The Mel Robbins Podcast - This Shocking Truth About Other People Will Change Your Life
Episode Date: September 29, 2025What if the world became a better place by becoming better, more authentic versions of ourselves?Despite what the headlines and social media might suggest, we’re not as divided as we think. Most peo...ple want the same core things: to be a good person, to live with integrity and authenticity, and to make a positive impact.But we’re caught in a collective illusion - where the loudest voices dominate 80% of the headlines, social media, and public conversation.If there’s one episode to share with someone who’s feeling discouraged about the state of the world, it’s this one.In this powerful conversation, Mel sits down with Dr. Todd Rose, co-founder and CEO of the think tank Populace, which is on a mission to use data to ensure that all people have the opportunity to pursue fulfilling lives.He was also a professor at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education, where he earned his PhD and founded the Laboratory for the Science of Individuality.Dr. Rose has analyzed the largest dataset ever collected on what people actually want in life based not on what they share publicly, but what they admit privately, when they’re telling the truth.The data is clear: we are more alike than we are different. And the small, authentic choices we make every day can have a ripple effect that changes culture at scale.He also shares a remarkable moment in history that proves real change doesn’t start with the majority - it starts with a few people who dare to live honestly.In this episode, you’ll learn:- Why the world feels more polarized than it really is- What people actually want in life, according to the data- How the media and social platforms distort what most people believe- Why authenticity makes you happier, stronger, and more impactful- How your personal choices create ripple effects with global impact- Practical steps to live more truthfully and reclaim your voice This conversation will change how you see the world — and your place in it.If there’s one episode to listen to and share, it’s this one.For more resources, click here for the podcast episode page. If you liked the episode, check out this one next: This Conversation Will Change Your Life: Do This to Find Purpose & MeaningClick here to get tickets to Mel's live tour, Let Them Tour 2026.Connect with Mel: Get Mel’s #1 bestselling book, The Let Them TheoryWatch the episodes on YouTubeFollow Mel on InstagramThe Mel Robbins Podcast InstagramMel's TikTokSign up for Mel’s personal letterSubscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ to listen to new episodes ad-freeDisclaimer Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.
You know, lately, I'm just going to admit it.
I've been feeling more discouraged than normal.
Maybe you have two.
It's just that there's just so much polarization, so much negativity,
whether you're looking at the headlines or online,
it's so easy to get to a point where you're just exhausted.
Haven't you wondered?
How did we get here?
Why is everybody so far apart?
But despite all this noise, here is what I choose to believe. I believe that we want the same things
for ourselves and our families. I believe that we define success in largely the same way. I mean,
you want to be a good person. You want to feel like your authentic self. You want to do something
with your life that makes a difference in the world. You want good relationships with your family and your
friends. And yet somehow, this truth that unites us, it has been hijacked by headlines,
politics, the lies on social media, the busyness and pressure of trying to fit in. That it's easy
to forget who you are and what truly matters to you. In fact, I think that's why you listen to
this podcast. Because every time you listen, you are reminded that you are capable of so much
more, that you deserve more. You're reminded of what matters to you authentically. And that's why I cannot
wait for our conversation today. Because here in our Boston studios, we have an expert researcher
with a PhD from Harvard who's been crunching the single biggest data set on what people
truly want in life, how they define success, what matters to them. These are the kinds of
things that people admit when they're telling the truth in private, not the garbage they post about
online. Dr. Todd Rose is here to tell you and me there is a gigantic lie that you have been
told about other people and the world at large and he is here to teach you the truth. The truth is
you have the power to change your life. You can make a difference in the world because your brain
rewards authenticity. Authenticity, you being you. That is the secret to a better life and a better
world. You and I are going to learn from the scientist and researcher who has crunched all the data
on how to live a more authentic life. And today, that's what we're talking about. How you find
the courage to be yourself, the confidence to trust your own voice, and our collective power
to make the world a better place by being a better version of ourselves.
Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast. I'm so fired up that you're
here. I am so excited for today's conversation. It is always an honor to be together. It is
always an honor to spend time with you, but today it is particularly important. And if you're a
new listener or you're here because someone shared this conversation with you. I just wanted to take a
moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. Today's conversation about
authenticity and the lies that you've been told is going to be life-changing. Dr. Todd Rose is here
to teach you how to reconnect with your true self so you can live the life you deserve. He is the co-founder
and CEO of the Think Tank Populis, which is a mission to use data to ensure that all people have the
opportunity to pursue fulfilling lives. He was also a professor at Harvard University's Graduate School
of Education. Harvard is also where he earned his Ph.D. in developmental science. While he was at Harvard,
Dr. Rose led both the mind, brain, and education program and also founded their laboratory for
the science of individuality. He's written a number of best-selling books, including his most
recent, collective illusions, which reveals the biggest lies that you and I have been told about
ourselves and what other people believe. So please help me welcome Dr. Todd Rose to the Mel Robbins
podcast. Thanks for having me. I am so excited to talk to you. Me too. I'm really excited for so many
reasons. And here's where I want to start. How is my life going to be different? If you understand and
internalize the ideas we're going to talk about today, you're going to be more confident. You're going to
live more authentically, which is going to lead to greater life satisfaction, happiness. But more
importantly, your relationships are going to be better and you're going to have a deeper sense
of belonging to the groups that matter most to you. That's a big promise. I'm really excited for that.
I actually believe you. No, I do believe you. I believe you. And what I'm excited about is I have this
sense that we live in a world where we all feel so divided from one another. And yet I hold firmly
to this belief that the vast majority of us are way more similar and believe way more of the same,
things and want a lot of the same things than we actually are led to believe in the world right now.
And you're 100% correct. You know, what we do at my think tank populace, we do what's called
private opinion research. What is private opinion research? So polling, it's all public. Oh.
And it has all the social pressure. Okay. You know there's a right answer. And so it turns out everybody's
misrepresenting their views right now. You feel like there's this big cost if you just don't go with
the flow or you just don't agree or you just don't do what you think.
everybody else wants you to do, whether it's your family or at work or with your friend group.
And so you write a lot in your best-selling book, Collective Allusions, about the fact that we are
fundamentally wired to conform. What does that mean, Todd?
Yeah, this is really important to bring up because when we talk about conformity,
it kind of has like a negative connotation, right?
Yes.
Like nobody wants to admit they conform to something.
Yes.
But here's what's important.
We are hardwired to belong to groups.
Okay.
evolutionarily, this is how we survive.
And that belonging can lead to conformity
when we feel like we have to distort who we are
to get that belonging.
And if you don't mind, let me give you an example.
Please.
I'm going to tell you about what I think is my favorite study ever
because I can't believe he got funded to do it.
Okay.
A colleague of mine in the Netherlands back in 2009
was a little skeptical about this conformity,
like how deep it really went.
And so he said,
what's the most subjective thing I could possibly imagine
and see if conformity exists there?
So he decided it was,
who you think is good looking.
Because look, beauty's in the eye of the holder, right?
And there's no social pressure to be like,
you should think they're attracted because I do.
Yeah.
So he does this clever study.
He puts people in fMRI scanners,
and he does a version of hot or not.
Okay.
Really?
Like, this is why I can't believe he got funded.
He gets people, he shows him a couple hundred faces,
and he asks them to rate them on their attractiveness from one to five.
One, no thank you, five being yes, please, right?
Which, by the way, you do that kind of stuff.
stuff on the street, you're a creep. You do it in a scanner, you're a scientist. But here's what's
wild. So you're in that scanner and you see a face and you say, well, I think that's a five, pretty
attractive. What happens next is instantly you are shown another number, which is supposed to represent
the average score of everyone who's done this task before you. Okay, so if I just ranked somebody a five,
and then all of a sudden, I'm shown, well, everybody else said they were three. Yes, exactly, right?
And then we're going to watch what happens in your brain.
And here's the thing.
That group number was completely made up.
There was no other group.
Okay.
It's just you.
And it was engineered so that half the time,
you're told that you and your group are lockstep.
You said, you said five, the group said five.
Okay.
Right?
And on some of the trials, it makes it wildly different.
You said five, the group said one.
Oh, here's what's crazy.
on the trials where you and your group are aligned,
it triggers what we call a reward signal in your brain.
It's the same areas that hard drugs activate.
And it's meant to tell you, whatever you're doing,
keep doing it. This is amazing, right?
On the trials where you were like, five, and they said, one,
it triggers what's called an error signal in your brain.
It's this cascading electrical signal
that disrupts memory, attention, everything.
It's meant to get you to stop
because something you're doing is wrong
and you might be in danger.
So this is what happens you're right,
but that's not even the most interesting thing.
The clever part was then,
at the end of the study,
you're in the task,
they come and say,
oh, I'm so sorry.
For some reason,
the equipment didn't record your responses.
Would you mind just quickly doing the task again?
We're not going to record your brain,
just quickly do the task again.
They randomize the couple hundred pictures.
They get you to rate them again.
Lo and behold,
most people moved their score,
to align with the group, and they didn't even know they did it.
Wow.
You interview them after?
They're like, no, that didn't affect me at all.
So when I say it's hardwired, that's what I mean.
Even as something as subjective as attractiveness, we just want to be with our groups.
And there's a lot that we'll do to maintain that group alignment.
I think it's fascinating that there is an error signal in your brain, that when you recognize
that you're not conforming with group think or group look or group opinion,
that automatically signals that you're on the outside and you need to stop.
And I want to give you another example to see if I'm tracking with this.
Because this just happened to me the other night.
Like a lot of people, I am starting to really care more about my health.
And one of the things I am cutting way back on is alcohol.
And so I have this rule with myself that I'm just not going to drink during the week.
Yeah.
Now, fast forward to last night, I'm out at a restaurant after work.
And one of my colleagues turns to me and says,
I think I'm out of glass of wine. You want to have glass of wine? Okay. Can you explain using the
research what just happened? Because here's the thing. I know I was going to go in there and order a
Diet Coke or a club soda or whatever. The second somebody asks me, hey, you want to have something?
It's like I make a decision, reflexive. Didn't even contemplate it. You just went with it.
Well, you know, Todd, you wrote the book on this. So I think that's an example of why this is a really
important thing to understand that is happening in your physiology and your neurology and biology.
So what's happening? It's coming back to that need to belong that we just talked about and the
possibility of conformity there because the norm in our society is when you go out socially,
you drink. And people that don't drink aren't fun. That's the stereotype. At the same time,
you don't want to go against the grain. Yes. Right. And but do you know what's interesting?
If I had said to my colleague, you know, I'm just not drinking during the week right now. I don't think
I'm having it. You know what they probably would have said? I don't think I would have anything.
And that's the thing is because you don't have the simple tips and tricks that you can use to not put yourself in that, well, I don't want to come off as something I don't think I am. I think I'm fun. I think I'm social. I like to hang out with people. So something like, you know what? I decided to take a month off. Or you know what? I decided I'm not drinking on weekdays. Because then it doesn't say I'm not someone who drinks, right? It's just I've made that choice. And you'd be shocked how many people like the person said, hey, I'm
having a drink. We were at a table with a bunch of people and we're like, okay, fine. And then everyone
sees two people do it. And you're like, okay, there's a lot of pressure building as they come to you.
Yes. And what will you have, sir? I'll have what they're having, you know, is just the ability
to say something like, you know what? I've decided to take a month off or whatever. And no one's
going to say something's wrong with you. No. But what you'll do is you give them permission to do the
same thing. And try it out. It's amazing. And once you realize how many people end up copying you,
you'll see just how profoundly we're affected by what we believe other people believe and expect of us.
What is happening in that moment where you say, okay, I'll have what they're having? Like,
what's happening in your brain? So remember we talked about that reward response? Yep.
So your brain has what's called an anticipated reward response. We know that when we're aligned with our
group, it feels really good and we want that. It's not quite like drug addiction, but it's in that
ballpark where once you're addicted that drug, you're chasing the drug. Everything is about,
I want that feeling again. Of belonging. And we're talking about a deeper sense that's wired in you.
It's so deep and it's really important. And again, I want to say, there's nothing wrong with wanting
to belong. You should want to belong. And you just have to understand when that need to belong
tips into being controlled or manipulated or bottom line just leads you to do things that go against
your own judgment, that's when you start making really bad decisions.
I'm really excited because I feel like this is one of those hidden levers that we don't
realize is just operating in the background. And when you understand what you're dealing with,
you have so much more power of it. That's right. By the way, Mel, after I was booked around the show,
I actually dug in and read your book, let them.
And I got to tell you, there are so many parallels.
When we get into all the tools later on, we'll be able to dig into it a little bit more because
there's just so much overlap.
I'm excited to dig in.
That's a huge compliment.
We'll get into the tools later, but there's so much more about your research that I want
to make sure that we fully get to and understand.
One of the terms I'd love to have you talk a little bit about is this term collective
illusions.
It's the title of your best-selling book.
Can you define in very plain terms?
Yeah.
What is a collective illusion?
Collective illusion is group think, but you're wrong about the group.
So let me unpack that just a little bit.
It formally is a phenomenon where most people in a group go along with something they don't
privately agree with simply because they incorrectly think that most other people agree with it.
Okay. Give me an example.
So one of the most sticky collective illusions of all that's been around for multiple decades that we've tracked
is this binge drinking in college.
Okay.
So kids leave home, they go to a new place.
They're like, what does it mean to be a college student here?
Yep.
And they all think that most kids binge drink.
And so they go to a party and they end up binge drinking when in reality, in private,
we know as a matter of fact, most college kids are deeply skeptical about binge drinking.
They know what's bad.
But it's what they feel like they need to do to belong, to be a college student.
Wow.
And it turns out what we can talk about later, no amount of trying to tell
them how bad drinking is works. In fact, it propagates the illusion. Oh, that it's a problem.
And that everybody's doing it. Yeah. Why would all the administration put all these posters
up telling us about the dangers of been drinking if people weren't binge drinking? And so it ends up
fueling the illusion. And so what you know, what you need is to have social proof where you have
popular kids, other people just feel like, I don't binge drink. Why would I binge drink?
You can't lecture or try to persuade you have to just reveal. But this happens all the time.
What's crazy is the phenomenon of collective illusions we've known about for about 100 years in research.
It goes back further, obviously, because the emperor's new clothes is about collective illusions.
On the fact that for the person that doesn't know what the emperor's new clothes is.
It's the story of the parable of like the emperor gets convinced by some huckster that they can spin the most beautiful clothing ever made.
And it's so fine that it's invisible to everyone except for people who are worthy of their state.
in life. And the emperors were like, obviously, I'm worthy of it. So they make up, they fake like
they're putting it on him. And he's like, well, obviously I can see it because I may say I can't see it,
then I must not be worthy of being in charge of everything. Yes, yes. And then everybody around him
wants power and wants to be close to it. So they don't want to say you're buck naked, right?
And then the king's prancing around, going outside. All the crowds line up. They're cheering because no one
wants to say it, and then one little kid is like, why are you naked? The innocence of the child
to be just asked the obvious question, and then the illusion shatters. So we obviously, this has
been a problem in humanity for a very long time. What's interesting is up until just recently,
the number of illusions, collective illusions that have harmed us as a society were pretty small.
Yes. But you put it into the social media age. Yes. And it's just exploded to the point where
Now, name anything that matters in life, it's a coin toss whether or not you're just wrong about what your community believes now.
Well, I also think like the experience we all have when you go online, and it looks like every single person, I mean, I'm a 57-year-old woman, so it's largely menopause and interior design and health products.
Like, every single person is taking the exact same brand of supplement.
Every single person is wearing this exact makeup line.
Every single person is buying this particular couch.
And I feel like, oh, my God, I'm missing out.
Like, everybody has that thing.
And it does feel like it's gotten worse.
And then my daughter was talking today, I'm like, well, I'm getting targeted for a cellulite foam roller that I'm about to buy because it looks like everybody that, you know, I follow online is using it.
And so what are some of the collective illusions that you can point to in day-to-day life that we may not be aware that that's what that is?
Well, let's hit on those.
but when we think about how is it that we can end up being so wrong about the groups that matter so much to us.
Like, it's kind of weird that that would be true, right?
Yes.
Let me show you like two things.
One, how they happen in day-to-day life without anybody trying to manipulate you.
And then let's talk about what social media does at the societal level.
And I think people will have some similar experience because I can remember the first time that I actually experienced a collective illusion.
So growing up, I was kind of a problematic child, which I'm sure.
we can talk about. And didn't really fit in except for my grandmother, who was like my second mom,
whenever I was with her, I could just be myself, and I was good enough. And she decided,
I mean, they were very, very poor. She had me come and sleep over as a kid once a month,
just me. Literally no other grandkids got this. And when I was there, she'd make a bologna
sandwich in her little tiny kitchenette, would play yachtsy together. And we'd just talk.
And I could share anything with her.
Stuff I couldn't tell my parents, whatever.
It was like literally amazing.
It was this oasis for me in a really tough environment.
We've been sleeping over, sleeping over, sleeping over.
Then one time she says, hey, good news.
I'm taking you to Sizzler, like your grandpa and I, this steakhouse, this all you can eat
steakhouse.
And I was like, I don't, I was like, I don't really want to go to, it's noisy there.
Like, I just want to be here.
But I knew it meant a lot to them.
Yeah.
So I went with it.
what we started doing instead of just playing Yatze, we'd go to Sizzler. And that went on for six years.
Okay. So in 2015, we found out she was dying and I went back to Utah where I was born to say goodbye to her.
And I was preparing, I was like, my last conversation I'm ever going to have with this woman that meant the world to me.
And I'm holding her hand and I were talking about a lot of things. I thought, you know, I want to just let her know how transformative those sleepovers were to me.
And I said, you know, grandma, I just want to tell you all those times.
sleeping over. She's like, barely can get a word out. And she says, she touches my arm.
She says, I know, I know what mattered most to you. It was going to Sizzler. And I was like,
wait, what? Like, and I didn't have the heart to be like, I didn't like that at all, right?
But she said, just to be honest, your grandpa and I didn't really like going to Sizzler,
but we knew it meant a lot to you. So I'm sitting there thinking, wait, we all ended up going to Sizzler
once a month for six years because we all thought we all wanted to go to Sizzler when nobody
actually did. Again, I'd have the heart to tell her on her deathbed. She could have me for a
bloney sandwich. But that kind of like, nobody was manipulating anyone. We care about each other.
We want each other to be happy and we can misread each other. And then just like the drink example,
nobody wants to question it and we just keep doing it. You're making my wheels spend now
where I'm sitting here thinking, what are we all continuing to do as a family?
Yes.
That we all think we're supposed to be doing.
Like, it could even be something as simple as we've always had the same meal for a certain holiday.
Nobody actually likes it.
Why are we not just doing something different and talking about it?
I promise you, do me one favor is just go to your family or your significant other
and think about the things you do on a routine basis.
Okay, so give us some examples.
I have friends that have every Friday, we have salmon night.
Yep.
And we watch a movie.
Maybe everybody wants to do that.
It could be true.
It's these basic day-to-day things and just say, honestly, do we still like doing this?
You know what I mean?
And just ask, you will be shocked at how many of these, someone's going, well, actually,
if you give me the permission to be honest, like, actually, maybe we could shake that up a bit.
if illusions can happen amongst tightly knit relationships, it's not surprising that they can happen
in a country of 300 million people at a societal level. Think about, you have all these identities
and you're tied to these groups that matter to you, but they consist of people you're probably
never going to meet. And you have to guess what does that group believe? You know what I mean? So I can
know what it is I'm trying to align to. Yeah. And here's the thing about your brain that is just crazy is
how your brain estimates what your group believes.
Because you'd imagine given how important it is with conformity and belonging,
you'd have some sophisticated way that your brain calculates like,
on average, this is what my group believes.
Now, there's a shortcut your brain takes.
No kidding.
Your brain assumes the loudest voices repeated the most are the majority.
The loudest voices repeated the most are the majority.
Even when you know it's not true.
intellectually, you know, oh, this is just Mel telling me this over and over again.
Your brain is keeping score this way. So it must have worked. You evolved to have this
shortcut, but you put that into a social media age. Yes. So here's a stat that blows my mind.
If you take what was Twitter, which is now X, research has shown that 80% of all the content
on that platform is generated by only 10% of the users. 80% of the content you're reading.
on X is generated by 10%? And here's the trick. Pew Research has found that that 10% isn't remotely
representative of the general public. They are extreme on almost every social issue. But you can see
the problem here. Let's say 10% of people hold some view, but you think it's 80%. I think that's what's
happened. That error signal kicks in, unless you're willing to override that and go against what you
think your group believes, what do you do? You end up self-silencing, you say nothing, or worse,
you start saying what you think people want to hear so you can be part of the group. And when enough
people self-silence, the only people left are the people on the fringes. The 10% that are the loudest
repeating everything that we then say, oh, well, everybody that's part of that party must believe
that. Everybody that follows that person must believe that. And what you're being,
basically saying is the research is very conclusive. That's absolutely not true. The loudest voices
don't represent the majority. They don't. In fact, they almost never do. They wouldn't have to be so
loud, right? If you knew everybody agreed with you, you don't have to say much. So, but you can see how
this is where then you get these societal level collective illusions because we're self-silencing.
And our data on this is, we have more private opinion data on the American public than any
organization, I'm quite certain of, almost two-thirds of people are admitting that they are self-silencing
right now. That means withholding things that matter to them because they think other people disagree.
Like, this is a very dangerous place to be when we can't even be honest with each other.
And so the problem with that is as these illusions form. Okay. So now I'm thinking,
wow, most people, like, what happened? What happened to society? Like, am I crazy or did everybody else?
seem to go crazy. And it's like you start feeling alienated from your group, isolated, a little bit
resentful that you're having to self-silance. And we see this in the data. You start losing trust
in other people. And life gets much worse for you, but it also gets much worse for the rest of us.
Because as a result, we end up with this false polarization, right? We feel like we're completely
divided and it becomes self-ful. Yes. We lose trust in each other and we become resentful.
make sure that I'm unpacking this because I think this is so important what you're saying
and it is so important that you really take in, and I'm going to now call you Dr. Todd Rose,
what he is saying about the data because this is something that I have held in my heart
that has made me very sad and has also made me pull back and feel discouraged. I've bought
into the collective illusion of what the loudest voices, you're saying it's the 10% the framers,
are saying, and I have presumed that the majority of people believe in this.
Yeah.
We're the first generation now as a society that has to deal with collective illusions at scale
because of social media.
Like, you cannot trust your brain to tell you what your group thinks anymore.
You can't.
And that's a hard thing to overcome.
And when you put it into social media environment, even if there's no bad actors,
just the dynamics of that, the loudest voices, will guarantee
that you're going to be wrong, the longer you spend time on there.
But it gets even worse.
So my organization has partnered with other organizations.
We've been studying the way in which foreign entities that are trying to disrupt us
have built bot armies, Russia, China.
They have millions of bots, some of them AI enabled now.
And we often think when it's propaganda manipulation, that they're just spreading disinformation.
It's not what they do at all.
What do they do?
the new form of propaganda is the ability to manufacture a collective illusion.
So meaning, like literally like put you in the matrix of what they want you to believe by
intentionally targeting, especially Gen Z, to convince them that their communities believe
things they don't.
And that need to belong kicks in.
I mean, we're talking about, so we know on social media writ large that roughly one-fourth
of all the interactions you ever have are with bots and you don't know it.
that again. One fourth of all your interactions on social media are with bots and you don't know it. And with
AI-enabled bots, you wouldn't be able to tell. They are so sophisticated. So you just have to be
careful to know if you just get to that point and understand this concept of a collective illusion, right?
Right. Group think, but you're wrong about the group. So why would you conform? Like, if you conform
to something your group doesn't want, you're destroying the group you actually care about.
So let me just unpack this. I really do think.
this is critical, that a quarter of the content that you interact with online are bots and that
you believe that's conservative, that the bots are programmed to convince you to believe
something that the majority of people do not agree with. And I also will extrapolate that that is
why it is more important than ever that you stop conforming and you actually take a
a step back and you deeply connect with what's important to you and that you find the courage to
start speaking up because everybody else is waiting for somebody else to go first. And I believe,
regardless of how you voted, regardless of what country you live in, there is this deep
weariness within families, within communities, within friend groups to even talk about anything
because we convince ourselves that they believe what the bots and the 10%
loud as voices believe, and you're here to tell us that they don't believe that at all.
They absolutely do not. I mean, we have the data you can download all of the, we've studied everything
from the kind of lives people want to live, the kind of country they want to live in, what they
want from education, health care, criminal justice. It is shocking. When you get beyond the
social pressure and the distortion, we are unbelievably similar in our aspirations, in our fears,
in our desires, but we just don't believe it's true. And so we act accordingly.
And to your point, when we get weary and we just go silent, it's understandable, but then it becomes part of the illusion, right?
That's true, because nobody's speaking up to the people that matter most of us.
Like yelling at each other.
Right.
And so we all become caricatures of some fringe view that nobody really holds.
And so one of the things that I've been the most proud of is, and the reason why I wanted to write this book is, you know, you give people a concept.
And people go, oh, wow, I didn't realize this.
And then it opens up the ability to start talking about, well, wait a minute.
Like, here's some of the things I think, you know, it's a safe way to have the conversation.
Well, just even hearing that your data conclusively shows that the majority of people literally agree on the things that they care about and one out of life.
Like, it makes me go, really?
Because I've been in a duck in cover mode, like, when is this madness going to end?
When are we going to reconnect with what matters?
Like, I kind of know that everybody agrees, but why isn't anybody, why is there not a reasonable person like, oh, because I know a reasonable person doesn't want to stand up and get caught this crossfire?
Yep.
That's why we're like, okay, when is somebody normal going to pop up and show us the way?
But you're here to say, we all have the ability to do this.
We do.
And it's only, only we can do this because, like, if you think about it, there are people who profit from the illusions.
Correct.
And especially in a binary political system.
Yes.
there's a lot of benefit to getting people to be more extreme and locked into an identity where
you'll fall on that sword because these are my people. Todd, I have so many questions. I am so
grateful that you're here. I want to hit the pause button. I'd like to give our sponsors a chance
to share a few words. And I also want to give you a chance to share this. This is one of the most
important conversations that we have had on this podcast, not only because it has the
ability to impact your life, but collectively, this is the kind of conversation that can make the
world a better place. So I want to thank you for being generous as you share this. We are just
getting started. Do not go anywhere. We haven't even gotten to the tools yet. We're going to get to
that in a bit. We'll be right back after this short break with our sponsors to stay with me.
Welcome back. It's your buddy, Mel Robbins, and today you and I are learning about this incredible
data set from Dr. Todd Rose and all about this lie that we collectively believe that is keeping us
from living our authentic life, from making the world a better place. I am so interested in this topic.
I'm so glad that you're here. So, Todd, can you share the data on what people actually
agree on and care about so that as you're listening and watching, like, this is an incredible
episode to send to family members and descend to friends that you feel like, you know,
you can't talk to anymore because you believe the collective illusion that they somehow don't agree
with you on core things. So what does the data say about what people actually care about?
So let's take a few things because we can go all day on this, which is pretty incredible.
We studied the American aspirations of Texas. So this was a U.S. focused one. And we studied,
what do you want for the country? And there were dozens and dozens and dozens of possibilities.
And what was shocking to me, we found that in the top 10 aspirations for the country, we agreed on
eight out of the 10. Individual rights, we still believe that in free speech, treating each other with
respect, everyone have high quality health care. So there's a basic kind of life we want to live
together. And we know that we owe each other certain things to make that life possible.
And it turns out we agree on that. Now, as you said earlier, back in the day, we might
disagree on how we do it, right? Do you have Medicare for all? Do you have more like Romney Care?
We had to Massachusetts. You know, there are different ways that we can debate how to get it done.
But it turns out the ultimate aims we're shockingly similar on.
I find it extraordinarily encouraging to hear that underneath all the noise of the loudest voices
and the division and the bots that human beings agree on eight out of the ten things.
that are the most important things. What did you find about our personal lives? Like, how do people
want to live? And how do we, like, break us, tell me the list on what we agree on, and then let's
unpack that. Probably the single most important study we've ever done that I think has the most
implications for society and for individuals is, it's called the success index. The success index.
And we wanted to know, what do you mean by a successful life for you?
what kind of life do you want to live? Nothing's more important than you feeling like you're living
the kind of life that you want to live, even if no one else wants to live it, right? That's literally
the American dream. That's literally like the key to flourishing. It's the key to social trust.
It's the key to everything. So we did this, I mean, massive private opinion study with the same
kind of tradeoffs, right? Because you can have everything in life. We had 61 possible attributes for
good life. So you can pick between 61. Everything from having a family to being the richest person
you know and everything in between. Okay. And then you force the tradeoffs in this way that gives you
anonymity and plausible. So you have to rank what you want? It's amazing. We can go into details on how
they do it. There's some stuff on our site that'll show you. It's really cool. But you can't,
you can't game it. It's so good at getting at private views. Okay. So let's talk about what most
people see in terms of their top priorities for a good life. It warms my heart. The
number one priority for a successful life is, I want to do work that has a positive impact on
other people. They want to contribute. In that top 10, across all demographics, were things to do
with relationships, family, character, self-improvement, and growth. Okay. In fact, one of the
really crazy ones that I think is important is across every demographic in the top 10 was I want to be more
engaged in my community. Now, here's what's interesting. We also measure how well you're achieving
on these different things. Involved in your community was the lowest achieved of all top 10
priorities for your life. In fact, more people reported being debt-free than involved in their
community at the level they want to. What does that tell you as a researcher? It tells me that,
well, we've lost that civic layer of society that gave us the way to engage and contribute, and they
don't know how to do it. And by the way, and then if you also assume that nobody agrees with you
and everybody like. So this is what when we ask. So what do you think most people see as a successful life?
Same trade-off things. It flips entirely. They think everyone is obsessed with status, wealth,
getting into the most prestigious school. The top thing that people think everyone else cares about
is being famous. Really? Okay. In private, it's dead.
last. Now, let me unpack why that really matters, okay? Because there's an important thing about
collective illusions, which is this. This generation's illusions tend to become next generation's
private opinion if you don't do something. Say that again? This generation's collective illusions
tend to become next generation's private opinion. So let's use the example of fame.
Because young kids don't know that we're lying. So young kids look to culture, look to media,
like look to each other, what do we believe? What do we aspire to? So my colleagues at UCLA have tracked
the effects of culture and media on middle school kids for a very long time. Up until a few years ago,
the top thing that emerged every year had to do with character. Think like Mr. Rogers kind of stuff,
right? Wonderful. A few years ago, it switched to I want to be famous and it hasn't changed back.
I remember they interviewed one kid in the study, and he said, I want to have a million followers.
It said, okay, for what? And he said, it doesn't matter. So it's bad enough when these illusions
lead our young kids to pursue dead ends that we know. We know that's not how you live a good life.
That's bad enough. But when it starts to become about the fundamental assumptions of democracy,
of free society, of our shared humanity, you can see the real danger to us, individual.
and collectively. So if this generation's collective illusion is that the number one aspiration in life
is being famous because they have bought into the lie that that's what everybody else
prioritizes and values. That's what everybody else thinks matters. How does that impact the next
generation when it comes to their private opinion? So because again, they don't know it's a lie.
and they're looking to society to tell them initially what to value.
We're social species.
We internalize the norms, the aspirations, what does it mean to succeed?
And they will internalize that as, well, that's what I believe.
I mean, they genuinely believe it.
They're not lying.
The kids aren't lying.
They'll learn the hard way again, just like we all have, that that's a really bad way
to think about living a good life.
But that's really sad.
I mean, it has to come to that.
At the end of the day, like what's so important about this,
And we can talk about why.
When it comes to collective illusions, it's about individuals.
It's about authenticity.
Authenticity is the kryptonite of collective illusions.
Silence is never the answer.
Authenticity always is.
So is the reason why so many people are miserable as they're chasing success is because
they're chasing a version of success that they believe other people have?
And let's be fair to all of us.
We want to be successful on our own terms.
and we also would love to be recognized for that.
But for what?
So if I think being successful is finding fulfillment and doing something,
like literally most people's view of success is getting meaning in their life
by contributing to the lives of other people.
That's literally if I could sum it up, right?
Well, I want to do that, but I would also love that you recognize that I do that
and it's valuable.
Like nothing wrong with wanting society to recognize my accomplishments,
my aspirations, and validate them.
Yeah.
The slippery slope is, I can, without thinking, just like with your drinking example, where
you're like, I didn't even think about it and suddenly I'm having a glass of wine.
Yes.
Without thinking about it, we can easily slip into wanting their affirmation first and corrupting
what we choose to do as a result.
And I'll give you why this matters.
In our research, we linked achievement on that success index to life satisfaction.
Like, how happy you are with your life?
Here's what was amazing.
To the extent that you were achieving.
on your private priorities.
And just to make sure I'm tracking with you, people publicly say, I want the fame, I want the
house, I want the car, I want the followers.
But what secretly matters to you is your family, your friendships, my community,
being a good person.
If you achieve on those, it directly increases life satisfaction.
In fact, just-
If you directly achieve on the things that are private.
Yes, and here's the thing.
It was such a big effect.
Because people are only achieving about 50% of their own priorities right now.
If you bump that up by just 20 points, which is actually not hard when what we care about
is being a good person and being involved in your community, anyone can do that, right?
Yeah.
It led to an increase in life satisfaction that was the same as doubling your salary.
Wow.
Okay, so it's a big deal, but now flip it around.
No amount of achievement on what you think other people value increases life satisfaction at all.
it is an absolute dead end.
I mean, so this is what I say.
The sort of personal success, I think, is the most important illusion we've ever found
because it completely corrupts your own life.
It leads to misery, right?
And it's the one illusion that only you can solve.
You have the power right now to solve that one, right?
You don't need anyone's permission to start making different choices about the life you live.
To get honest with yourself about what privately matters
and to stop obsessing about what you think everybody else thinks,
because you're here to tell us, all of that is an illusion.
What you think other people think isn't even what they privately believe.
The group doesn't even believe the thing that you're about to conform to.
And so when you do it, and enough of us do it,
we literally destroy the very group that we care about.
And when you listen, and that's why I love this conversation,
you're being reminded of the things that privately you know deep down or true,
and that you can from this moment forward start living your life with the truth because the data shows it.
Ask yourself, how would you behave if you knew for sure that this thing was an illusion?
If you knew for sure your group didn't believe the thing that this fringe is just shouting at you.
Well, you'd probably be talking to your friends, Mark.
You'd probably be involved in your community.
Yeah.
You'd probably wear what you want to wear.
You'd probably speak up more.
You know, because what happens when you recognize so much of the noise is noise,
and 80% of us, based on the 8 out of 10 data that you have been crunching,
really want the same things.
We may disagree a little bit on how to achieve it, but we want the same things.
And the kryptonite, you said, to exploding all of this noise,
is you personally starting to make decisions day by day, conversation by conversation,
moment by moment, that really align with those deeper things that you want for yourself.
Because this is how we live our lives and the illusion that's like darkening our doorstep here.
Because if you look at the research on what happens when we self-silance,
so let's look at the downside of it and then look at the upside of being authentic.
The downside of self-signancing is shocking.
So research that followed longitudinally people who were self-silencing and people who weren't.
Self-sylencers actually have dramatically higher rates of cardiovascular disease, strokes, high cholesterol, everything.
And there's a mechanism for it, which is basically when you're self-science or misrepresenting your views, you get this cognitive dissidence, you know, this kind of like, I know I'm not being honest.
cortisol levels elevate and they stay elevated.
And cortisol is good in the short term when you're under threat and absolutely toxic,
breaks down blood vessels, everything.
The study I'm referring to actually tracked women who have much higher rates of self-souncing
and just found when you look at all the gaps in mental health issues, there's usually a gender gap, right?
Eating disorders, depression, anxiety.
Autoimmune disorders.
When you control for rates of self-sensing, the gender gap disappears.
years. This is a big deal. This is a big deal for your physical help. What does that mean to the person
listening who knows that you're the person that stays silent in meetings? You're the person
that doesn't rock the vote. So you're in conflict with your privately held beliefs with yourself.
Yeah. And you're living like that. And what you're saying is based on the research,
women do this more than men. And there's lots of reasons why. But in the data,
when you look at people who are self-silencers,
it has massively negative health outcomes.
But when you remove the gender piece...
When you remove the self-sit-sulencing,
the effect of that,
it turns out there isn't a gender gap in those things.
It's about self-silencing.
Like, that's not everything, right?
There's lots of reasons why we can end up with anxiety.
But I think the reason I say this is
that when we self-silance,
I think we tend to think that it's sort of benign, right?
it's not much of a cost. Yeah, I don't feel so good, but look, I get to fit in. What I want to show
you is, no, there is a profound cost to your physical help, right? There is a cost to your
psychological help. I mean, self-signing is correlated with anxiety, depression, eating disorders,
all these things. And there is a cost to humanity, right? In the false polarization, the
distrust, the resentment that is pervasive in society today. And democracies do not survive
this kind of threat. And I will say one thing, which is, you know, one of my favorite
psychologist, the humanist Carl Rogers, said, all of problems in society from nations against
nations, groups against groups, boil down to individuals at war with themselves.
When we start to misrepresent our views, when we self-silence,
to fit in. We're at war with ourselves. You're creating this war internally because you're forcing
yourself to stay silent on something you don't agree with. That's right. So you're internalizing all
the downside and you don't recognize it. And it's funny is we don't connect those dots. We start seeing
our health start to fail. We see our mental health start to deteriorate and we look for all these
reasons. I don't think it's coincidental. I don't think it's the only cause, but I don't think
it's coincidental, that our youngest generation that was literally born online has this skyrocketing
anxiety and mental health challenges that are real, and they're coming from a number of places.
Right.
But for sure.
On we control.
Because we know in our data that Gen Z is self-silensing at the highest rate of any demographic
that we've ever studied.
Why is that?
Because they're online more than anybody else.
And how does being online all the time reinforce this self-silencing?
Because when I'm in person, I get a lot more cues.
First of all, I know they're real people.
I know a lot of them.
When I'm online, I'm getting inundated with likes, with stuff pushed to me repeatedly.
And remember your brain's going, loudest voices repeated the most are the majority.
And so on almost everything, especially when you're in those formative years, what do I believe?
Who am I?
What do I aspire to?
They're being shaped by illusions in ways that,
none of us have ever really experienced, those of us that at least remember a time when there
wasn't social media? And again, I'm not saying social media is bad. It's got a lot of upside.
But like any technology, there's always a downside. And if you don't recognize the downside,
you're going to live it. I think as a parent, my heart just collapsed because I see that
paralysis in self-expression, this like fear that it's going to be cringy, fear that somebody's going to
judge it, fear that, you know, you're not going to get the likes that you want, which is all
driven by conformity, which then has you, A, silence yourself, and then B, now operate online in a way
that you think gets people to like you because we're wired for conformity. So how do you
break this, given that we're wired for conformity? And we understand how self-silance,
because I self-silance at work, you don't talk in meetings.
Self silence it works, you don't raise problems. You don't talk about the mistakes that happened and how you solved them. Self silence, you start to operate the way everybody else does because you think that's the way you get ahead.
That's right. And by the way, when everyone starts doing that and starts conforming, groups lose their vitality.
Groups lose their purpose. The purpose of a group is not blind conformity. It's that we're better together. It's that we can cooperate. It's that we can exchange ideas, right? That I can learn from you and be like, maybe I'm wrong. But that loses its function. And it just becomes this blind tribalism where we're just like, now who's our enemy? Okay, we're good because they're losing. It's pretty hurried.
The trick is, is if you care about living a good life, authenticity is everything.
By the way, let me just be clear. Authenticity doesn't mean you even know all the facts about
yourself. It's that you are acting in accordance with who you believe you are in that moment.
That's the win. It doesn't mean you're right. Give me an example.
So I could believe that I care about football. It's my preference. I love it so much because,
you know, my mom taught me it. It matters. I do actually care quite a bit about it.
And so I express myself that way.
I follow the Patriots.
It's a little tough right now, but we'll get back.
But let's say it turns out I buy season tickets and I go and I'm like,
oaf, actually, I don't, it turns out, I don't actually like football anymore.
Or maybe I never did.
I just thought I did.
Okay.
It wasn't about being accurate.
It's that the choice I made at the time was consistent with who I believe I am.
All the benefits of authenticity accrue from that, not from being accurate.
So in other words, you buying a Patriot tickets is an authentic decision.
It aligns with what you believe to be true.
You going and sitting there and freezing your rear end off while you sit on a sleeping bag,
you know, in the middle of January watching a game in an open stadium.
Quite literally.
Yes.
And you're like, I don't think I like this anymore.
And that is also an authentic decision.
I had the same experience.
I grew up skiing, love skiing, love skiing with my parents, love skiing in northern Michigan,
that I didn't ski for a while, then I married a guy who's a ski racer.
And you know what I learned?
I don't like skiing that much.
And, you know, I can tell you an opposite one, golf, hate golf, no time for golf, don't
care about golf, didn't get golf, don't understand why people watch golf.
Then all of a sudden, I'm riding on a golf cart with my husband.
And we're chatting and talking because I just want to spend some time of them, that I'm doing it with my parents.
And I'm like, wow, it's kind of beautiful.
out here. Wow, we're talking a lot. Guess what? I'm now thinking I might want to play golf.
Yeah. And that's authentic. Correct. Because remember, what we don't want is for you to stop growing
and changing. So at any moment, you have a set of beliefs about yourself. Yep. And as long as
they're aligned with who you believe you are, you get all the benefits of authenticity, which
they are incredible, a level of confidence that will just blow your mind, right? Not arrogance,
just a deep confidence in yourself and your ability to make decisions. People who are authentic,
actually have higher levels of viewing the world as positive some, which it is. There's enough.
And we can grow the pie, not just materialistically, but psychologically and spiritually.
Right? Like, your success does not hurt me. It actually benefits me. We can all win.
But more importantly, authentic people have phenomenally better relationships. Because obviously,
right? Because here's the thing. As we said a while back, we want belonging. What we end up giving
into is fitting in. This is so important. Thank you for explaining it like that. Let's just take a
quick break so our sponsors can share a few words. And please, please share this with people that you care
about. Everybody deserves to live an authentic life. And I love everything that I'm learning.
I feel so much more empowered. And I know you do too. So as you've been nodding along,
thank you for sharing this with people. Don't go anywhere. We have so much more to unpack. When we return,
stay with me. Welcome back at your buddy Mel Robbins and today you and I are learning all about living
a more authentic life from Dr. Todd Rose. So Todd, what is the difference between belonging and fitting in?
Belonging is when you are recognized, accepted, and even loved for who you are. So you have to do that
for yourself first. Because no one's going to do that for you. But when you're in groups and we've all felt
this, right? Like me with my grandmother, I knew I was good enough. Like, flaws and all, it didn't matter.
Like, I didn't have to be somebody else, even in a small way for her to love me. When you have that
kind of relationship, there's nothing better in the world. Okay. Fitting in is you accept me if.
You accept me if, if I like the things you like, if I do the things you want me to do,
If I decide to be a computer scientist instead of an artist, so many of our relationships are built on that kind of if.
And, you know, just like when you're not physically healthy, you forget what it feels like to be healthy.
When we're used to fitting in, we forget what it feels like to truly belong.
And I'll say this, and I'll say this to anyone listening or viewing, you deserve to belong.
You should not accept the status of just fitting in.
It's not good enough.
It doesn't lead to the place that you want it to lead to,
and it causes a lot of harm to you and society.
What is the first step?
Because I think as you're listening,
what you just said is both a wake-up call,
and it can be a little crushing to your soul
when you recognize your whole life,
all you've tried to do is fit in.
Yeah.
And I know that everybody wants to feel like their authentic self.
Everybody wants to be proud of themselves.
Like, you want to lay your head down on the pillow at night and know that you did the best
that you could.
You made the best decisions that you could, that you're proud of how you showed up, that you
had good intentions.
That is the gold standard.
That you, you know, it was a good day because you tried the best that you could to be a good
person.
And that starts with you being making good decisions for yourself and not self-silencing
to fit in.
Here's the important part about authenticity.
it is a process. It's not a destination. There's no such thing as you could put all the work you want in
right now and you're like, I'm done. That's not how it works. Because a flourishing life is one where you
grow and change and discover and all that stuff. So even if you were 100% right now,
if you lock that in, you'd be inauthentic in the future. So the things that people need to understand
is, again, it's never too late. This is what's amazing. All the benefits of authenticity, the research
goes, they accrue very quickly to you, no matter how old you are, no matter where you're
starting from, it's pretty amazing. You just have to get started. And here's the thing.
There's two things from my perspective. The first is getting a hand along what you think you
really believe. How do you do that? When you're like been gaslit by all the noise.
There's a very simple step that I've used and I've shared and people have used and it's worked.
ask yourself why on things you believe you believe because when they're your honest beliefs that
you've arrived at you know why i'll give you an example i have a deep commitment like probably most
people to human rights it might be the most important concept to me of anything in the world
that every individual has moral worth and we are equal to one another and we are never ever a means
to someone else's ends that's how i want to be viewed and treated that's how i want to be viewed and treated that's how
will view and treat other people. Human rights flows from dignity. So I know for sure I believe that.
But you'll be shocked at how many things you think you believe are just the norms of your society
that you've never really questioned because you want to fit in. For me, didn't do very well in school.
And that's a understatement. I fell out of high school with a 0.9 GPA.
0.9, that's possible?
You have to work really hard to do that poorly. You know, I ended up failing out a couple of
months later, my girlfriend at the time who was my wife for 29 years, found out she was pregnant.
This is rural Utah. It was not something one does in rural Utah. We were on welfare. We ended
with two kids by the time I was 20, doing a string of minimum wage jobs. I had a paper route at 4 a.m.
to supplement our income. We were selling blood plasma, you know, all the things you have to do.
and recognizing rock bottom, I was working at what was Circuit City, which they've gone out of business now.
And on my lunch break, I didn't have any money.
So I went over to Barnes & Noble, and I was perusing this self-help section.
I had like no self-esteem.
No, you know, I'd lied to myself a lot.
I knew something had to change.
And I happened upon a book called The Six Pillars of Self-Esteem.
And Nathaniel Brandon said,
Self-esteem is not something you can directly act on.
It's the alignment of your beliefs and your behavior.
And if your behavior and beliefs don't align, you won't respect yourself.
Why would you?
But this was the nugget for me that completely changed my life.
I had always assumed that my beliefs were my beliefs
and that my behavior was what needed to change.
But this book told me that's not true.
That you may not actually believe the things you believe,
that you believe. And in my case, it was religious in nature. I had tried so hard to align my
behaviors to a set of beliefs that came from my religion. And I just failed a lot. And now those
behaviors weren't bad behaviors, they were just inconsistent. And I thought, wait a minute,
it could be my beliefs that are the thing that's causing the problem. And so I spent a lot of
time thinking about, well, why do I believe this? And I realized I didn't believe. And once I recognized
that and start on the path of thinking about who am I, what do I believe, things got a lot
easier, a lot easier.
Why?
Because suddenly I knew the root problem.
I was constantly trying to get my behavior to line, just like if you're trying to conform to a
group, constantly trying to, what am I supposed to do now?
What do we do?
How do I dress?
What do I drink?
You know, what career do I choose?
And once I had permission to start questioning my own beliefs, I was able to get
on a different path. And it never would have changed without that. I think that's super profound.
I think it's also crazy inspiring that you went from there to becoming a graduate school professor
at Harvard and now running a think tank and doing this deeply important work. And I was so excited to
have you on because I fundamentally refuse to believe that we are this divided. Yeah.
I fundamentally refuse to believe that people are unreasonable or lack character. I also
fundamentally refused to give that much power to all the noise.
Right.
And, you know, one of the things that I want to hover on the authenticity piece, because when
somebody walks into a room that is very much authentically themselves, whether they have on
just a cool outfit, or they have an energy about them, or there's a kindness to them,
whatever it may be, you feel it.
The energy of that is unbelievable.
It is intoxicating.
And it's not a level of arrogance.
There is something that I truly believe that we're all yearning for it.
And we're looking for someone to give us the permission.
That's right.
And they just, they're not trying to get you to do something.
They just, I'm going to be me, you be you, put it in different terms, like, let them, let me, right?
And they're the embodiment of that.
Some things happen.
Because we so deeply want that, we gravitate toward.
The energy there is real.
So how do you cultivate that energy?
You mentioned let them and let me.
And you also, when we were talking, said, that is a tool that really helps you apply this research and this data that let them.
Like, why don't you explain it?
Because how can you use those two words let them?
That's it.
And those two words let me as a way for you to start to become more authentically yourself.
Well, this is why I was so excited to talk to you because my scientific research,
the work we do at Populus, my think tank is, I would say what we've uncovered is the science behind.
Let them, let me.
We talked a lot about the conformity and all the problems there, but also the broader societal consequences of not doing that.
Wow.
Right.
So what do we know about how we shatter illusions, how we get back to authenticity?
and it's the practical stuff you need to do to get on that path.
When I looked at it, when I read your book, I was like, okay, this, if you just do this,
it's not easy. It's simple, but it's not easy. Right. And so bringing it to a level of
getting people on that journey. Again, authenticity is a journey. It's process. It's not a destination.
You can start anytime, anywhere, no matter how old you are, no matter what your circumstances.
then if all we did, and I'll tell you why,
if you leaned in to let them,
I mean, you framed a lot, and I think it's right,
around how miserable we get when we try to control everybody else.
But it goes a little further,
because as we start to participate in that sort of like,
you should believe what I'm saying to.
And what's funny about collective illusions,
and this is one of those like, I could not believe this.
So once you start lying about your views,
the research is pretty clear,
start to lean into that. You become an enforcer of it. Because you don't want to admit you're wrong?
Yes, and because you always think people are going to find me out. Because I know I'm lying. It's called
the illusion of transparency. They think everyone can tell that I'm not really a true believer.
And so it turns out that people who lie about their views have a high probability become
enforcers of that view on other people. I'll give you a concrete example. Like if I hear,
every time I hear a pastor who's anti-gay now, I'm like, they're probably gay. The number of times,
that just turns out to be true. I'm like, yeah, you're protesting a bit much, right? But like,
once you're hiding that part of yourself, you start to become the person that's literally
leads the witch hunt to prove, like, no, look, I'm a true believer. And so don't be that person,
right? Because the let them part of it is, the more you're seeking to control their people,
not just their behavior, but their beliefs, you are leading them down a path of self-silencing
that will be catastrophic for them. But now you also know,
it's catastrophic for all of us.
Well, the other application that I see based on everything you shared is that very profound
difference between feeling a sense of belonging versus an obsession with trying to fit in.
And to me, if you could speak a little bit about how the let them and the let me really gives
you a tool to notice those moments where you're so scared of other people's opinion or you're so
seeking, fitting in, that you cut off access to authenticity and belonging.
That's right. And so we did the let them side, right? Because you are literally making it
less likely that the people around you can live authentic lives. You talked about this so well
in the book. Like the kids like, really? Okay, for the for the dance you're going to,
really? You haven't, okay, they want to wear certain things. They want to do these things.
It's like, let them. Because part of that is let them be their authentic self. Yes. Yes. Yes.
Your need to control is actually teaching other people that they have to fit in.
And you are squashing somebody else's authenticity.
Exactly right.
So it's how you stop yourself from making people conform.
Correct.
And then you flip it around and they'll let me, I deserve to be authentic.
And so that flip side, if I'm going to give that same grace to other people now,
I owe it to myself to give myself that same grace.
I deserve to belong.
I don't need to settle for fitting in.
right? I deserve all the benefits that come from being my truest self and I shouldn't
compromise that just because I believe other people want something different. And again,
when collective illusions are layered into that, that thing you're about to like give up your
authenticity for, they don't even want. Like, so what are we doing? I just want to say, I was kind of
blown away because when I first started using Let Them First, it was really to stop.
trying to control everybody so that I wasn't so stressed out all the time.
Right.
But then it became very clear how my default was to fit in.
My default was to seek approval.
My default was to make everybody else happy.
My default was to buy into the collective illusion and allow that to dictate what I do
or don't do, like navigating your life based on everybody else.
And you're telling us all of the things that you believe, everybody else believes,
they're largely wrong, and we're all desperate for somebody to say, hey, it's time to just stand up and be
authentic. It's time for you to stop trying to fit in, and it's time for you to make decisions and live
your life in a way that really aligns with you. And I hadn't thought about the let me part
truly as a tool for authenticity and courage in that way. And that's how it resonated with me,
which isn't that funny? And if you read all of our research, and you realize, wait, so,
if I let them be their authentic self,
and we do that at scale,
what kind of society would we have?
Well, see, I worry that if we let people be their authentic self,
that we would have a runaway train
of people who are selfish and not conscientious
and who are chasing fame and profit
and trashing human beings for all the tech giants
and that bots would run the world
and what you're now teaching me,
is that my belief that if I just let people run wild, the worst of humanity would rise to the top.
And you're telling me, Mel, not true.
What is true?
Go back to the success index.
Okay.
The private highest aspirations we have for the lives we want to live ourselves.
Okay.
Remember, top trade-off priority.
I want to do work that has a positive impact on other people.
I want to be trustworthy.
I want to have a family.
I want to be good to other people. I want to be involved in my community. I want to achieve on things
that matter. I want an education. I want these things. Like, this is what people would do if we leaned
in to let them, let me. And the only reason we're afraid of it is because we've fallen for the illusions,
right? We've been with this illusion for a while. And so we're like, oh, I mean, it's funny. We ask
people about trust. Yeah. Privately. Are you trustworthy? 93%
of people said, of course I'm trustworthy, and I want that. It matters to me. What do you think
other people would say, oh, no, no, no, other people don't care about being trustworthy. They're not
trustworthy. And you're like, yeah, it's a massive illusion. And so if I'm looking around thinking,
other people don't even care about being trustworthy, and I think they all want fame and the zero-sum,
like, winner take all, they will step on my thing to get to me. Why would I want to let them
be able to live their authentic lives. Because if that were who they really are, that would be awful.
And so what we end up doing is having to control everybody. And that's true in our interpersonal
lives that you wrote about. It's also true all the way up to our political lives where we've
given up on these fundamental values. Like, you know what? You live your life, all live mind,
as long as we're not hurt each other. Like, we've lost a willingness to invest in one another
because we believe the illusion. Where did all this lack of
trust come from. I know you have a story. So social trust, which is trust in strangers.
Okay. Right? The single best predictor of the health and flourishing of democracies.
At the end of the day, we talk about trust in institutions. I don't need to trust the government.
I need to have confidence that they'll do what they say. So accountability, transparency.
The only trust that matters is that we trust each other. So it predicts almost everything that
matters collectively. And ever since we implemented in the 1930s in the United States,
scientific management, Frederick Taylor, which is where we got standardization to everything.
Everything became standardized. He invented the concept of a manager. So you just do the job I'm
telling you. You don't get any say in what you do in the name of efficiency. Every single
generation since has had lower social trust in the preceding generation. Right now in America,
we have the lowest levels of social trust ever recorded.
Now, is that true or is that an illusion?
You know what I'm saying?
It's true.
It's even worse in private right now than it is in public.
Oh, no.
Now, here's the good news, though.
Okay.
And this is what matters.
If I could wave a magic wand and say,
what's the one thing I could change about this country besides,
and again, honestly, everybody leaning in to let them and let me
because the illusions would have nowhere to hide,
and we'd obviously see that we have a lot in common and that people trusted.
It's this illusion of trust.
Okay.
What's interesting in our data.
So when you look across the world, like Scandinavian countries have very high levels of social trust.
And you can see the cohesion, the trust in each other, the investment in each other.
You only have to get above 50% social trust for that to kick in.
When a majority of people believe a majority of people in their society are trustworthy,
good things start to happen.
Yes.
When you dip into like the 30s, it spirals the other way, right?
We start to need to control each other.
We're in the low mid-30s right now.
Okay. In our data, though, in private, here's what I think is fascinating. If you cut the data
by whether you're self-silencing, people that self-silence have the lowest levels of social trust
ever. It's, they are like in the low 30s percent of people who believe other people can be
trusted. Okay. If you're one of the one-third that hasn't self-silenced, they have levels of
social trust that rival Scandinavian countries.
So there's something about feeling like you're in a society where you can't even say your opinion.
Why would I trust everybody else if I feel like I can't be me?
Yeah.
So this issue of needing to reclaim an authenticity, it might be the single most important thing you could do to heal your society
because it is the fastest way to increase social trust.
Well, I can give an example that came to mind as you were talking about plummeting trust.
if you have ever had any kind of tragedy hit your community, whether it's a fire or a flood or something else, what happens?
Yeah.
People reveal who they are at their core.
Like you have some illness in a family, family members that are divided on politics that haven't talked or two years, all of a sudden come in because it reduces us to just our core values in a moment where it's all hands.
hands on deck. You're exactly right. Like I had a, you know, a couple of years ago, I lost my wife,
20 years. And it was unbelievable. People who I thought I had beefs with, right? Some people we had
challenges, it doesn't matter anymore. There's this common humanity that comes together. And you're
right. You see this in these trauma and tragedy. We reveal who we are. Okay. Why is that true?
Because the norm around tragedy, right? We have.
norms in this country and other countries that it's all hands on deck we just rally that's what we do okay
i was a little worried some of the last unnatural disasters in the country when the first thing we saw
was the politicization of it the the blaming right off the bat but then that that dissolved pretty quick
at the ground level yeah into we need to help each other because as human beings we empathize
that's one of our magical traits right we can put ourselves in other people's shoes we can think about how
we would want to be treated and we can activate compassion and act on it. When we see people in those
times of need, it reveals what our real character is. Imagine what it would have been like if the
illusion was correct. That nobody cares. We don't trust it. Nobody shows up. Nobody shows up.
And the thing right now, that's not the case. But if we don't recognize this problem and take some
responsibility for it, it could become the case. Do you truly believe, based on all of this data,
that if every single one of us as an individual were to really embrace the facts that when it comes to
the things that we all value as human beings, we all value the same 80% of things.
So we are all so much more alike. We want the same things for ourselves and each other.
If we were to operate with that and then we were to go into our day-to-day lives,
and say my only job is to let other people be themselves
and be who they are and with the presumption
that underneath it, they value character.
Underneath it, they want meaningful work.
Underneath it, they want better for their friends
and for their family.
That if we operate like that,
and then we also say to ourselves,
my job is to then show up and make decisions
with the information,
I have the best that I can day to day
that really align what I truly value.
Like to give myself that permission
and to find the courage to do it,
whether it's how you post on social
or whether you talk at work
or whether you ski or not this season,
whether you want to live where you live,
whether you want to go to sizzlers or not,
that you just start to slowly calibrate your life
back toward the things that you know deeply matter to you.
Like simply volunteer.
in a place in your community would make you feel more authentic.
Yes.
Changing your major could make you feel more authentic.
Asking your brother or sister for a little help with mom and dad because you've self-silenced
would make you feel a little authentic.
It doesn't have to do with what they are going to say.
That's right.
You may have a collective illusion that they're not going to do anything because you think
everybody's selfish now.
But that's the noise.
The truth is deep down.
People care about the same thing.
It starts with you.
you really believe that that's what's going to turn this all around? Yeah, let me give you historical
example when I say, because it feels like the problems are too big. Yes. They must require these
big solutions. Yes. It's not true. Let me give you an example. As a reformed academic,
I'm going to lean into a bigger example just once, but I think it's important. When the problem is a
collective illusion and you pursue the right strategy, which is this authenticity strategy, right? It's not about
persuading, it's about revealing,
showing people.
The kind of social change that can happen
at how fast it can happen,
how big it can happen,
the best example of this
is the Velvet Revolution
in Czechoslovakia.
This is puzzled historians for a long time.
It happened in late 80s.
Czechoslovakia had been under
communist rule for a long time, just brutal.
Other countries had tried to revolt
Hungary, other things like bloody massacres
as a result. The Velvet Revolution is famous because it's the only time
a people have overthrown a communist regime without a single person dying,
without a single shot being fired. Okay? Wow. And people are like,
how does that happen? It's an anomaly. The best part about it is who led it,
and this is how you'll get to the secret of it. Is a person named Voslophevall.
Okay. And I'm going to say right now, for everyone listening or watching,
if you go online, you can download for free. He wrote a manifesto about this
called The Power of the Powerless.
That is, will chill you to the bones.
It will sound like he's writing about our time today.
But he writes about how he discovered the real problem in their society was this collective illusion.
So he's had no military experience.
He wasn't a politician.
He was a poet and a playwright.
And he was anti-communist, but he decides he writes this play called The Garden Party.
and it was a satire about communism.
It was so subtle that the censors
didn't even know they were being made fun of.
Okay?
So he puts it on.
It becomes a runaway hit.
It's like the Hamilton of the time there.
It sold out every night.
He attends every single play,
and he doesn't watch the play.
He watches the audience.
And he said,
they laughed at all the right parts.
They laughed at things that you would not find funny
if you truly believed in communism.
And he writes in the power of the powerless
that he recognizes.
The fundamental problem was not
that the people of Czechoslovakia
believed in communism.
It's that they believed
that they believed.
It was a collective illusion.
I mean, I don't know how he got there,
but it's amazing he figured it out.
The solution then was not weapons.
It was not even political.
It was authenticity.
He called it authenticity and personal responsibility.
And here's what he did.
He said, well, then the answer is,
we've got to create ways for people
to start to be,
comfortable living in truth again because we've become way too comfortable living in the lie.
Okay? So he starts what he called the small works. How do we help people start to lean into
their authentic selves in ways that weren't risky to begin with? Literally created a literary magazine
so people could publish poetry. They did gardening. They did all these things. People mocked him,
mocked him. Like even people who, his fellow revolutionaries, are like, this is so naive.
They have all the guns. You're going to defeat them with authenticity and
personal responsibility, but they did. And here's what's crazy. Nobody saw it coming.
The CIA completely missed it. The KGB missed it entirely. Even Havel himself didn't appreciate how
fast it could change when it was an illusion. Just a few months before the student protest that led
12 days of protest, government falls, he's interviewed in an international magazine. And he's trying
to rally the troops. And he's like, look, revolutions take time. You have to
to be committed. He's like, look, I probably won't even be alive to see the end of this,
but I am in it, right? Three months later, he was the first democratically elected president of
a free Czechoslovakia. That's what I mean when I say, when the problem is an illusion,
two things. Only we can solve it. It didn't require somebody from on high telling us something.
It was the everyday people learning to live in truth in small ways that start to build habit
that lead to a, we believe we believe this now, right?
And I think about it, I think about that story all the time
because I think if a poet can overthrow communism
under a collective illusion,
think what you can do in your own life,
think what we can do together.
I promise you that power of the powerless, it's free,
it's like 80 pages, it is unbelievable.
It is never forget, like, this thing that you want more than anything
to be authentic and you should want it.
It's like almost magical in what it does for you and for us.
Is the thing that you should do for yourself?
And again, it is the most important thing you could do to heal society.
Or your family.
Your family, your community, or your kids, or your relationships.
Yeah.
It's a journey.
You say this all the time, right?
I think we overestimate what we can do in the short term and we underestimate what can happen
more time.
A long time.
Yeah.
And we also underestimate the power of these small microchanges.
and you talk a lot in your work about the microchanges.
It's all that matters.
And it could mean speaking up at work.
It could mean going to church this weekend.
It could mean volunteering in your community.
It could mean picking up a book and getting back into reading fiction instead of scrolling
on social media.
Find the thing that connects you back to who you believe you are right now.
And it doesn't have to be these massive life-changing things.
In fact, it rarely ever requires that.
again, if you can literally transform a tyrannical society into a free society on the back of
authenticity, like you can change your life.
What is one thing that you could challenge us to do based on all the research, the power of
authenticity to do this week?
What would it be?
This is going to sound basic, but it's do something.
You've got to get that action.
bias. Again, listen to Voslav. It doesn't have to be huge. But find those places where you know you've
been going along. You know you really didn't agree. Could be eating. Like, what are some of the simple
places? I'm talking literally like, go back to the very beginning. No, I'm not actually drinking tonight.
Yep. You know what I mean? Little things. Hey, are we sure we want to go to that restaurant? Yep.
Just stuff that, like, I'm talking about your preferences. They don't have to be these deep,
profound, like, let's have a political conversation about it could.
But just you know, first of all, you know it when you're not being authentic.
Like, so I don't have to tell you.
It's so true.
And just say, look, I'm going to commit to one act of authenticity.
And I would say, find the smallest meaningful act.
And I'll tell you, remember that reward signal I talked about with conformity?
Yes.
It also works with authenticity.
Tell me more about that.
So when people who desire authenticity believe they are acting on it, and we've seen this with neuroimaging studies and everything,
they get the same reward response
because your brain's like that,
do more of that.
And then you get the anticipation of it.
And one small act leads to another,
leads to another,
it becomes habit,
then it becomes your identity.
It becomes who you are.
And you won't even realize it happened.
And then you'll become the person
that everyone looks at
and goes,
I want to be like them.
I want to be around them.
The energy you bring into a room.
And the thing is it's absolutely contagious.
Not only because you create permission for other people to unbutton their
hands at the table, right?
Or mine buttoned?
I was like, did I button them back up?
Because we know this from the research that happiness itself is contagious.
When the people around you within your network increase their happiness,
you get about a 25% boost for free.
Become that person.
And if you worry too much about the end goal, it feels insurmountable.
I remember thinking when I was minimum wage, welfare, two kids, no high school diploma.
If I tried to think about what life might be like in the long, it just seems insurmountable.
I thought, what's the next step that I can take?
And then you take another step.
And for me, and I don't mean this to sound arrogant, it took seven years from when I was
felled out of high school to when I got into Harvard.
for my doctorate. Another seven years before I was a professor. That time's going to go past no matter what
you do. And when you think about those sort of time horizons, you know, five years is going to go by,
whether you like it or not. And all the fear you feel, first of all, say most of it is completely
unfounded. Now you know why. It's a prison in our own minds. We're at war with ourselves.
But whatever fear you feel, remember, you know something's wrong right now.
Like, the status core in your own life is not good enough.
You know that you deserve better than that.
That time's going to pass.
Just start the small acts, get on that path of authenticity,
and I promise you, you won't even recognize yourself.
Todd Rose, what are your parting words?
It's easy for individuals.
just live in their life, trying to make ends meet day to day.
You barely have enough time to do anything for yourself.
The problems in our society seems so big, so insurmountable,
that there's like an apathy that sets in.
Because what could I possibly do?
It's also exhausting.
It is exhausting.
Because it's exhausting in part because we don't know what to do.
We feel like nothing we could do would ever matter, and we feel helpless.
It's not true.
Like, at my core, I believe it, but I also have the data to back it up.
You matter more than you could possibly know.
That's true in general, but it is particularly true when the problems of our society are related to collective illusions.
You have a role to play.
Do it for yourself.
Your life will be immeasurably better.
You and I both know.
I pinch myself.
I'm like, I cannot believe I get to live this life.
Same.
And I also can't believe how long.
I spent it trying to fit in and how exhausting and fatiguing it was, how long I gaslit myself saying there's
nothing I can do and all the noise is correct when I deeply fundamentally believe that's not true,
that we all kind of want the same things. And then when you realize, wait a minute,
if I'm just authentically myself, the illusion disappears. Do it for yourself just for that,
but do it for us. Todd, I am so grateful. I am
grateful that you're doing this work. I am so grateful that you are able to break it down for all of us.
And so I just want to thank you for the proof and the permission to believe in the better nature
in all of us. And I'm also grateful that just allowing yourself to be yourself and finding the
courage to start to point your life back toward the things that you know make you feel like you
is actually the answer to all the big problems. Yeah. So thank you. Thank you.
you, thank you. And I also want to thank you. Thank you for being here. Thank you for really listening
or watching something that will help you be more authentic. And thank you for sharing this more than any
other episode. We do have the power to change things. Do not buy into the lies. I really want you
to live in the truth. And I love you for being here. And I do believe in your ability to create a better
life. And today, after a conversation and everything I learned, I believe in your ability and my
ability to create a better world. All righty, I'll see you in the very next episode. I'll welcome
you in the moment you hit play. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten.
All right, you're ready. No, you're good. Okay, here we go. Okay, gotcha. Okay.
I'm just going to go drink some water and get ready. I'm really excited. Yeah, me too. Thank you for
coming in. Thanks for having me. Of course. All right, you're ready? Good. Let's dive in. Perfect time.
I have two big German shepherds.
Oh, you do?
Okay, I got to bounce.
All right, great.
Let's have lunch.
That was so fun.
Thank you.
Oh, my God.
That was so much fun.
That was so incredible.
Oh, and one more thing.
And no, this is not a blooper.
This is the legal language.
You know what the lawyer's right 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.
Serious XM Podcasts.
