The Mel Robbins Podcast - How To Make Your Life Exciting Again
Episode Date: July 18, 2024New research shows that your work, your life, and your relationships will get boring. Today, you’ll learn a simple tool you can use to make your life exciting, joyful, and energizing again. This p...rofound conversation will allow you to truly understand and connect the dots between why you've become bored with what used to excite you – and how you can create more meaning in your life.In this episode, Mel is joined by the renowned neuroscientist from University College London and MIT, Dr. Tali Sharot. She is here to teach you the groundbreaking science and research about how you can start feeling excitement about your life again.Dr. Sharot is a behavioral neuroscientist and the director of the Affective Brain Lab at University College London. Her research integrates neuroscience, behavioral economics, and psychology to study how emotion and behavior influences people's beliefs and decisions.After today, you will know how to use Dr. Sharot’s research to make your life sparkle again and reignite happiness in your day-to-day life.You’ll also learn very specific, tactical things you can do to make your vacations better, avoid a midlife crisis, and improve the experience of your everyday life.For more resources, including links to Dr. Tali’s books, website, and research, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked this episode with Dr. Tali Sharot, you will love her first appearance on The Mel Robbins Podcast: How to Motivate Yourself (and Others) to Change Any BehaviorAnd to go deeper in the themes of this episode, you’ll love this one: 5 Fun Ideas to Shake Up Your Life & Get Out Of A RutConnect with Mel: Watch the episodes on YouTubeGo deeper with Mel’s free video course, Make It HappenFollow Mel on Instagram The Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTok Sign up for Mel’s personal letter Disclaimer
Transcript
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Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins Podcast.
You're not going to believe what I did last night.
I mean, just take a guess.
What do you think I did last night?
You're never going to guess this one.
Well, last night, my husband Chris and I pitched a tent in our backyard. We grabbed a blow-up mattress, a couple of comforters, two pillows, and we slept out
under the stars in our backyard here in Vermont.
It was a full moon.
It was absolutely incredible.
And we used to do this kind of stuff all the time when we were first dating.
I mean, we were constantly planning fun adventures
and camping and like doing cool things outside.
And, you know, we've been married now.
My God, it's gonna be 28 years this year.
Holy smokes.
Well, and the other day, Chris turned to me and said,
hey Mel, you know, in a couple nights,
it's gonna be a full moon, weather looks good.
You have any interest in sleeping outside in a tent?
I was like, oh my God, yes!
And so we did.
In fact, we did it last night.
And here I was this morning.
After sleeping in the tent last night, I was having my coffee in the house.
And if you're watching, you can probably tell based on the fact that I have greasy hair,
I've pulled it back in a ponytail and I'm wearing my red flannel that I look like I was camping because I was.
But here I am, you know, we're out of the tent,
I'm standing in my kitchen,
I got my mug of coffee in my hand
and I started to wonder, that was so fun.
When did life get boring?
Why don't I do this more often?
And then it dawned on me.
Mel, maybe life isn't boring.
Maybe you've gotten boring.
I want you to really think about that.
Maybe the reason why you're not having enough fun
in your life or your relationship or work
is because you've gotten a little too used to your routine.
And that's made you a little boring.
Well, today, that's made you a little boring.
Well today, that's what you and I are going to talk about with a neuroscientist from MIT
in University College London who says, habits and routines have a hidden cost.
They can make your life feel boring.
And she's here to tell you what to do about it.
There are really fun ways that you can shake up your life, your work, your relationships,
and even a really fun thing that research says you need to do to shake up your vacation.
So are you ready to shake things up?
Good.
Let's go.
Hey, it's your friend Mel.
I am so glad you're here with me today.
It is always such an honor to spend some time together, and I want to start by acknowledging
you for taking the time to listen to something that is going to help you create a better
life.
And I know our conversation today is going to do that.
If you're a new listener, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast family.
I'm so happy you're here with me.
I love the topic that we're going to talk about, and I am a little groggy because, yes,
I did sleep in a tent last night.
And I was telling you, my husband Chris and I,
when we were first, like, dating,
and then we eventually got married and we had kids,
and when they were young,
we used to go camping all the time.
And not only, like, to the national parks
and out into the wilderness, but we would pitch a tent in the backyard when our kids were little,
like just on any given night, especially during those years when we didn't have the money to go away and take a trip.
And just a couple of days ago, you know, we're standing in the kitchen, we're cooking dinner.
Chris and I have been married for 28 years.
We've been together for a long time.
And Chris turns to me out of the blue and he's like,
Hey Mel, you wanna sleep outside?
And just that one change to our normal routine
created so much excitement and fun.
I felt like I was dating him again.
And you know, to put this in perspective,
it's not like I'm in the wilderness.
I mean, we pitched the tent like eight feet
from our bedroom for crying out loud.
Like you could almost reach out and touch the house.
If I had to get up and go to the bathroom during the night,
I would have just walked into my house.
But I felt a world away.
Because just think about what do you do on a normal night
after work or school?
Same old, same old, right?
You cook dinner, you clean up, you watch something on TV
or you read a book, you go to bed, boring.
Instead, one small change, just eight feet from the outside of my house, whole new world,
whole new marriage, one small change.
You know, I was thinking this morning that you and I talk a lot about the topic of locking
in a routine or, you know, learning new habits and making them stick.
And that's a really important topic when you wanna change and learn something new.
But today we're gonna talk about something different,
which is what do you do when you need to change a life?
You don't wanna blow it up, you just wanna mix it up.
You know what I mean?
A life or work or a relationship
that's become just too routine.
It's a little boring.
And when that happens, you got to do the opposite.
You have to become really intentional about breaking the routine, about shaking things
up, not in a way that breaks everything apart, but that makes them better.
Like think about a snow globe, right?
You pick up a snow globe and you shake it.
And all of a sudden, all of that stuff that was inside gets just
covered in all this shimmery little stuff.
And then all the shimmery little stuff, that little shake, it eventually just drifts down
to the bottom, and the image appears and things go back to normal.
That's exactly what I'm talking about, how to add that little shake into your life,
into your relationship, into your work.
And I know you've experienced what I'm talking about
when I say that things are a little boring.
That life, like nothing's really bad.
It just feels a little dull, you know?
Like the only thing that you have to look forward to
is oh my gosh, is there some surprise movie
that's streaming tonight? Or that vacation that you can afford look forward to is, oh my gosh, is there some surprise movie that's streaming tonight?
Or that vacation that you can afford
to take eight months from now?
Like that's not a way to go through your life.
So today, we're gonna shake things up.
And we're gonna shake it up in a really cool way,
because this is not just some light chit chatty topic.
There's a word that researchers have
to describe this feeling when life gets a little dull,
when things seem a little too boring.
That feeling that the person that you're in a relationship with has lost their luster.
It's this feeling that, I hate to say it, but you're kind of falling out of love with
a life that you used to love.
You might be silently quitting your job.
The word to describe when life becomes too routine is habituation.
And habituation affects everything, and it affects your enjoyment of every single aspect
of your life.
And habituation is the phenomenon
of how when you get used to something,
you tend not to enjoy it as much,
whether that's your significant other,
or even have you ever noticed the first day of vacation
is always the best?
And then you start to get used to being away
and it's just not as fun as it was on the first day.
Or the first bite of ice cream.
Way better than the rest of the cone.
I mean, that doesn't keep me from eating the entire thing,
but the question is, how can you enjoy the whole thing?
How can you shake up your day-to-day life
or your relationship or your work so you enjoy it more?
And there's a lot of research about why this is important
and so many fun and simple things
that you're gonna learn to do today
that will make the little and the big things
in your life shimmer again.
And what I love about this topic,
it's one of my favorite kinds of topics
because it combines deep academic research
with the tiny little things you can do
that make a profound difference on your experience
as you live
your day-to-day life.
And here with the groundbreaking science and the research to teach you how you can start
seeing, feeling, and noticing all the shimmery cool things in your life again is Dr. Tali
Sherritt.
Now, Dr. Sherritt is a behavioral neuroscientist and the director of the Effective Brain Lab
at University College London. Her research integrates neuroscience, behavioral economics, and psychology to study how emotion
and behavior influences people's beliefs and decisions. She's also a professor at both
University College London and MIT and the best-selling author of three books, including
the new book, Look Again. And this episode, I think you're gonna love it
because it's one of those profound conversations
that will allow you to truly understand
and connect the dots between why you've become bored
with what used to give you excitement and meaning.
And more importantly, based on the research,
how you can reignite the sparks of joy and happiness
in your day-to-day
life. Dr. Tali Sherritt, welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I am so excited to shake
things up with you.
I am so excited to be here. Thanks for having me.
What I'd love to do is dig into your really amazing research on habituation. You have uncovered this link between change
and experiencing happiness and joy in your life.
And so many of us fear change,
and yet what you're finding is that our ability to change
and pushing ourselves to change
and experiencing new things in our life
is foundational to you enjoying your life
and having moments
of joy.
So can you tell us about habituation?
Right.
So habituation, it's really a fundamental process, our fundamental rule that governs
how our brain works and every neuron in it.
And it's basically our tendency to respond less and less and less to things that are
constant or that change very gradually or are frequent.
So for example, an easy example, you walk into a bakery, there's like the smell of the
baked goods and the cake and studies show that within 20 minutes, you cannot detect
the smell any longer.
The olfactory neurons in your brain stop responding because the smell is constant around you, right?
So very fast, they will actually stop
and you won't be able to smell.
You probably have this with perfume, right?
When you first buy perfume and you put it on,
really salient, next day a little bit less,
for a day a little bit less, a month goes by
and you can't smell your own perfume.
It's so true.
Yeah, so that's habituation, or you jump into a pool,
it's really cold, but you tend to get used to it.
After a few minutes, it's less cold, right?
And so just as you habituate to smells or to a temperature, you also habituate to more
complicated things in your life or in society.
So for example, you get used to there's a new romance, right?
It's really exciting, but over time, it gets less exciting, right?
So you have less of a reaction,
less of a physiological reaction,
less of an emotional reaction,
but you also get used to the bad stuff, breakup, right?
There's less of a reaction to that.
You get used to the view of the ocean,
and you get used to pollution too,
meaning you're able to detect it less,
you're able to see it even less
you get used to a new job to a promotion you react to that yet less you
habituate to that you can habituate also to losing a job and so because of
habituation we might have some great things in our life like a loving
relationship or a comfortable home or interesting job, but they don't elicit as much joy on a daily basis as you'd expect
them to.
Just because you're used to it?
Right.
Right.
You don't notice them anymore, right?
You could have a wonderful comfortable home, which when you first bought it, you were so
excited and you kind of like really kind of noticed everything.
But now you're there every day, right?
So it doesn't elicit as much of a reaction.
The same thing with a job.
When you first got the job, you're like,
oh, you're just amazed that you could do what you could do.
But now you're doing it every day, you're doing it right.
So it has less.
It doesn't mean the people don't appreciate it all,
but less so over time.
And it's a similar thing for the bad stuff in life.
So there could be bad things around us,
societal things like sexism or racism,
or could be cracks in your personal relationships
or inefficiencies in the workplace.
But if they've been there for a long time,
we stop noticing them.
We just kind of get used to them and we stop.
And if we stop noticing them,
we're less motivated to change.
So how does this impact our happiness?
Because it seems like it could have good and bad implications, and I think it's really
interesting that your brain itself is reacting to something that you're getting used to.
So it's not like you're some sort of jerk that's just zoning out.
It's that your brain, in your words, this is
habituation, that you're becoming really familiar with your partner or with where you work or your neighborhood. So
how does this impact our happiness?
Well, it means that the good things around us can create less happiness, right, on a daily basis.
So the stuff that's really good and everyone has some good, you know, stuff around us again, it could be a relationship. It could be a comfortable home, but those things don't
elicit as much happiness. So that has a negative impact on our happiness. However, you know,
on the flip side, if something bad happens, even if it's really, really bad,
a loss of a loved one, you know, we habituate to that as well.
To the bad stuff in life, we habituate.
And it could be a good thing because we don't want to feel like a breakup, right?
We don't want to feel that pain that you feel at the very beginning.
You want to habituate, right?
So then you can move forward.
So that's good.
That's very good. But on the other hand, there could be some bad things that have been there for a long
time and they're kind of like in the background. And because of habituation, we don't really
notice them. And that's not great because then we are not motivated to change. And it,
you know, it turns out if you do notice and you try to change and you're successful, well,
that will enhance your well-being and your happiness.
Well, I think that's what the thing that's super cool about
your research is that there is a direct connection
between the happiness and joy that you feel and the amount that you're willing to change.
What is happening in your brain when you experience something new?
Right. So really,
our brain, you can think about it as a front page of a newspaper.
It cares about what's new, what just happened.
It doesn't really care that much about the old.
And it makes sense, you know, if you think about it like in an evolution kind of way,
and, you know, your ability to adapt.
When something new is happening, your brain needs to process,
because maybe you need to react, right?
Maybe it's like threatening. But after, you know, it's been there for a while and you're fine,
well, we really need to keep our resources, you know, the neurons need to be ready for
the next new thing that's coming. So we're ready to react to that. And so new is what
we are noticing the most and what we're acting to the most. And just to give you kind of
like a fun example, I was working
with a tourism company where they wanted to know what makes people happiest on
vacation and when they're happiest on vacation. So we went to the resorts and
we surveyed people and we asked them, hey what was the best bit of the vacation?
And there was one words that they repeated more than any other word and it
was first. The first view of the
ocean, the first cocktail that I had, the first sun castle that I built, right? The
first was new and exciting. Now the second view of the ocean, that was good too, but
it wasn't quite as good as the first, right? And the second cocktail was quite good, but
it wasn't good as the first cocktail. And that's because of habituation, right? We feel
less. And the other interesting thing was
when we just looked at the data and we wanted to see when were they the happiest,
we found that they were happiest 43 hours into a vacation.
Forty-three hours gave you time to unpacked and really focus on the fun.
But from that point on,
fun started dwindling over time because we habituated.
You were still happy on day eight, seven, six, and five,
but not as happy as you were 43 hours in,
because you have started to habituate to the environment,
to the activities.
I am learning so much.
I feel empowered to try new strategies.
And so I want to take a quick break
and hear a word from our sponsors.
And while you're listening to our sponsors
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takeaways coming up that you're going to be thrilled that you stuck around to learn,
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Welcome back. It's your friend Mel, and we are here with the remarkable neuroscientist,
Dr. Tali Sharit. So how do we apply this research around vacations to our own life?
So I think it suggests that maybe we want to have more frequent vacations, but shorter
ones, right? So instead of going away for a couple of weeks, you might actually go for
a long weekend a few times. Now, sometimes it's not possible
if you're going far, but what that means is you will have more of those 43 hour peaks,
you will have more of those firsts. And you know what else you will have? You will have
the anticipation of the vacation, because this is what I didn't tell you. I told you
that the happiest time is 43 hours into the vacation. But I didn't actually tell you that the really, really happiest
time is a day before vacation.
So there is a study that was conducted where people who
were about to go on vacation were asked every day
of the week before vacation how happy they were,
every day of the vacation for a week how happy they were,
and then every day of the when they came back after vacation
how happy they were.
And it turns out that people are happiest
before they even step on the plane.
So the day before vacation, they're still in their office
working on their computers,
but in their mind, they're on vacation.
And in their mind, it's quite wonderful.
When they go on vacation, it is good,
but it's not as good as it was in their mind the day before.
The anticipation of good things
is what really makes people happy. So if you have more vacations, you have more of those
anticipations and you have more of the afterglow as well. Well, you know what? There's huge
implications if you take this even out of the context of vacations and you just say,
what are things that I look forward to? Whether it's a date on the calendar eight months from now
where I'm gonna get together with my favorite family members
or it is some day that I'm taking off of work
to take a class or it is some cool thing.
Like I'm going, it sounds kind of dumb,
but I'm going on a walk this weekend with my husband
and it is a guided walk looking for owls.
This must mean I'm in my 50s,
but I am so excited for this thing.
And so I can see how even just being proactive
about putting things in your calendar out in the future
to look forward to is a way to hack happiness in your life now.
Absolutely. I call these anticipatory events, right?
These are events that we have on our calendar.
They haven't happened yet, but they're making you happy at the moment.
And in fact, this is why when you ask people about which days, which is a favorite day of the week,
people prefer Friday by far more than Sunday,
because Friday brings with this the anticipation of everything that they had planned for the weekend,
whether it is a hike to find owls or whatever it is.
But Sunday, you might be out hiking and looking for owls,
but you have the anxiety of the work week.
So indeed, anticipation is something that's really, really important.
And so have that holiday booked, have that activity booked.
It can be a night out.
It could be a hike.
Very simple things, right?
And that makes us happy at the moment.
What's so interesting about this research that I really like is that you got no choice in this.
Like your brain is literally filing away information
based on your familiarity with it.
And so what is the implication for your relationship?
Because as I'm sitting here listening to you talk about
the research on vacation,
which I think we can all relate to,
I'm also thinking, oh, well, probably
right around day 43 or week 43 as you're dating somebody and you're wondering, why is this person
no longer being proactive? Why is this person no longer seeming to make an effort? Why is this
no longer feeling as exciting? Is that habituation? Yeah.
So habituation has a lot to do with this, right?
And in fact, so if you listen to Esther Perel, you know, the well-known relationship expert,
she did surveys and research where she asked people, hey, when were you most attracted
to your partner?
These are people who have been together for a while, Mary Gappos.
And she found that they said two things.
Either they said, I was most attracted to my partner when I went away and came back.
Maybe I was like on a business trip.
I was away for a weekend and I came back, right?
Which makes perfect sense because what you're doing when you're leaving a situation and
then coming back is you're dishabituating.
What does dishabituating mean?
It means that you remove that thing, right?
You stepped out of the bakery for 10 minutes.
Now you're coming back.
Now your neurons are gonna start responding.
Maybe not as much as a very, very first
that when you enter the bakery,
but if there's a large enough break,
then you dishabituate and you start responding, right?
And that's the first thing she found.
We have actually, so on the cover of our book,
if you open it up, there's a little visual illusion,
which is colors, clouds of colors,
and a fixation point in the middle.
And if you fixate on that fixation point
and you don't move your eyes at all,
what happens is the colors suddenly become gray. And if you do it really, really well, actually, it
just becomes white. And why does that happen? Because the input to every specific neuron,
if you're not moving your eyes, doesn't change. It's the same, right? The same colors are
getting to the same exact neurons. And so the neurons at the beginning, they're like
active, they're like active.
They're like, color, color, color.
Then they're like, well, color is not changing.
I'm going to stop responding.
So now it's gray and finally it's white.
All you need to do is move your eyes like that.
Just move them for a second and then the color
immediately comes back because
now different neurons are getting different signals,
and now they're reacting again.
So that's dishabituation.
The habituation is what came at. So that's dishabituation, right? Gotcha.
The habituation is what came at the beginning
and then dishabituation.
And so that kind of same principle,
of course, like the actual neural mechanism
is not exactly the same, but the principle is the same.
Your partner's been there for a while,
everything's the same.
We kind of like don't notice, don't respond, don't think.
We leave for a bit, we come back, and now colors, right?
So that's the first thing she found.
And the second thing is related,
which she found that people say
they're most attracted to the partner
when they're in a novel new situation.
For example, the partner is talking to some strangers
or the partner is on the stage doing something, right?
And again, this is a form of dishabituation.
You're seeing your partner in a different way
because they are in a different circumstance.
So now it's not the same old same old, right?
It's something new.
When does habituation pose the biggest, I think, threat
to upsetting what might be otherwise a nice life. Because I could see how you getting used
to your neighborhood, you getting used to your,
I'll just take the example of a kitchen.
Your kitchen's perfectly fine,
and yet you probably spend a lot of time on social media
looking at kitchens and thinking about a kitchen renovation,
and then you walk into another person's house,
and you're like, ooh, we should have a coffee bar,
we should do, what if I did white cabinets?
And now all of a sudden you're looking at your kitchen, which has been perfectly
fine and you no longer like it.
You kind of hate it.
And so does habituation make you start to reject or not like the things in your
life from relationships to your job, to your neighborhood, to your kitchen?
Is that part of the problem
with this if you don't realize it's going on?
Yeah, because it brings you less joy. And as a result, you want something different,
right? And I think your example is great because there's two things here. One is, it's something
that you had before, which you thought was fantastic.
Yes.
The kitchen. You thought was fantastic before, but now is not
that exciting, not that fun. And also the other thing that nice that you said is like,
well, I go to another person's house, I think their kitchen is great. And they probably
come to yours. And for them, they think like, oh, the kitchen is great. Or they think like,
oh, she has like a wonderful life. She has like, and it's potentially the case that you
have the same thing, right? But you've had it the same for a while.
Yes.
And that's why kind of we're looking for, you know,
diversity or new things.
And it's not all bad, right?
I mean, again, it's like two sides of the coin.
Okay, maybe we don't need to, like, redo our kitchen
every couple of years.
But that kind of needs to progress, right?
That's not necessarily just a bad thing.
That keeps us moving forward.
But it's like a delicate balance.
How do you balance it?
Because I can think about an example where we all are chasing the next greatest thing,
right?
We're chasing something that looks better
or something that's gonna be this,
and we're kind of going after that newness thrill.
And it's very clear that there's both the need to change,
but there's also the fact that constantly chasing it
and using an example of what,
oh, well, their significant other does a lot of that and my partner doesn't do that anymore.
Is it making us unhappy to constantly seek the change
or how do you balance it?
Yeah, so, I mean, it is definitely a balance,
which is why I think it's important to kind of think about
how do we get some joy back from what we have, right? And there's two
ways to do that, right? And one, and we kind of like one of the ways is what we talked
about, which is like a little break, right? You probably noticed that if you go on a work
thing for a couple of days, or maybe even more, maybe three days or a week. And when you come back, it seems like everything has re-sparkled, right?
Even your kitchen.
Yes.
I'd imagine that if you're away for enough time, you come back and the kitchen has re-sparkled,
right?
It suddenly does look great.
So does Chris.
And I think he looks at it and is like, you're not so bad after all.
And the home and everything else.
It's definitely something that happens. In fact, we stole the word,
with the word respalco from Julia Roberts.
So she has a quote where she says that
her normal day is like, she gets up,
she takes the kids to school, she comes back,
she maybe goes on a bike ride, maybe with her husband,
she has lunch, then it's time to pick them up and take them to their after-school activities and she says well if I've done that
Every day, you know for months and months and months it would just be boring, but I don't because I go away
You know to film or whatever she does and then she comes back and then it has
Resparpled right? Yes sparkling everything. Yes, like she, it seems like there's pixie dust on it.
Yes.
And you can say, well, Julia Roberts is not the average human being.
Correct.
She's quite a privileged person, but I think she's talking here about something that we can relate to.
Which is if you take a little break and you come back, then your life looks a little bit different.
Right? You disabituate to some degree. It doesn't, maybe it doesn't last very long, but you can see things a little bit differently.
Dr. Sharrett, I am eating up every single word
and this right now feels like a great moment
to take a quick pause so we can hear a word
from our sponsors.
Don't you love what you're learning from Dr. Sharrett?
And did you notice your last name?
Sharrett.
So how about you share it, as in this episode,
with somebody that you love
while you're listening to our sponsors.
And don't go anywhere, because Dr. Sharrett
has shown up here with brand new cutting edge research.
We're gonna be talking about that in a little bit.
Don't go anywhere.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back. It's your friend, Mel. We are here with Dr. Sherrit.
She is teaching us so much about the latest research
on the connection between change and happiness and joy.
Dr. Sherrit, do you have recommendations
for how a person who's not leaving to go film a movie
could do that if they're in a job
that they go to all the time?
And they are in just this cycle of same person,
same job, same neighborhood, same group of friends.
How do you use this research to re-sparkle
some pixie dust on your life?
Right, so two things.
First is you could probably take a break, okay?
To most people, they could still take a little break.
You could still go away for a few days and come back.
Now, let's say you can't do that.
Laurie Santos, who is a professor at Yale,
suggests closing your eyes
and imagining your life without these things, right?
Imagine your life without that wonderful kitchen. Imagine your life without these things, right? Imagine your life without that wonderful kitchen.
Imagine your life without the partner,
without the job that you have, right?
And then when you open your eyes again,
well, things kind of are sparkle a little bit, right?
So that's like a good little kind of exercise to do.
I actually like that because I think the instinct
is instead of closing your eyes and imagining your life
without the person you're complaining about or without the kitchen that you have that
is great and works fine and without the neighborhood you live in, that we instead look out instead
of in and we go, oh, well, I like the way that relationship over there works oh well I like the way that relationship over
there works better and I like the way that kitchen over there looks better and
then you bring it back to your life and pound on the people that are there
instead of taking a step to close your eyes and go well what would my life look
like if they weren't here? Now obviously obviously, if you're happy, then you gotta make some changes. But if you feel that little ache,
then what do you do?
Right.
You just open your eyes
and sprinkle a little fairy dust on them.
How does this impact our sex life?
So again, if we go back to Esther Perrell's research,
her recommendations is breaks or novelty, right? Putting yourself...
Well, a lot of us are already taking breaks, so that's not working.
Putting yourself. Putting yourself. She doesn't, yeah. She means, I think, breaking away from that person for a little bit.
It doesn't mean like a break in a relationship.
No, I meant like a break from sex. There's a lot of us in the menopause years that are like, you know, we need to get more
adventurous.
So either take a break in terms of stop or introduce a novelty.
And so the novelty is like a really interesting thing because, okay, so I was talking about
breaks before and then the second thing you could do to spice up your relationship, but
in general to spice up your life, but in general to spice up your life, is to introduce variety.
Right? So diversify. And I don't know that, you know, she necessarily is giving examples
just about, you know, what's happening in the bedroom while you're in the bedroom, because
I think her point is that if you do things in a way that's different outside, so once in a while when she said,
oh, you see your partner on the stage,
or you see them doing something
that you've never seen them before,
what her research suggests is that that enhances attraction.
But I think the message of variety and novelty
is important for our life in general.
So people who have a more diverse life,
they've maybe lived in different places,
they work in different types of projects,
they interact with different type of people,
they tend to have a more psychologically rich life, right?
So I think we could definitely do that.
Whatever kind of life you have,
you can actually shake things up a little bit.
It can be something small, like how do you commute to work?
What route do you take to work?
It could be small like that.
Or it could be like, maybe take a course and it doesn't,
it could be something online, okay?
So maybe you don't have the money to pay for like a new,
but take up a new skill or a new,
listen to a new podcast, right?
So try to change things or maybe start talking to someone
or befriend someone who's different
from the normal kind of people that you tend to interact.
I'm not even, you know, like their personality is not the type that you usually are interacting
with.
And by diversifying, we are doing a few things.
We are disabituating because now, you know, we have different inputs that we're not used
to.
We also, as we talked about before, are putting ourselves in a context of learning.
And that's important.
Learning is always good.
We enjoy learning.
Well, it boosts your happiness based on the research.
Right, exactly.
I have another question about the research, which is, when does habituation and the fact
that you're now used to your life feel the most overwhelming?
Right. So I think it is when things are not changing for a prolonged time, and we see that in our midlife.
And so there's this interesting thing called the U-shape of happiness.
So happiness is quite high in kids and teenagers, and then it goes down, down, down,
and reaches rock bottom in your midlife,
but then it starts going up again,
and actually remains quite high
until the last couple of years of life.
And again, this U shape is on average, right?
So there's thousands of individuals,
and we're looking for a trend,
and data from thousands of individuals.
It doesn't mean that for every person,
midlife will be the bottom parts,
and you'll be happy in the edges.
But that's in general.
And so why are people less happy in midlife?
There could be many reasons.
But one reason is it is the least amount of change.
If you think about it, when you're a kid,
things are changing all the time.
I mean, you're changing.
You're growing.
You're learning.
It's like a most amount of change.
Then you're in the 20s, you're trying different things,
you're trying different partners,
you're trying different professions.
Maybe you're in university or in college, right?
You're learning a lot.
And then comes midlife and things are kind of similar.
Most people kind of stay in the same place
because maybe people have kids.
You're mostly on average, maybe with the same partner.
You may be at the top of your game professionally,
but you're kind of maintaining, right?
You're not kind of looking up.
You're not looking sideways.
You're mostly just maintaining.
And so that's the least amount of learning,
the least amount of change.
Now, counter-intuitively, at an older age,
once the kids get out of the house
and maybe you're retired, in fact, you're starting to change again. Now you need to
learn how am I going to live my life? It's a totally different life now, right? And so
it can seem like it will be overwhelming, and maybe it is at the beginning, but that
causes people to start learning again.
That is so cool. You literally just explained the midlife crisis and
the journey of happiness of the human beings through
the lens of neuroscience and the fact that
we assimilate to the experiences around us.
That's so cool. Dr. Sherrit,
you do a ton of work with companies and team behavior.
I was just curious, how can you keep your teams
motivated and creative when this habituation creeps in
at a job where it's kind of the same thing most days?
Yeah, so you want to induce, inject variety
into their daily work as well.
And so one thing that companies tend to do is they take people
and they rotate them through different divisions, right?
Or get them to work on different types of projects
with different type of people.
And if you do that, then again, you're
creating more change, more learning, dishabituation.
Not only are they learning something
from this new division, but then when they go back
to their old division, now it's a break, right?
So now they will see their division with new eyes,
which means they might appreciate the good things that they kind of have ituated to.
They might see the bad things that weren't quite salient before,
because they've been through, and that's a good thing,
because if I see the bad things, I'm going to try to change them, right?
And so that will enhance my well-being, right?
But also, it turns out it also enhances creativity.
So it turns out if you change your environment,
and it could be even really small changes,
like I'm working in my office,
and now I'm going to work in a coffee shop,
or I'm going to walk and maybe have like a meeting, you know, while walking.
It turns out that that enhances creativity.
So a research by a psychologist by the name of Kayleigh Main,
she found that creativity will be
boosted after making these changes,
just changing your environment.
Now, that being said, the creativity boost only lasts for six minutes.
However, those six minutes can be quite crucial.
That could be the time when you come up with this new idea,
you know, the new direction.
And in fact, you know, if I think about all the times
in my life when I had this like really important idea,
right, the creative solution,
it was never when I was in front of my computer working
and trying to think of a solution, right?
It was mostly when I was somewhere else, right?
Right. And so for one example,
I was in my office trying to solve this problem.
I couldn't solve it, so I decided to go to the gym.
Left the office, walked to the gym.
Gym was quite close.
It took me less than six minutes to get there,
but on the way is when I suddenly came up with a solution.
And I don't know that I necessarily was
consciously thinking about it,
but I think I had this old information in my mind
and then I just changed my environment
and that kind of changed something
in the way that my brain was processing things
and the solution appeared,
which was to be a really important kind of breakthrough
that will lead to a lot of what I did after that.
And if I think about it every single time,
every single time when I had an idea,
which would be like, oh, that will be my next book,
or that will be my next research direction,
or there's some problem that it was in that kind of situation.
I was suddenly in a new place, right?
Yeah.
Another one was I was in a conference
listening to these talks.
They were super interesting.
But then after the conference, I went,
and this was in San Francisco, so I went to a vineyard,
and I was just sitting outside and having a little wine.
And then suddenly the idea came,
based on the knowledge that I already had
during the conference, but it was like being in this
totally new, different environment, right?
Where the processing happened
and the creative idea came about.
Well, I think a lot of people have the experience
of either being out on a walk in the nature
or on some vacation or away for the weekend.
And that's where people tend to make big decisions
and have these breakthroughs
because you get a break from your life,
which gives you much needed perspective
about what's important
or what you've always been thinking about.
So if there were one change or one thing
that you hope the person listening would do
as a result of this conversation and all of the research,
what is one action that somebody could take
that you think would make a big difference in their life?
One action that you could take that will make a big difference?
I think it is try something new. And look, it might make no difference. It depends, right? But it might make a big difference. So try something new, whether it is, you know,
think about something that you want to learn, right?
Think about a new skill that you want to have, maybe,
you know, somewhere that you want to visit.
Just something try and you dish to make.
I don't know.
I think that would not necess- it could change your life,
right?
It could be that. Of course. You think it will change your life? But I think most likely not necessarily, it could change your life, right? It could be that thing that you think will change your life.
But I think most likely what it may do, it would give you this kind of like joy of novelty,
which then may create a habit of trying new things.
I love that.
And I love to end my interviews with brilliant people like you by giving you an opportunity
to just talk directly to the person that is listening.
They might be driving a car or unloading the dishwasher or taking you on a walk with them.
And I would love to give you the opportunity to just give them any parting words or some sort of message from you?
Sure. So we end our the book that I wrote together with my co-author, Kat Sanse,
we end that with a chapter that's called Experiments in Living.
OK, so my parting words is experiment in living.
And the idea here is that you don't really know what's good for your life
or for society without doing experiments. Just like in science, I don't know what the ground
truth is until I do my experiments. And sometimes it's surprising. And so the idea is that if you do
these experiments in living, try things in different ways, try them in new ways, it could be you're
actually taking out some stuff from your life, right? Try to maybe see what happens if you go off social media for a few weeks, right? See how
that impacts you. Maybe you like it, maybe you don't like it, right? Or maybe it's adding something
to your life. Experiments in living allows you to try, you know, everything or not everything, but like, you know, more things to find out what are
the optimal things for me and what doesn't really work.
I love it. Well, Dr. Tali Sherritt, thank you so much for
being here. And I also wanted to thank you for spending time with
us today. And in case nobody tells you, I wanted to tell you
that I love you. I believe in you. And I believe in your
ability to not only create a better life but to take Dr. Sherritt's words to heart and start
experimenting, start trying new things. Alrighty, I'll talk to you in a few days.
Is that good? Do you want to do it one more time?
What do you think?
All right, let me start one more time.
Let me do it one more time.
Okay, you ready?
Okay.
Doctor, doc.
Oh, that's right.
And the bet.
Okay.
And she's the best selling offer.
God, this is where the gas and the tank,
I need my own magic wand.
Come on Mel.
Okay.
Oh my Lordy.
Okay, here we go.
All right.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Amazing.
Super helpful.
Wow.
Okay.
Oh, and one more thing. And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you.
This podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
I'm just your friend.
I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute
for the advice of a physician, professional coach,
psychotherapist, or other qualified professional.
Got it? Good.
I'll see you in the next episode.
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