our instinct
is to learn from a single story.
The third reason I think is that stories are often novel.
Like you've never heard the exact same story
in that kind of way.
Again, novelty causes you to pay attention
and causes you to remember.
It's another signal of something is important, right?
While data and figures, you kind of heard it before.
If someone says, well, there's no relationship between autism and vaccine or whatever. I mean, you've already had the science. It's usually doesn't it doesn't sound so novel. And really, our brain cares about the headlines. Right. What's new? It's like a newspaper. We don't care about what's been the same. We care about this is new means that we should pay attention. And then maybe it's important or maybe not. But that last point really resonated about the sheer nature that stories are in essence novel.
You've never heard about Debbie in Newcastle before. But also, you know, now it makes perfect
sense as to why politicians in the House of Parliament every week say, I spoke to my
constituent Dorothy in Burnley, and then they'll tell the story about Dorothy struggling to heat
her home versus just coming with facts. And when you hear about Dorothy who can't heat her home,
you feel way more, oh my God, versus hearing 24% of elderly people can't heat their home,
for example. When I think about motivation though, do the same rules apply? So if I want
to motivate my team, should I be telling them the driver CEO has done 20 million downloads this month?
Or should I be telling them a story of Dorothy who listened to the podcast and it changed her life?
I think in this case, both things will work.
I mean, seeing progress is something that really motivates us.
And seeing progress with numbers is an easy way
for us to see progress, right? This is why all these kind of like track your steps work, right?
So I think to motivate, I mean, it's always lovely also to hear a story. I mean, even for yourself,
if you know, it doesn't matter how many people watched your podcast, when you get like, you meet someone, they tell you about like how much you touch them and really change their life.
And they decide to make a decision because of you.
They heard you do something.
You really remember that, right?
That like causes so much joy and motivation.
Numbers are great, too.
Right.
When you look and you're like, oh, I have one million people listening to my podcast.
That's great, too.
So I think both things work.
And when if you do use numbers, it's really great to kind of show the progress, right? A really great way to change behavior
is to show people progress and numbers is just one way to show it, right? If they can kind of
see it going up, up, up, up, um, that's, that's really helpful. And I mean, we know it in sports,
but it can, it can be true for anything right if it's like you can do it
it's money investments right um seeing that go up relationships as well i wonder how you can do it
for relationships a good question well i i actually i say that because i feel like i do that sometimes
with my partner where um we might be facing some kind of issue and one of the most compelling
things we've ever done when we're facing an issue is we look at all the issues we've overcame together and like how we're here right so there were so many other times
where we thought this you know we couldn't solve it she lived on the other side of the planet
i lived here we both didn't want to move and then i've had exactly the same
that was her problem for years and years oh really yeah i remember bits being sat in a bar
and my partner was talking
about an issue something that we were struggling with or whatever and I remember saying to her like
look look how far we've come from where we were here to where we are now so there's nothing that's
gonna get in the way of us you know and that seemed to be compelling because it I guess it
was an emotional story of all the previous issues we've overcame getting back to the optimism bias
the optimism bias,
the optimism bias from what I understood is that, is that bias to believing that the future will be good? Is that, is that accurate or is that inaccurate?
Yeah, kind of. So optimism on its own.
You're agreeing with me even though I'm wrong.
No, no, no, you're not wrong. I think what you mean is right.
I'll just give you the scientific definition. So, yeah.
So, optimism is believing that, you know, that positive things will happen.
The optimism bias means that you're either like, that you believe these optimistic things, these good things will happen, but the evidence suggests otherwise.
So, it's actually a mistake, right?
The optimism bias.
So, usually we define it as overestimating the likelihood of positive events happening. So you're overestimating how
much money am I going to get with my first job when I leave graduate school, right? Or
overestimating like how long my marriage will last and so on. So overestimating the positive
in light of the evidence that is in front of us and underestimating the likelihood of negative events happening.
So I'm underestimating my likelihood of getting COVID, of getting cancer, of being in a car accident, going bankrupt, whatever it is, based on whatever evidence is there.
So optimism bias does mean mistakes.
So the word bias means a systematic mistake. So obviously, when we think about the future, we can't be right most of the time because the future is uncertain and we don't know what's going to happen. So we're going to be wrong a lot of times when we predict the future. But the optimism bias means that the mistakes that we make tend to systematically be that we expect it to be better than it ends up being. So that's basically the optimism bias, right? I expect it to be better than it ends up being. So that's basically optimism bias, right? I expect it to be better than it ends up being, which sounds like a bad thing,
but it's not necessarily so. I mean, the word bias, people usually, because it is a mistake,
people usually think that that means it's not a good thing, but it's not necessarily so. It can
actually have both positive and negative
outcomes to it. So if you think about the positive, if I expect good things in my future,
specifically good things, even though I'm overestimating the likelihood of these things
happening, even if I think, oh, I'm, you know, I'm going to make 1 million in the next year.
And of course, that's way more than I'm going to.
But that then motivates you, right? So having these positive expectations motivates you to try harder. It's a bit like, I think I'm going to get the gold. I'm more likely to get the silver.
So that's kind of the idea. And it also enhances your happiness and well-being, right? Because
how you're feeling now is a lot to do, not necessarily with what you're doing at the moment,
but what you think you'll be doing later, right? How you're feeling now is like, okay, you might maybe feeling
nice talking here, but a lot of it is what do I think I'm going to do later on this evening, next
week, next month, in a year? Our expectations of where we will be in the future affects our
happiness today, right? And so if I have these positive, positive expectations of the future,
even if they're not going to happen, they make me happier today. This is why there's a really
cool study that was done at Harvard, where they were asking people who are about to go on vacation,
how happy they were every day before vacation, and have every day during vacation and every day
after vacation for a week. So a week before vacation every day, a week during vacation
every day, a week after vacation every day. So what was the happiest day, do you think?
The day before they went.
Right. Exactly. Right. The day before vacation, they were still in the office,
working on the computers, but on their mind, they were already on vacation. In their mind,
it was wonderful. And when they went on vacation, it was good, but it wasn't as good as it was in
their mind the day before. So it's the anticipation of these goods. So it's an optimism bias because
they thought the vacation is going to be better than what it ended up being, but that brought
them the happiness beforehand, right? And also probably enhance the likelihood that they will
go on vacation, which is a good thing as well. So does that mean that we should, in our
relationships, in our teams, et cetera, we should try and give people things to look forward to?
Absolutely. Absolutely. And I think that there's two things. You kind of want things in the diary, right? So having a vacation in the diary that's going to happen in a month makes you happy today. So whatever it is, whatever you're doing that matters to your team, have what I call anticipatory events, right? Things that they could look forward to that will make them happy today. But also, I think, you know, a lot of times
I do motivate my team by telling them that I think this project is going to work really well.
I mean, even I think it's going to work pretty well, but I might like exaggerate a little bit
because, you know, that enhances motivation and who knows, you know, maybe it will work even better than I expected.
So it's good to kind of enhance kind of the expectations and also to have these things
that people can look forward to.
And of course, it works the other way.
So also, if you're dreading something, that's going to happen tomorrow, next week, right?
You have to go to the dentist or whatever bad thing is happening is going to get there in that it's going to affect your mood today. So dread of things in the future and
anticipation of the good stuff is all affecting how we feel at the moment.
How contagious is optimism and conversely pessimism in life generally? If I'm around
a group of pessimists or I'm around a group of optimists, what kind of contagious impact is there on me? Yeah, any emotion is contagious.
Anything, sadness, anxiety, joy, everything is contagious, fear. And it happens really,
really fast and in an unconscious way, right? It could be even like you're sitting in the tube and someone in front of you is looking fearful.
You straight away will feel fearful yourself.
First of all, you will mimic the expression of the person that's in front of you without noticing it.
So if you look fearful, I'm going to start mimicking the same facial expressions.
Yeah.
And that facial expression will make me feel fearful right because our brain is learning from how our face
right there's it's a signal and it goes both ways like a feedback loop um and there's a good reason
for it because if someone is afraid there might be something dangerous around us so i should
we've seen the monkeys in the david atbro documentary that star they they know that
they know that the other monkeys are taking a cue from them.
So they fake fear.
So they go, ah!
And then when all the monkeys run off, they go and get the food.
Because they've got to level two where they realize that they're all taking cues from each other.
And I remember that documentary thinking, wow.
Because all the monkeys would run the minute one monkey made a reaction.
And that's pretty much what you're describing there, right?
Yeah, exactly. And it works for much what you're describing there, right?
Yeah, exactly.
And it works for good things as well.
If someone looks excited, you will feel excited as well.
You don't know why.
But if they're excited, there might be something good around, right?
Is this why people yawn together?
I was thinking about yawns are contagious.
It's just mimicking.
We do facial expressions.
We mimic any kind of facial expression and bodily expressions as well.
Yeah, I'm trying not to now. Yeah.
But OK, so why is this really important to think about?
Because let's say you want to you're managing your team.
If you're stressful and you're going to start like, I don't know, even like shouting or raising your voice or they're going to get more stressed as well.
Right. So it's it's it's true. It's a bit like the monkeys.
You can actually change at least
how you look in terms of the emotions you need to think about what is my what emotion am i conveying
because the emotion that you are conveying is going to then affect how people around you feel
so there's a little bit of kind of emotional control that is helpful too.
You mentioned that you might exaggerate a little bit the belief in a positive outcome to your team members.
And I hope they're not listening.
Well, I think we all do sometimes.
I mean, I usually believe it because I think I have a bit of a bias, optimism bias myself.
But that's in part because of, of I guess chapter three in the optimism bias
where you talk about how self-fulfilling um optimism is and there was some really really
staggering statistical sort of studies and um experiments that have been done to prove that
optimism really is a self-fulfilling thing and it kind of kind of um makes me think about this
concept of manifestation people always talk about manifestation. And it seems that it's in my mind always been this kind of pseudoscience.
You just think about something and then it happens.
What's your view on manifestation?
Is it true?
Yeah.
So it's not magic.
It's not that I'm thinking something in my mind and the waves are going to change what happens in the world.
The reason if you believe something, the likely they will happen
is higher is because you then change your actions, right? You think, I think, you know, my startup is
going to really succeed. And that then changes your actions. You're more likely to go out there
and tell other people, right? So if you think it's going to succeed, you're more likely to convey
that information to investors and so on. They can see your, your kind of confidence. They'll be more likely to invest
in you, right? You put more time in, you put more effort in. And that's why it can have an effect
on the outcomes. So it's not kind of a magic kind of thing. It's just that what we believe in our
mind changes the way we behave and the way we behave in the world changes the world um so that's that's why that is and then that's kind of like this idea of
self-fulfilling prophecies is linked to this concept of stereotyping where one of the real
startling things i read in your um in your work was that if a woman is reminded of her gender before a math exam,
then her performance on that math exam will drop.
Right.
So our expectations, where do they come from, right?
To some extent, I mean, they're coming from around us as well. Not only we can have confidence, even if the people around us do not,
but other people's expectations, whether it is your friends, your family, society, will impact your own. And so, and again, that becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy,
right? If you're told females are not good in math, they're not good in science, they can't be
CEOs and so on, that will change the way that you think. Even if it's momentarily, even if you're
trying to fight it, it will change the way that you think and what you believe. And that will then change your outcomes.
And I think maybe in that, I mean, we don't know exactly why reminding females about the stereotype
that the females don't do well with math changes the exam results, but it could be things like
maybe it enhances anxiety. You start self-doubt, right? I mean, if you go to an exam and there's self-doubt, well, that's not helpful.
And there's, you know, there's all these classic studies where there was in a class, they would tell the teachers at the beginning of the semester who the talented kids were.
But it was random.
They randomly selected kids and they said, these are the talented ones.
By the end of the
year, they did better at these kids, right? Because the teachers believe that they were talented.
They would treat them in that kind of way. They would maybe put more time. They could
convey their expectations to the kids. The kids then started believing that they're talented
and that gave them confidence and they performed better. And of course it works the other way,
right? If a teacher is told this is the naughty one,
this is the non-intelligent one,
that will then change how the kids behave,
what they believe.
And this is where stereotypes come into play as well
because sometimes it's about not specific individuals,
it's about a whole group of individuals.
And one such example as well is the study where African-Americans were found to do significantly worse on IQ tests compared to Caucasians, people that are white, when race was emphasized before the IQ test.
But did as well as white people when no stereotype was mentioned before.
So just by mentioning that I'm black before I do a IQ test will lower my
performance on the test versus if you hadn't mentioned it. Because the association, you're
reminded of your ethnicity and you're doing this exam and then you know that maybe in your society
there's a stereotype. And again, that can cause self-doubt and anxiety and so on. And what I think
I like is that I think after I talk about that study,
I also talk about another study that after Obama was elected,
grades went up for African-Americans.
Because again, it's a self-confident thing.
It's amazing how these little things, I mean, it's not little.
The fact that Obama got elected is not little.
But then the fact that that then impacts your self-confidence you know the little impact on self-confidence then changes um your
grades um it's it's quite something but it also changes your um one of the other things i read
that was really startling it also changes your salary you talk about how one tiny move up on
the optimism scale is worth an extra $33,000 a year in salary
over the long term? Right. And I, okay. So that, um, that, that shows us a correlation. I think,
I think that's, um, so we still don't know for sure if it, is it that because I have specific
traits, I'm more likely to be optimistic and therefore more likely,
because of those traits, also more likely to gain higher salary, right? So, you know,
you can imagine I'm optimistic because I had a very privileged life and I did well in school.
So I'm more optimistic. And for the same reasons, I'm then more likely to get a higher grade.
But in some cases, so we don't know if it's going one way or the other way,
right? If it's a causation or correlation. One interesting thing that has been found is
that optimists are more likely to be entrepreneurs. I mean, that is quite clear.
And again, we don't know, is it because I'm optimistic that I'm more likely to be an
entrepreneur? Or is it something about being'm optimistic that I'm more likely to be an entrepreneur?
Or is it something about being an entrepreneur that makes me more optimistic?
But what they found is after you become an entrepreneur, you become even more optimistic.
So that suggests that there is something, it is true that optimistic people are more likely to take a chance, more likely to take a risk, and therefore more likely to be entrepreneurs.
And that experience of doing that enhances your
optimism further, which is really interesting, kind of goes both ways.
Does that then explain how we can teach someone to become more optimistic? Because if the pursuit
of entrepreneurship is kind of self-reinforcing your optimism, it's making you more and more
optimistic, one would assume that that's because you're gaining evidence about yourself and the
world and what you're capable of as you're going, which is further sort of fueling you.
And conversely, someone who I know maybe lingers too long in their comfort zone and is like leaning out of opportunities, constantly being negatively reinforced in terms of their self-belief in their skills, etc.
So they're becoming more and more pessimistic. Is that like broadly true?
I think it might be. Yes. I think you are gaining evidence that you can do things.
And I think even if you fail, you still gained evidence that you were able to try something new.
And not die. What? And not die. And not die, right? And you learned something, right? Yes,
I think you're absolutely right. So if you're able to get people to have these kind of experiences, that then causes them to become more confident.
That will then enhance their optimism.
So how do you know, we talked about the all the positive upsides there of being an optimist.
How does if I've got a friend that's a pessimist or a partner or a husband or whatever it might be, how do I get them?
We talked a little bit about it there, but how do I get them to become more of an optimist?
Because I want to be surrounded by optimists. I want my company to be full of them, like
pragmatic optimists, but still people that believe that, you know, the future is going to be good
and we're going to do great things for all the self-fulfilling reasons you've described.
What do I do?
Okay. So first of all, I just want to mention that about 30%
of how optimistic we are is genetically determined. This has been shown from twin studies,
but that still leaves two thirds, right? I think the best studies on this comes probably from
Martin Seligman, where he actually did experiments where he got people who were somewhat pessimistic, even slightly depressed. And the approach that he took is to change what he calls interpretation
style. So optimists, this is what they usually do. If something happened and it went well,
right? You sold your startup for a lot of money, you had a project and it was successful.
They usually interpret that as meaning that they, it's personally, it's something about them that
caused this positive outcome, right? And it is something in them that's quite permanent. Let's
say my project went well because I'm a hard worker, right? And, you know, maybe I'm intelligent or
whatever. And then they say, well, if I have
those skills, that means that a lot of other things are going to work well in life, right?
If I'm in a hard work or if I'm good with people, that also means that I'll be a good dad,
for example, right? When something negative happens, they tend to do the opposite. They
tend to see it as circumstantial, right? This negative thing happened. Okay, so I didn't put
a lot of effort in this, but not because I'm not a hard worker. I just didn't put enough effort because I was
distracted by something else or, you know, this other person just happened to have a better
proposal. So it's circumstantial. That means that they don't take that as evidence of how am I going
to perform in the future, right? So it's really different interpretation of negative outcomes
and positive outcomes. And then pessimists do the exact opposite. When something bad happens,
they say, this bad thing happened because of me, because of a trait that I have. And because I have
this trait, let's say I'm bad with people, that's going to affect all the rest of my life and all
these future projects. When something good happened, it's circumstantial. Good thing happened. I got the job, but really because they didn't have any other
people, candidates. So what Martin Sagan did is he taught people this interpretation style,
that he taught them whenever something good happens, this is how you have to think about it.
You have to think about what is it about you that caused this positive thing to happen, right? And how is that positive trait or whatever skill, whatever thing you did,
how can it affect other parts of your life and other future outcomes? And the opposite for
negative. If something negative happened, I don't mean it don't take responsibility,
but are there circumstantial, right? It could be something that you did, but it doesn't have to be
permanent, right? You happen to be in a really bad state because, I don't know, something else.
Your parent was sick or something.
So he teaches the people to kind of interpret this, to find these reasons for the positive and negative.
And it seemed to work to some extent.
Now, it's difficult.
It's not easy to turn a pessimist into an optimist. But it had some effect on their well-being and even on their physical health as a result.
Is that negative explanatory style of saying, okay, this bad thing happened. It's because of depression. It's an actual symptom. And so
what we see is people with severe depression have a pessimistic bias. They expect the future to be
worse than it ends up being and worse than the evidence in front of them is. People with mild
depression have no bias at all. This doesn't mean they're accurate. They can make mistakes,
but on both sides.
So sometimes they expect things to be better.
Sometimes they expect things to be worse.
But overall, they don't have a bias.
Happiness.
You know, one of the things we talked about before we started recording was Scott Galloway said on this podcast that happiness looks like a U-shape throughout our lives. As in when we're young, we're at a high level of happiness. And then we kind of dip into our forties. I think, I think from what I read,
when we hit our forties, that's kind of the lowest. It sounds kind of morbid, sounds kind of
grim, but we, that's our lowest point of happiness. And then it kind of curves back up again, as we go
into the last sort of chapters of our life. Is that accurate? Because Scott didn't provide any research and I've mulled it over. And I, you know. Yeah, no, so this, this is true. It's based on many studies
and studies involving thousands and thousands of individuals, you know, up to like 70,000 or more
in a country. And it's been shown in many, many countries. So not just in, in the Western world,
in many, many countries, almost all countries around
the world. So exactly what you said, kids and children, they're happiest and the most optimistic.
Then it goes down and reaches rock bottom in your midlife, as well as optimism does. So actually,
in middle age, you stop having an optimism bias. So your optimism bias is greater,
greatest in children and kids, it goes down, down, down. And then really there's no optimism bias in midlife,
on average, of course. And then it starts going up. You become happier and more optimistic until
the last few years of life, which is counterintuitive to our image of the grumpy old
man, right? And it actually stays there until the last couple of years of life. The difference between countries is that the dip, the point where it's lowest, actually is a little
bit different between country and country. I think in the US it's about 40, it's relatively early.
I think in the UK as well, but then some countries as much, I think like Italy might be 50,
Greece as well, like 50 to 60. And then there's a few countries where you don't see that.
Russia is one of them, Romania.
And I forget, there's another one where you actually don't see,
they actually just become, you know, less and less, less happy in those countries.
We don't know why that is that specific case.
I'm 30 now, so I'm heading right down to rock bottom as we speak.
Oh, you've got time. You've got time. I'm about to turn. So I'm waiting. I'm looking forward.
Well, not quite yet, but I'm about on my way up.
And this, you know, this links to, I think, chapter five in your book, where we say,
where you talk about how the chapter is called humans are bad at predicting what makes them
happy. And one of the startling things is you say that children don't impact our happiness positively.
Now, I'm under the impression that children make us ecstatically happy.
Well, it's difficult.
But from what I've heard from people, I thought children are something to really be looking forward to.
But you seem to assert otherwise in your book.
So this, first of all, I want to say this is just a research on the numbers.
And I'm not just saying this, but my own experience is the absolute opposite.
Bear in mind, her child is upstairs.
And he's watching this.
Leo.
No, but it's absolutely true.
Because it's funny, because because of that research, and I wrote the first, this is in my first book, The Optimism Bias, which I wrote before my kids.
And I actually, I mean, I believed it i mean i mean that's a data
what are you going to do and and that kind of got me worried i have to say about having kids i was
a little bit worried about the fact that children it says children's you know children don't make
you happy you become less happy you become less happy when you have children that's what the
research i didn't i didn't see that oh sorry that's what you said, right? Because children don't make you happy.
Yeah. But I didn't know there was, I thought they didn't make you more happy. I didn't know they make you less happy.
Oh, no, it's apparently like, I mean, the data shows, I mean, who's a Nobel Prize winner, where they asked a large group of French women to say how happy they were throughout the day.
So, I don't know, every few hours or maybe at the end of the day, they said what they were doing and how happy they were.
And they found that the least happy people are is commuting.
But then I think number two least happy was being with our children.
So I have to tell you, from my own, this is an anecdote, an N of one, my children really make
me extremely happy. I love being with them. I'm really, it's contrary to all the research.
So I truly, I mean, I'm surprised, you know, before they were born, I was thinking, look,
if I, if, you know, if I don't like them, we'll put them in boarding school. And my mom was like, I don't think you want to put them in boarding school. And I was like, well, we'll a scientist, shapes the way that you interpret the data.
But I mean, look, having I mean, I'm sure having children can be difficult.
And and, you know, it depends on your life circumstances and all of that and temperament of the child and so on.
And so I'm sure it could be it could be difficult.
But is that is that because there's a distinction, as you said, at the start of this conversation between
like happiness and meaning, it might be difficult, but it's meaningful. I mean,
like work is difficult. There's like varieties of work. If I'm working in a job with low autonomy,
where the outcomes I'm like subjectively not interested in, then it's just difficult work.
But if I'm like raising a child, it's difficult, but it's tremendously meaningful. So although I might say to this, the investigator that I'm unhappy when
my kid is crying and running around and smashing everything and playing with the Rubik's cube and
won't put it down. I reflect on that in hindsight and go, oh, amazing. You know what I say?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, meaning is important and you should do things. You should make choices according to meaning as well.
And obviously there's individual differences.
In my case, they just actually make me happy.
I can like dance with them in my, you know, at home and like actual happiness.
But, you know, it can obviously, it's different.
And it's not like all the time, of course.
Um.
What about marriage?
That was the other one that was quite surprising.
That it didn't.
Didn't make us.
But I think, okay, so that was a little bit, so it's been a while since I look at this,
but I think it was nuanced, which is what does make you happy is being in a relationship.
I believe that didn't make, whether you were married or not married, didn't really matter.
But I think being in a relationship was inducing happiness. The other kind of interesting finding about problems, I guess, and so on. And it actually hits rock bottom just about the time that you get divorced and then it starts going up. You start adapting, right? And in fact,
goes back to baseline levels of happiness within about two years. I don't know, maybe two years is
a lot, but then people bounce back. So when you kind of think about these changes, which could be negative, right, divorce, I think people don't consider as much our ability to adapt so fast, right, to change so fast.
I think COVID was a really good example of the pandemic.
I mean, before the pandemic, if I was to tell you you're going to have to stay at home and see anyone else. And you'd be like, this is disaster. How's it going to happen? People adapted quite fast. Yes,
stress. We did studies. We actually started doing studies a few weeks after the pandemic started.
We did see, of course, stress and anxiety was enhanced, but A, not as much as we thought. And number two, the bouncing back was extremely surprising.
Within just a couple of months, a lot of people were back to their baseline happiness.
So adaptation is really fast.
You kind of find ways to overcome these things.
That being said, that was like a bird's eye view because there were parts of the population that were not doing well right so if you kind of take a worm's eye view you see that for example people with mental health problems i mean pre-existing ones they
had trouble adapting to this new situation um some like women actually did a little bit worse
because they were probably had more of the the child care umer individuals did worse than older individuals, maybe because of that U-shape
curve. But in general, people adapt faster than they believe they will. And I think that goes
back to our question of why don't people take risks and why don't they make changes? I think
because one of the reasons is they're afraid that they won't adapt to the change right and they underestimate how fast and
how well humans adapt to changes in their environment in their situation i mean this is
basically why our species did so well and why we're all here today i think because we can just
adapt to to these different environment changes and when we're trying to get people to take action
in their lives or just take action in teams and such, one of the things in the Influential Mind book that you wrote
talks about how fear and trying to scare people. And I was thinking about it then when you're
talking about the pandemic and much of what the governments were saying and how trying to get us
to conform to the pandemics through fear, I guess. Should we try and scare people into action as leaders? Yeah, so I really like this
because it's kind of a fundamental neuroscientific finding that it's a little bit of a leap,
but tells you something really interesting and how to get people to do something or not to do
something. So basically, what we find is that if you want to induce action, it's more helpful to highlight the rewards.
If you do this, if you put the time in, you're going to get a promotion.
And less so about the fear that if you don't do this, you won't get a promotion.
So if you want people to act, highlighting rewards, highlighting the good outcomes is better. If you want people not to act, let's say you want them not to reveal some secret,
actually highlighting the punishment is better. And why is that? So this is where I find it really
interesting, which is we kind of evolved in a world that to get something good, whether it is
a promotion or love or we have to do something.
So I'm thirsty. I need to move my hand and have a little sip of this tea, right? So, and imagine
it doesn't necessarily, this is a world we live in, but it's not necessarily the way it could
have been. It could have been that to get the tea, I'd have to kind of like go like this and not do
anything. I imagine like different physics or something, right? But the world that we live in is to get the good stuff, you have to do
things. And so our brain has evolved in this kind of world where anytime something good, we anticipate
something good, a go reaction is activated deep in our brain, in the midbrain. It goes all the way
to our frontal cortex and makes action more likely. Now, the reverse is that if usually in the world to avoid something
bad, usually, not always, but usually we just need to not do anything. So whether it's deep waters,
untrustworthy people, poison, I usually just need not to eat, not to jump in the pool, right? I need
to just stay put. So our brain has evolved in this kind of environment that to avoid the bad things, I need to not act. And so when there is anticipation of something bad, a no-go
reaction is activated deep in our brain, goes all the way to our frontal cortex, and it inhibits
action. Now, again, we're sophisticated creatures, we can overcome this, but our immediate reaction
is to freeze in this case, not to flee or act, right? First we freeze and then we
might be able to do something. And so we see this in like very basic studies where we tell people
press a button to get money or press a button to avoid losing money. They press the button faster
to get the dollar than to not avoid losing it because action is related to rewards, right?
Interesting.
So it's hard for them to do, I mean, of course they do it,
but there's a little bit of inhibition if the goal is to not have something happen,
not to lose, right?
We kind of, I mean, a lot of, I mean, there's on one hand,
there's these theories about fear gets me motivated.
I don't want to lose.
That's why I don't really believe that that is the commonly true.
I think usually we do stuff to get things
rather than to avoid losing things.
Example in your book as well
is you think about planes going down.
When people are most scared,
they just, they're frozen.
And fear doesn't necessarily seem
to be a great driver of human action
and motivation in the same way yeah that's
that's really important for organizations that are trying to get their people to take greater risks
and to innovate and to take chances which is to try and remove as much of that
fear as you possibly can right and also to kind of be able to vividly imagine this like goal, this better future. Again, it's not because our, whatever we
think in our mind is changing the world, but it changes your behavior. Chapter six in your book
is what happens to people under threat. And you talk a lot about stress and the role stress plays
in organizations and companies. Now I've gone back and forward in my mind about the concept
of stress. Cause I remember reading a lot that some of the most subjectively fulfilling jobs were like quite
stressful jobs. It was things like being a military commander at the highest level, because I guess
they have a lot of meaning associated with them. But what role does stress play on people's
behavior and actions as it relates to, you know, workforces and teams and relationships?
I'll actually start with the kind of example that you're talking about. You're saying, well, a lot of the really most fulfilling jobs are
highly stressful, but I think the people who take those jobs are somewhat resilient more to stress
than others, right? So how much stress you're feeling is a subjective thing, right? It's not
only about what's happening. It's also about you. So, you know, so you could have
what other people will consider
a very stressful job.
And you're maybe feeling
a little bit stressed.
And we know, I mean,
I'm sure a lot of people know this,
that the optimal,
there's an optimal kind of
inverse U shape for stress.
No stress at all is actually
not that great for your performance.
And a lot of stress is also not good.
You want to be somewhere
where you have a certain amount of stress that's driving you forward. But again, that certain
amount of stress is the subjective feeling of it. It's not the objective happening, right?
But what kind of I talk about there is that what happens when you are stressed, and when I say
stress, I mean, you're feeling stressed, like cortisol is going up and, and, you know, that people tend to concentrate on negative information. So if we give people,
so this is kind of interesting. If we, we, I ask you like, what is the likelihood that you will
sell your company? And you give me a number. And I give you a number and I say, you know,
actually based on all my data, you're more likely to sell the company. You will listen to me. You'll change your belief. But when I tell you actually based on my data,
you're less likely to sell your company that you believe, you won't change it as much. You'll
listen. You'll learn a little bit, but you'll learn more when I give you the good news. So we
talked about that a little bit before. Good news is more effective than bad news, not under stress.
So if you're stressed out for whatever reason, it doesn't have to be a business
reason. You could be stressed because of the conversation you had with your partner. That
will then affect how you take the information that I give you. You will now focus more on the
negative information, surprisingly negative information that I give you than you would
otherwise will. Interesting. And if you look at, you know, if you look at events in the world, whether it's after a terrorist attack or a pandemic or a natural disaster, people get a lot of this kind of information.
Even if it's not happening here, there's a terrorist attack halfway around the world.
We get all the information on the media.
That stresses us out.
The stress causes us to focus more on the negative information, which there is a lot of at the time.
And that can actually cause people
to be overly pessimistic. So a lot of times we're overly optimistic, but actually when really
stressful things happen, we could be overly pessimistic. And you can see that in the market,
in the financial market, where when the market starts going down, even if it's a little bit,
it does cause stress. And then people get overly pessimistic.
They start panicking and selling their stocks. Well, really, they should be holding on.
So we get these overly pessimistic reactions under stress because people start focusing on
the negative. So they don't see the evidence in the positive information. They kind of focus on
the negative information. It's funny because the example you gave there in the context of selling a company and a business,
I've got a very close friend of mine
who pre-pandemic set valuation for his company,
I'm going to say 100 million.
And he was stead set on it.
He was, you know, he wouldn't accept a penny less.
Post-pandemic and in the wake of the like
sort of economic backdrop we're facing now in recession,
he is desperate to sell it for 20 million.
It's the exact same company. It's weird how much his perspective has changed from being this person who
was absolutely not willing to budge the company's not changing the company's doing as well as it was
before but just with the pessimistic outlook he's suddenly trying to offload the company for a
fraction of the price and is suddenly seems to be incredibly desperate in doing that and i guess
that further reinforces your point about us being much more suggestible and pessimistic in times of threat and stress.
Because now it's not likely that there's a buyer out there. And it's just interesting
having observed that in him so quickly, it seems. It wasn't even pre and post pandemic,
because in the pandemic, the markets were great. It was about a year ago, it's about 12 months
difference, that he's willing to drop the value of his company by about 80%,
even though it's doing really, really well.
And then the one thing I think about a lot in building companies
and building company cultures is the role stress plays on,
like, innovation and risk-taking.
It's interesting because most of the teams that I run,
going back to social chain and even this team
and other teams that I'm in, they are somewhat high pressure teams as in like, we're really, we're usually at the front of our market.
We're usually pushing very hard.
The growth is usually very, very intense, but at the same, which causes, I imagine stress, but at the same time we're there and we need, we'll stay there by taking a high degree of risks so how do i balance that environment which can be stressful while also needing people to continue to take risks and
feel safe in doing so what advice would you give me um so because we said that stress is really
stress is your own reaction within yourself um and that reaction can be different to the same
outside environment then what you really want is to reduce people's stress
and not necessarily not put the pressure on them, right?
I mean, that's the better, right?
You could basically do two things.
You could say, oh, I'll put less pressure on them.
I mean, give them less work to do.
Or on the other hand, you could be like,
well, actually let's stay with this amount of work,
but can we just reduce the way that they perceive it on the stress that they have?
So I actually think my answer is going to be extremely simple because the research shows that simple things like and this is so simple that I'm exercise actually is great at reducing stress.
I don't do things like meditation and so on,
but people, there's studies showing that that also reduces stress. So I actually think those are really important, going outside, walking in nature, right? Social interaction. So there's all
of these things that can reduce stress. And I really believe that just having, and this kind
of sounds like really that's not, but just working out like an hour in the morning or something like that is going to
hugely change. It reduces stress. It makes you more focused. Then if you want to do like something
more psychologically, you can highlight how you can get through it, right? So, okay. So this is
all the workload and these are all the problems? So, okay, so this is all the workload
and these are all the problems that can,
there are hurdles.
These are the problems, these are the hurdles.
But okay, let's think through how we go,
we actually overcome them
rather than just put it out there, right?
Walk through about, okay, what are we gonna do
in order to get to where we want?
And then the other thing that we talked about
a little bit ago is um progress monitoring
that's always helpful like not just saying that things are progressed if you can actually like
if there's a way to see it right if there's an actual way to like put it on a board or something
like that um because again like just um enhancing people's confidence and optimism will reduce
stress as well these are two fantastic books i, they're right up my street. People will know from listening
to this podcast that all of this subject matter about influence, about the brain, about psychology,
optimism, pessimism, all of these topics are things that I absolutely adore. So anyone that
loves this podcast should immediately go and check out these books because they are real
sort of foundational books on this subject matter. But what are you thinking about next? What do you, what do you, you know, you could write about it in anything, I think, because of
your, your huge, broad understanding of human beings. There's so many things you could write
about sales, whatever. What are you thinking about next?
So the book that I'm working on at the moment, which probably will be out in about one year in 2024, is about how is it that in fact, we're not noticing
a lot of the things around us, a lot of the good things around us and a lot of the bad things
around us. And in fact, the reason for it is a basic physiological reason of how our mind works,
every single neuron in our brain, actually. And what it is, is that when
something is like constant, doesn't change in front of us, we stop noticing it, we stop feeling
it, we stop responding to it. So something simple, like you jump into a pool, it's really cold after
a few seconds, doesn't feel that cold. Or there's like the refrigerator noise, and it really bothers
you because you just walked into the room. But after a few minutes or maybe half an hour, maybe 10 minutes, you stop noticing it.
You go to, I don't know, if people still remember going to a bar and was full of smoke before smoking with band, you'd go in and you'd be like, oh, and then you don't notice it anymore.
The reason is, is that how our neurons work.
That's how the brain works.
The neurons will respond to things that are novel, new, just happened.
And after a while they adapt
and they stop responding.
Physically, they just stop responding.
So, okay, fine.
That's fine when it comes to sound
or smoke and so on,
but it happens to everything.
It also has what we call emotional adaptation.
So you meet your partner
and it's so exciting
and you're so grateful
and you're really kind of feel the love. And so, and it goes down over time. If they're constant, if they're with you, you just
don't notice how wonderful, you know, what is around you. You got a new job that you always
dreamed of and you're so happy, but very, very soon you think, oh, you know, what is the next
thing? Now that's not a bad thing. The reason that we do that is because we want to progress, but it also makes us a little bit less grateful and happy. And the flip
side is the side that people haven't noticed so much, which I think most of our book is, which is
about the fact that we stop noticing the bad things around us. Things like, for example,
if you go, as we talked about a little before we started, you go on Twitter when you just started Twitter, you know, 2010 or whatever, you'd go on in it and you'd be like, oh, this is terrible.
People are calling names to other people.
There's all this harassment online and you're kind of you notice it and you're and then you get used to it.
You don't notice it anymore. So whether it is misinformation that is around us,
whether it is dishonesty,
even things like the reason
that we don't really notice climate change around us
is because it's happening so, so, so slowly.
And our brain doesn't respond to things
that are constant or very, very slow.
So, or risk.
Actually, we have a whole
chapter about risk, risk adaptation, right? So how you get used to taking risks, and you don't
notice the risks anymore, you underestimate the risks, because you get used to that.
One of the things I was thinking, so earlier on, you talked about how when you were doing
presentations on stage, starting in a way that feels novel is a way to kind of bypass the mind's filter.
That's useful.
That's used to people coming up on stage and saying,
hi, I'm Tom from, I don't know, innovativesales.com.
And I'm going to tell you,
and then your brain just goes,
okay, we know what to do with this filter.
And then generally in marketing as well,
we have this term we use a lot on our team
where we'll say the word wallpaper.
You don't notice wallpapers there.
And so whenever a message sounds like wallpaper,
we know it becomes ineffective.
So when people do podcasts like this,
they'll say things like, like and subscribe.
Now you've heard that 10,000 times.
So it works on no one.
I'm asking you to like and subscribe,
but you've heard the phrase.
So, but if I say it in another way,
if I say my mom's got a message for you
and then my mom appears in her big, wonderful African voice and says, this is my son's YouTube channel, please do.
Then instantaneously it bypasses the wallpaper filter and you're like, what the heck?
And then the second thing I was thinking about when you talked about that is how we become kind of, we lose gratitude for things in our lives very quickly because we're becoming sort of desensitized and use the example of our relationships so how does one stop themselves from becoming bored of their partner
yeah actually i have i have a few good answers but um i i love your examples i might use a few
of them no i was just thinking back and i think i think what you're saying and i'll talk about the
relationship in a minute but yes exactly what you want to do is surprise people, right?
Exactly what you're saying.
You need the brain to be surprised.
I didn't expect that.
Because what the brain is trying to do at all times, it's actually trying not to be surprised.
The brain is trying to model the world, to have an internal model of what's outside so I can anticipate what's happening.
So then I can react in time,
right? I want to know whether it's going to rain. I don't want to be surprised in the rain because I
want to bring the umbrella ahead of time. So it's all about I have the best model of the world in
my mind so I can predict what's happened so I can react in time ahead of time. So that's why we're
not responding to things that are unexpected because the model in the brain already told us
what is about to happen. And when you surprise people, that's when like the neurons go, and then it's
attention, right? So, so we actually talk about relationships. And it seems that when you ask
people, and this is from, I'm going to mispronounce her name, but a well-known relationship expert.
And she says that she's done studies.
And when you ask people, when do you feel most attracted to your partner?
They say one of two things.
Either when you see them in an unexpected way, something that you're not used to.
Maybe they're talking to some strangers.
Maybe they're on a stage doing something. And the second thing they say is, when I'm away and when I come back.
I mean, it's really resonating, right? It's like, I mean, I feel that a lot, like when I'm kind of,
you know, I've been away for a while and I'm on the plane ready, you know, on the way home. And
I'm like, oh, I can't wait to see everyone again. And, you know, so what that tells us is that we need a little bit of distance. I think that's what it says,
right? That in fact, you might want to be away for like a weekend, for a day or so on.
And that kind of causes what we call like, it's a bit tacky, but we call it re-sparkling,
like re-sparkling or like, we actually got the term from Julia Roberts. My co-author happened to read an interview with Julia Roberts
and she was saying how her life, I mean, it's Julia Roberts, of course, like rich and privileged
and all of that. But she was talking about her regular life and, you know, she has a couple of
kids and her husband and she wakes up in the morning and there's breakfast and she brings them to school.
And then, you know, they go have a bike ride and lunch and then picks up the kids.
And she's like, well, if I did that every day, all day for years and years and years, I'd probably think it was quite boring, you know, and not that great.
But once in a few months, she goes away and does her filming or whatever and comes back and everything seems like re-sparkle again, right?
Because it's kind of feels like new again.
So you want to make things feel like they're new.
And one way to do it is just to take yourself to another place.
Now, you could say, well, maybe I don't have money to go away for the weekend.
Well, there's a few solutions for that.
So this was interesting because doing COVID, I got COVID.
And so I had to go down to the basement. And so I had to spend, you know, five days or a week in the basement.
First of all, it wasn't that bad. It was like a little camping experience. And second of all,
when like the few days were up, I felt like my home life was so amazing. So, you know,
I came out of the basement. But it turns out, so there is a little exercise that Laurie Santos recommends, who's a professor at Yale.
And she says, if you just imagine for a minute, like close your eyes and imagine your life without your partner, without like the great house that you have, without like the great job that you have.
Like if you really imagine it and think about it like that, then, you know, like the fear comes in.
And then when you kind of get out of that, you're like, oh, I oh i appreciate it right now you have to probably do it more than two minutes here but
and i feel that's so true when you have kind of you know how you have a dream you kind of wake up
from this really terrible dream where you lost your partner or something like that and you
and you're like so appreciative and so i yeah i've got reoccurring dream of being
falsely imprisoned for a comedy commit and I wake
up oh my god my freedom no but you what you've described there is um me and my friends have been
talking about we call it desire management in our relationships which is like actively managing the
desire because we have a really good example in our in our friendship circle of a friend who
moved in with his partner on the second date and they didn't just move in together they moved into
a hotel room in the second day and they just this was covid or what um it was during covid but she
she lived on the other side of the world so in order for them to be together she was going to
have to fly across and stay with him and it was basically their second day they moved into a hotel
room together and desire very quickly drops and you but there's also this collision of lifestyles so like oh my
god you've left the toilet seat up and you make the bathroom wet and these kinds of smaller things
which also are an impact have a huge impact on desire but then you're held together in a hotel
room for three months barely knowing this person desire in that early phase of relationship should
be you know it's normally like a little bit exciting and it's funny how that can kill desire so quickly and then moving in and
then um another friend of mine moved in straight away with somebody and they work together live on
top of each other and i saw the same thing so me and my friends came up with this term called desire
management where it's actually our jobs as a sort of in a relationship to manage the desire, actively manage it.
And this means obviously some people go for dates and they try and keep things new and fresh. But
one of the best ways that I do it in my relationship is my partner goes away all the
time and so do I. And like, she's been in India for the last four weeks. She got back
yesterday or the day before. It's like, feels brand new again again and she does it all the time she's always
flying away somewhere i'm gonna go do this training course in summer i'm like oh my god this is
amazing because then i really look but then also it's funny you said that because um last night we
were at our christmas party that's why everyone here's a bit pissed still a bit slow and some of
them are missing and um my girlfriend was really really pushing me to go up and dj i've never really
dj'd before but i've been learning for nine months. And she was like pushing, she was like, we'll go get a, there was a DJ at the party.
She was like, we'll go get a USB stick now. We'll go put it on there and you go up and DJ. And I,
I noticed that when I went, I went home, I put some music on, I came back to the party and I
DJ'd, I could see, I could see because it was seeing me in a new context. Right. And it's
high status, probably quite attractive context. And conversely, when she did her breathwork sessions in London and she had this room full of 25 people and she basically has them hypnotized.
Like they're crying and screaming and she's doing this thing.
It was so attractive for me to see that.
See her in this new, it was almost like discovering a new person.
Because you also see that person from the eyes of the strangers to see them, right?
So they see them as someone that they don't know,
that they're not intimate with.
And you kind of maybe see that,
you get that point of view.
Well, I can't wait to read that book as well.
We have a closing tradition on the podcast
where the last guest asks a question for the next guest,
not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for so let me see people don't believe me when i say this but i actually don't
get to see the question beforehand um okay the question left for you is
can you describe what winning means to you
so it's a catch because i think what winning means to me is to get what i want however as we just
said once you get what you want then you want something else so that's still the answer
thank you so much telly you write the best books you really do this conversation has been one of my then you want something else. So that's still the answer.
Thank you so much, Tali.
You write the best books.
You really do.
This conversation has been one of my favorite ever because you have a really remarkable ability
to deliver very important information
that's very actual in people's lives.
Do the tie it in with a story that makes it seem
that connects on an emotional level,
but then also support it with science and psychology.
So thank you so much.
It's honestly a huge,
I don't like people.
Thank you, that was super fun.
I really, really, really mean it.
Fantastic conversation.
And I, I know already how much my audience
are going to appreciate it
because I can kind of predict
because we're kind of the same people,
me and the audience.
So thank you so much for your time, Tali.
It means a lot to me.
Thank you for having me. you