Unlocking Us with Brené Brown - Brené with Scott Sonenshein on Stretching and Chasing
Episode Date: September 9, 2020Dr. Scott Sonenshein — a researcher and professor — and I talk about the art and science of being scrappy, why outsiders are sometimes better than experts, and why comparison is truly the thief of... joy. This book turned things upside down for me — in the best way. I hope the conversation does the same for you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. I'm Brene Brown, and this is Unlocking Us.
In today's episode, I'm talking to my friend, Dr. Scott Sonenshine, about his book, Stretch.
We read this book across our organization last year, and it turned our thinking upside down.
So today, we're going to dig into what it means to be stretchy, what it means to be chasey.
We're going to talk about parenting, we're going to talk
about work, and we're going to talk about that gremlin that is problematic for all of us. I
think, especially right now, it seems worse during COVID, comparison. So Dr. Scott Sun and Shine,
his new name is going to be Dr. Scott Walking on Sun and Shine. You'll see why later in the podcast.
It's going to be Dr. Scott Walking on Sun and Shine. You'll see why later in the podcast.
It's going to be great.
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About a year ago, two twin brothers in Wisconsin discovered, kind of by accident,
that mini golf might be the perfect spectator sport for the TikTok era. Meanwhile, a YouTuber in Brooklyn found himself less interested in tech YouTube and more interested in making coffee.
This month on The Verge Cast, we're telling stories about these people
who tried to find new ways to make content,
new ways to build businesses around that content,
and new ways to make content about those businesses.
Our series is called How to Make It in the Future,
and it's all this month on The Verge Cast, wherever you get podcasts.
So Dr. Scott Sonenshine is the Henry Gardner Simmons Professor of Management at Rice University
and is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have been translated into
nearly 20 languages. In addition to Stretch, he also has co-written a book with our friend Marie Kondo called Joy at Work.
So he's got these two books.
He's written for, I mean, every outlet you can imagine, New York Times, Time Magazine,
Fast Company, Harvard Business Review.
He holds a PhD in organizational behavior from the University of Michigan.
He has a master's in philosophy from the University of Cambridge and a bachelor's from
University of Virginia.
That's a ton of schooling.
Just imagine the school loans on that sucker.
Woo.
His research appears in the very top academic journals, and he's contributed to several
topics in management and psychology, including change, creativity, personal growth, social
issues, decision-making, and influence. He's just a fascinating researcher,
a really good guy, and my sometimes walking partner here in the cool, crisp days of Houston
summer. Let's meet Scott. Okay. Welcome to Unlocking Us, Scott Sonenshine.
Well, thanks again for having me on.
I am so excited. You know how much I love Stretch. You know this book has been a game changer for me
and for all of us at our organization. It's like mandatory reading over here.
Yeah, no, it's exciting to talk to you about these ideas, especially the situation that we're in,
in the midst of a pandemic. And I think it's a time for all of us to think about how being resourceful is something
we can use to not just cope and get by, but to even maybe thrive during these circumstances.
Yeah. I think as I was rereading it in preparation for the interview, I really thought to myself,
we need this now and boy, do our kids need these lessons right now.
Yeah. I've got two daughters at home, eight and 13 now. And they've been home since March. And
you run out of things to do after a while. And it really challenges us as parents and
them as children to think about how they're going to go about their
days and their lives and dealing with so many of the challenges that we have right now. Uncertainty,
you know, when this is going to end, you know, what's going on with the pandemic, relationships.
I mean, they haven't had, you know, real play dates and connecting with their friends in months.
And then, of course, as parents, we're also trying to work.
And sometimes that's hard when we're also a camp counselor, homeschool teacher, entertainer extraordinaire.
And it really provokes having to change our mindset into thinking about, well,
how can we actually turn this into some teachable moments and opportunities
and deal with trying to do many
different things at a time. And I know that sounds a bit intimidating, but I do think there are some
simple things we can do to change our mindset that can actually turn these circumstances,
none of which we wish that we're in, but into an experience where we can build connection,
bond with our children a little more, and teach them something. I love that. So Stretch is basically, I categorize it,
which you may disagree, so tell me, is basically in my heart and mind a book about resourcefulness
and scrappiness. Tell me about the path that led you to Stretch. Tell me about your life and how you ended up
writing this book. We've got to go back a couple of decades. I had just graduated college and I
was working for a strategy consulting firm in Washington, DC. I got a phone call pretty much
out of the blue from a recruiter. This is during the internet boom. And she said to me, we've got a great job for you
in Silicon Valley. Come leave everything in your life to come out and work for us. And we're going
to give you a raise. We'll double your salary. We'll give you a million dollar budget to manage.
We're going to give you a team to manage. And it was like a year out of school. And I was like,
okay, this sounds amazing.
Of course, I'm going to sign up for this. I'd never been to the Bay Area. So I went out there
and they told me about all these wonderful things they were going to do and how we were going to
change the world. And everyone was going to get super rich. And I signed up and three weeks later,
I moved my whole life out there. And for the first few months, it was, I mean, it was exhilarating in
many respects because it was almost like the money would not stop flowing. Venture capitalists were throwing
tens and tens of millions of dollars at my company and so many others. And, you know,
there was a really simple but kind of eerie formula for what success was out there. It was
people give you money, you spend that money as fast as you can, and magically, they'll give you
more money and everything becomes worth more, on paper, at least, of course, until things came
crashing during the NASDAQ stock started crashing and the tech boom started eroding. And our company
was really left for exposed at its rawest form, which was, it really was a farce. We really were
only good at raising
money and spending money. What we were doing is what I call chasing. And what I was doing was
called chasing, which was thinking that the more we had was the token to success in life, the token
to having a good life, being a successful in your career, having a successful organization.
But that whole model is based off of resources
constantly flowing in. And it seemed like the good times would never end, but they always do.
And we didn't learn how to adapt and how to actually have a sustainable business or for me
to do things that I were actually finding meaningful. And I had this real inflection
point as I was seeing not only my millions of dollars
of stock option on paper turned into virtually nothing, but of course, this was also around the
time that September 11th happened. And I had a really good colleague who turned out to be one
of the heroes of Flight 93, Jeremy Glick, who was working for our company. And he died in Flight 93.
And we really had this crisis
of consciousness where we started asking ourselves, what are we really doing here?
I mean, we're spending all of this money. We're accomplishing very little. We're not
delighting customers. We're certainly not delighting our investors anymore.
What are we really doing here? And it was at that moment that I realized that I needed to go back
to graduate school and just figure out what the hell was I doing the last few years and why? And that was the start of my research
as the basis of Stretch. Oh, God, the story is so compelling. And I got to tell you,
you used the word eerie. It felt eerie when you were telling it because
we're seeing some of that more and more again today. Yeah. I mean, we see a lot of chasing out there.
And I mean, there's some telltale signs in how people are thinking about their consumption.
Obviously, the economy is distressed right now, but it seems to be bifurcated right now
where we've got a lot of haves and a lot of have-nots.
And the haves, I think, chasing is still very much alive.
It might look in different forms, but I think kind of just the blind consumerism is really
tainting people in terms of what their most important priorities are when there's
so much destruction and despair just around the corner. And so I'm hoping that the pandemic
really gives us an opportunity to rethink what our priorities and
what our goals are and to realize that life is so precious and to ask, are we really spending our
time in the way that we want to be spending our time? Or are we giving into these chasing
mentalities where we're focused on comparing ourselves to others and thinking we just need to
one-up each other. And if we can't do it in person
because of the pandemic, it's on Instagram and boasting about what the latest thing we've done
on Instagram. But are we really spending time and looking inward? Now we have the time to look
inward and to think, what is it that would make the type of meaningful and joyful life that I want?
And am I spending my time that way? And I
think if most people, or I'd say a lot of people, if they had that honest reflection and they held
up a mirror and they looked at themselves, I'm not sure they would say that they are doing that.
Tell me about, before we get into the book, and I want you to define the term stretching and chasing, because it's the central to the book. Tell me about how graduate school
post the dot-com bubble led you to becoming this esteemed, endowed professor at Rice University.
So tell me, where did you go to graduate school when you decided to do some reflection and study?
So I was at the University of Michigan. I was in
an organizational psychology program and my background was actually in philosophy. So I was
the one person in the entire program who had never taken a psych class before. So I definitely felt
like an outsider and not have a lot of influence too on stretch because kind of doing things
differently is a big part of stretching. So I was kind of, you know, the person kind of left out who had never even taken the psych 101 class, but I had a different way of thinking from
my philosophy studies and was really starting to just answer and try and ask questions that I've
been wrestling with as the dot-com industry was beginning to crater, which is, you know, why, why on one hand can people be so successful and so
satisfied with so little yet the experience I just went through people had so much abundance,
yet they were, they were miserable and their organizations weren't doing much better.
And it seemed like a big paradox about the amount of resources. It didn't really seem to be the most important
criterion in terms of what was driving either success or happiness. But that didn't make any
sense because, of course, the more you have, the more you should be able to do. And that means
you're going to feel better and be able to accomplish your goals. But it turned out that
wasn't the case. Define stretching and chasing for me, which is at the heart of the book. Yeah. So stretching is really about being resourceful. It's about doing more with what
you already have. It's focusing on not what other people have, not what you think you should need,
not what you hope to have tomorrow, but what you have right now in front of you and how can you be
more creative, more productive with what you already have?
And that's hard to do sometimes because of chasing, because chasing is this cultural belief
that the more we have, the more we can do. We want to solve problems. We just need more time
or we need more money or we need more experience. And what that really does for us, it just makes
us wait. I mean, how many times
have you said to yourself, you know, if I have more time or if I have more money or if I just
had more experience or more talent, this is what I can do. But that's just the delay towards the
goals that we really care about. It's almost like an excuse to do the hard work of what we actually
need to do. It's funny because I have this question for you. Let me tell the
story and then I'll ask the question. So when we read this, we were really blown away. And we did
exactly what you said not to do in the book, which was run around our company saying, oh,
he's a stretcher. He's a stretcher. She's a chaser. He's a stretcher. They're a stretcher. And I realized very quickly, one, the compulsion
to take new information that seems really helpful and immediately turn it into binaries and
diagnostic tools and labels, which didn't work. Because one of the things I realized in myself after reading this is that
when I'm at my best, and by best I mean most confident and grounded, I think I'm a stretcher
par excellence. When I am uncertain, vulnerable, and afraid, you will not meet a bigger chaser than me. I am like,
when I sit down to write a book, if I feel like the data makes sense to me and I'm ready to
explain what I'm learning, I just go. And it doesn't matter what's going on in the world,
I just sit down. If I feel insecure or doubtful, I have to buy a new desk. I have to repaint my study.
I have to get all new office supplies.
Do we all have chaser and stretching inside of us?
Yeah, I think we do.
They're not pure types.
And in fact, maybe we should talk about being stretchy or being chasey because there are
times when everyone does both, right?
And I'm certainly not immune to that
either. But being aware of the vocabulary allows us to hold ourselves accountable and to say,
hey, wait a minute, I'm being chasey here. Is this really what I intend to do? And I do think
that pathologizing people and sticking labels on them isn't helpful either, because we're all in this to improve ourselves. And once we label ourselves, it becomes hard to have that reflection, that
self-reflection to be able to grow and to do better. So we're all going to have lapses and
we're going to be chasey at times. But the other side is we all have the potential and the capability
to be stretchy. And in fact, we're born naturally to be stretchy. And I mean, I think the
studies on childhood and resourcefulness really show that. It's our institutions, it's our schools,
our work institutions, and our culture that really begin to stamp out the stretchiness in us by
teaching us that there is the way to do things, to teach us there are ways of using resources in certain ways
and to kind of think within the box and not out of the box. So I think our goal is to try and
navigate these institutions and hopefully eventually change them in ways that promote
stretching behavior and don't spoil the natural gift that we're at. And I mean, there's a really
easy way if you've got young children around, you can do what I call the frying pan test, which
is, you know, give a, give a young child a frying pan and it's a musical instrument. It's a step
stool. It's a bathtub for action figures or dolls on a bad day, especially in the midst of a pandemic.
You know, maybe it's a weapon to knock a sibling. They're really frustrated, you give it to us and we can
cook in it and make a scramble or something in it. And that's the best we can do because we've been
acculturated to use things in particular ways. And what that does for us is it takes away the
untapped potential of all of the things around us. And we miss out on that.
God, that's so good. I mean, I could just stop here and be like, I've learned the frying pan.
Okay. I want to read this quote from Jim Collins. So Jim Collins, for those of you unfamiliar with
his work, is the author of From Good to Great and Great by Choice. And I think it's fair to say
that, would you agree that Good to Great is a business classic, Scott?
Yeah.
There are very few books.
I mean, if you said classic, he would definitely be in the top 10 all-time list, I would say.
Yes.
If not the top five.
If not the top five.
So this is what he wrote about Stretch.
I always appreciate a book that challenges me, forces me to think, and creates constructive
discomfort. And I especially value such a book
when its key conclusions have a base of research. Dr. Sun and Shine has accomplished all this with
Stretch, and I am thankful for the chance to grow from reading his work. So not only, yeah,
like, yay for you, like, that's the top endorsement on the back of the book. But this term,
constructive discomfort. Let me tell you the hardest personal thing for me reading this book
was, you know, I've had a fair amount of success in my career, and I would attribute a lot of that
success to my scrappiness and my stretchiness. I mean, I sold books out of the back of my car.
I was just, all I needed at that point was like the money changer belt.
When I had t-shirts that, you know, we mailed them from my house. Like we did, I self-published my first book because no one was interested in
a book on shame and I had to borrow the money from my parents because I was in graduate school,
Steve was in medical school, and we were broke. I get stretchiness. I understand the power of
stretchiness. But as success has come, I find myself being less and less stretchy.
I find myself becoming more chasey, in some ways more fearful.
And there's something that I want to pause on, and I'm not going to be able to articulate
this in a way, so maybe you can unlock it for us.
My success in some weird way has taught me how to chase. Before my success,
my intuition was to stretch. Is that possible? Yeah, it's not only possible, it's very common
because what happens is people are resourceful by circumstances. So you're finding yourself
without a lot of resources, without a publisher,
trying to get your book and your ideas out there, and you've got to be scrappy because you have no
other way of doing it. So in that case, being stretchy is pretty natural. The more challenging
circumstance is how we can be stretchy when it's a choice. And what we need to realize is that stretching is
not something just when our backs are against the wall, though, certainly that's really helpful.
And you were able to get your book off to such great success under such constrained circumstances.
But being stretchy is something that's also helpful when we're already successful,
because it allows us to continue to create and innovate,
getting the most out of what we already have. It's not about just doing more with less. It's
about doing more with what we already have. There's folks in the book that I profile that are
millionaires and billionaires and have stuck with this lifestyle because they realize that
this is a mindset that has brought them success
and it's going to continue to bring them success because they're going to focus on what it is
they're trying to accomplish. Once we get chasey, we start thinking about what we have to do because
it's expected of conventions. We're worrying about what other people would be doing in these
circumstances and we're getting away from our own goals.
You see this a lot with organizations.
They start up as the scrappy, resourceful business, and then they move into the nicer
office building, and it begins to change the culture of the company because, well, look,
now we're no longer the garage startup, and we've got all these nice things.
Maybe I'm going to not have that sense of urgency, not think as creatively before
because I'm surrounded by this abundance.
And that's why as we achieve success, we need to be more mindful of how we're being
stretchy versus being chasey.
And there are some simple exercises simply reflecting about a time when we had to stretch,
when we had a lot of constraints.
So when you're working on a project, thinking about that first book and what it was like is enough to trigger that mindset
to keep you being stretchy. The research finds that just writing a paragraph can get you back
into that mindset. So just thinking about, ah, do you remember that time when no one knew who I was
and I couldn't even get my book in a bookstore? I mean, it was the car was the bookstore.
How was I feeling and what was I doing? And just writing about that is enough to put you in that
mindset to carry that over, to continue that stretchiness, even when you find yourself
in very different circumstances today. Okay. So one of the things I love about your work is
you may not have taken a psychology class when you arrived at Michigan,
but man, you
have turned into one hell of a social scientist.
Well, you know, it's interesting because if you think about my career, it's been very
non-conventional.
And I have a chapter and stretch about outsiders and the power of how outsiders solve problems.
So when we're facing some of our biggest problems, like grand challenges,
like what we're facing during the pandemic today,
people who approach problems
from very different perspectives,
diverse perspectives,
have so much to offer
because all the so-called experts
have been using their tools in one certain way,
and they're missing kind of the big,
you know, the new way of doing things.
And that's where the outsider really, really comes along.
One of my favorite stories in the book is from a guy by the name of Gavin Potter, who's
in the UK.
And he was in this competition with Netflix to try and improve their algorithm when they
were trying to get people to watch more movies. And he was going up against all of these teams, you know,
teams of mathematicians and computer scientists at MIT and Stanford and Oxford and all these places.
And he was literally working in his flat in London with a computer he had to turn off at night
because the fan was waking up his wife, his teenage daughter with, seriously, his teenage
daughter was his math consultant to help him with the calculus.
And all these teams are trying to figure out how to solve this as a math problem. And he realized
it's actually a social science problem because so much of the ratings are based off of what you
watched before because you become anchored and biased by how you rated the previous movie.
So while everyone's trying to solve the hard math problem, what really helped unlock this Netflix prize that awarded over a million dollars
to helping improve the algorithm was really just about understanding human nature that says,
if we just watch the movie that we like, it's going to impact the next movie that we rate.
And no one else was able to figure that out because they were busy doing fancy math and he
was doing something very different.
Yeah, it's the outsider perspective.
So I want to see, there's a part of the book, is that part of the 166 Grand Challenges study?
Can you tell us a little bit more about that study?
Yeah.
So this is a study looking at these grand challenges.
Think about eradicating a disease like we're facing right now
and how to get vaccines fast to cleaning up the Exxon Valdez oil spill. These are our biggest
challenges we're facing. And in this study that looked at 166 of these grand challenges,
it was across like 10 or 12 different countries, different research and development labs in
companies. And it was a really simple question
the researchers were asking. They were asking, to what extent does a scientist background in an area
of the challenge impact how well they can solve that challenge? So in other words, how well can
the biologist solve the biology problem? And you probably would say to me like, well, Scott, why
would they even study that? It seems obvious. Like the biologist of course, is going to get all the biology grand
challenges and so on. And you know, what's so telling is not only did the study not show that
positive correlation, it actually showed the negative correlation. So the biologist actually
solved the chemistry problems better than the chemists, and the chemists solved
the biology problems better than the biologists. It was the exact opposite of what we think,
which is just completely remarkable because we think expertise is really what matters and that
someone who doesn't come to the table with the most knowledge out there has very little to offer.
But in fact, these are the hidden gems that help us
solve our problems that we need to be empowering more. I mean, to me, this is, you know, people
ask a lot. People ask me pretty often, to be honest with you, like, how is it that you make
connections between things that are seemingly unconnectable, especially around
behavior, emotion, and thought. And for many years, I thought, well, it's because I'm a
grounded theory researcher and I study people and that's my expertise. But really, after reading
Stretch, what I realized was I've been an outsider my whole life. And my social wellbeing and my emotional wellbeing was completely dependent
on being able to understand people and how what they experienced and were feeling drove how they
showed up and behaved. Yeah. Yeah. And it's, it's I mean, I'm totally with you because that's,
that's what I feel. And it's sometimes a hard space to occupy, of course, because you never feel like you fit in a specific box. And it's, I remember even going on the job market first time as a faculty member and, you know, people are always, well, what, what box are you in? I'm like, well, I span multiple, multiple boxes. I don't, I don't want to put myself in a box. And when we're stretchy, we're becoming
comfortable with realizing that it's okay not to fit into that single box. And we can be almost
like multilingual. And it's about making connections between different parts of problems that we're
solving. That's a really powerful superpower to have because it allows us to look at things in
ways that other people have overlooked. I want to ask you a question that, again, I don't know if I can frame it up well,
so you may even have to help me ask the question. See if you can follow me.
When I think about what's happening right now around the racial reckoning and this fight for
racial justice that is long overdue, that I'm super committed to.
I know you're committed to it because I know you outside of this.
When I look at the issues that we're facing with police brutality, anti-Semitism, and
nationalism, I often wonder if the moral imagination that it's going to take to fix it and to create
more justice, environmental justice, social justice in the world is going to come from
stretchy outsiders.
I think so, because what we've seen is the status quo is clearly not
working. And the so-called experts have not figured out a way. And we're seeing in really
dramatic and unfortunate ways, just a lot of our social institutions beginning to crumble under all of this anxiety and stress and despair and unfairness of what's
happening out there. And it's almost like we're slogging away, just trying to get by and not
really touching the root of the problem, almost because people might be afraid to touch it. And it's not just going to disappear by itself. And we do need
solutions that help bring people back together and start to treat everyone with the worth and
dignity that they deserve. And this reminds me of a study by Gordon Alport from the 1960s.
And what he was studying during that was, again, groups that were
just not getting along and trying to put them in the same room. And he realized it doesn't actually
take a strong intervention to bring people together. It's simply just about spending time
together. And right now, what we're struggling with are just these narratives where we've got,
you know, at least two very different camps, you know, and telling stories in their heads that are just completely
annihilating each other. And we need to bring those stories together and help realize that
we have so much more in common that bonds us together as humans than we do apart, and that our country has a really sad history of how it's
treated certain groups of people. And I think we need to really get out there and help bring more
voice to Black Americans and other underrepresented minorities, and just stop ignoring that
and thinking this problem is going to go
away. So having outsiders come in there and think about ways of bringing groups together in ways
that haven't happened before, I think is really helpful. But something needs to start soon because
these stories become self-perpetuating over time. And unless we find a way of re-narrating those stories sooner, they're just going to
become further and further ingrained and it's going to be that much more difficult to dig out
from under them. Is there a relationship when we talk about problem solving, whether it's again,
the Exxon Valdez or issues of racial injustice or the pandemic. Is there research around the relationship between
creativity and imagination and stretchiness? Or do the most creative and great ideas come from
folks who chase and set up the biggest labs? What do we know? What do you know?
Yeah. So the creativity is a function of the stretchy mindset. And so that can come from just naturally
being resource constrained, like when you were trying to launch your first book, or it can come
from just getting into the stretching mindset through just thinking about a time when you were
constrained. And what the science teaches us is that when we face constraints, we have almost
permission. We give ourselves this kind of funny
permission to use our resources in different ways. So when we have abundance around us,
we can only see a chair as a chair because we have kind of the archetype of, well, a chair is
something that we sit in. But what's interesting is that when the mind is in this more scarcity,
this stretchy type mindset, we begin to see that carries different
things, whether it be a stool or a back scratcher or whatever else we might come up with it. So
we can unlock creativity. And we tend to think that creativity is something that people are
born with. And I'm not an artist, so I'm not really creative. But there's another type of
creativity. It's called
little c creativity. And this is the engine that allows us to solve problems, whether it be around
the pandemic or racial justice or day-to-day problems in our work life. It's this little c
creativity that we get this license, this permission slip to unlock once we embrace this
stretchy mindset. So the research clearly shows constraints
make us more creative. And I think that's why they have the cliche that necessity is the mother
of invention. Tell me what word you're using in front of creativity. What kind of creativity is
this? Little C creativity. So just the lowercase C as opposed to just thinking like big creativity,
like I'm going to go compose a
work of music or make beautiful art.
This is the little c creativity is the type of creativity that allows us to solve problems.
And that is a function of our stretchy mindset.
Okay.
I need you to have my back on something really big.
Are you ready?
I don't want you to ever lie about the data, but I need you to have my back on this. All right. I'll see what I can do. Bring it on.
This drives people crazy and it's probably kind of a shitty thing for my family and my colleagues,
but why do I write so much better under massive time constraint? So much so that I think I create it in order to write.
Okay. So I'm glad I'm not the only one who does this. So thank you.
Thank you for validating me. I know that wasn't your intention. I was supposed to go the other
way around, but I'm the same way. It's deadlines create urgency and they activate in us making
connections between things that we have a hard time seeing.
When we have abundance, we have what scientists call slack resources. So it could be like, well,
I don't need to finish this paragraph or make this connection because I have another three
weeks until this deadline is up. And so what happens is we just squander those three weeks
until it's midnight before it's due. And then miraculously, the idea comes to us.
So that's the first thing going on.
But the second thing I should point out is so much of our thought process is subconscious.
So when we're not working, you know, we're going for a walk.
You know, I love to walk.
I know you love to walk too.
We are constantly thinking about our problems, even if they're not top of mind.
And so we're beginning to develop ideas in our minds that when that deadline hits,
we're not starting from scratch. The mind has already been working on some things,
even without us realizing it. And we're just activating it during that deadline.
Okay, so I got to tell you a funny story. So I'm getting ready to start my sixth or seventh book. And
when the kids were little and I was writing my first book, Steve was like, okay, I understand
you have to write this weekend. I'm going to take the kids to San Antonio and go visit my mom. And
I said, great. And so when he came home, he said, did you get a lot written? You know, was it productive?
And I said, I was going to lie, but then like we have this rule we don't lie.
So I was like, well, he goes, did you write, did you not write a lot?
I said, well, he goes, did you write anything?
And I said, no, I didn't write a word.
And he was gone for a three-day weekend. And he said, well, what did you do? And I said,
I watched like 46 episodes of Law & Order. And we had a fight. Like we had a fight.
Not like a fistfight, obviously, but we had a really uncomfortable
argument. And probably that was, you know, he was home on a Monday afternoon because it was a
three-day weekend. And then on Thursday, I said, hey, I've got my first draft ready. And he's like,
when did you write that? And I said, oh, like between breaks at work and on lunch. And now
he still can take the kids away when I'm writing.
And he's like, okay, we got to go. Your mom's going to watch Law & Order and she's going to
do a lot of walking and she's going to reorganize stuff and clean up. But I need to do something
that rests my brain. And Law & order is so formulaic and easy? Because I think what you're
saying is true. All my creative stuff bubbles up underneath that or something. Is that weird? True?
No, it's not weird at all because again, so much of this mindset is trying to free ourselves from
what's happening out in the world. And when we
are walking or watching law and order and doing something that doesn't require a lot of thought,
our mind actually becomes looser because it's not focused on the task right in front of us.
So, you know, dueling or something in school, I know teachers, you know, would give students a
lot of problems with that, but then actually, people are still processing
information and allows them to be more creative in their problem solving when they're doing
something. So the trick here is to do something that requires a low amount of thought. And then
that's when the brain starts kind of thinking about these things in the background. So doing
doodling, walking, watching, watching TV could work. And that tends
to be more more creative than if you were doing nothing. If you just try and think about the
problem, you begin to tighten up how you think about your resources, whether it be ideas or
knowledge structures. So you're not you're not as creative. So it's doing a low amount of thing that
kind of takes your mind off the problem actually allows your brain to work on the problem without the stress or the pressure. So, you know, you go back to
that law and order and you can tell Steve that you are busy working while you're watching TV.
And let me tell you, I didn't know about the term dueling, but I must be wired for that hardcore
because the other thing is when I get stuck in writing,
I play ping pong for hours. Yeah. Yeah. No, that's, that's another,
that's another good one. The key that the one caveat here is not to be doing two things that
require a lot of thinking at the same time. So like multitasking is like, is absolutely terrible
for this, but ping pong, when you've got a big problem you're thinking about, that's awesome. Okay. So help us draw the line. Because I'm not thinking about my ping pong game when I'm
playing ping pong. I'm thinking about other things and I'm just going through the motions of ping
pong. So there's a difference between dueling and multitasking? Right. When you're multitasking,
which the sign shows on that is we don't actually multitask. What we do is we switch between different tasks just very,
very rapidly. And we just, we don't see that. So it seems like we're multitasking, but if you're
trying to, you know, write a book at the same time, and you're typing while you're trying to
do a math problem in your head, you know, that's never going to work. And that's, that's because,
you know, the brain just doesn't, doesn't work that way. So doing something that requires very little thought process, ping pong, walking, watching
kind of mindless TV, that allows the brain to reserve its power for the problem that
you're trying to solve without needing a lot of computational power to do this other
activity.
But once those two activities become things that require a lot
of concentration and effort, all bets are off. And multitaskers, actually, the science says,
are about 40% less productive. So we don't want to go down that route.
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Okay. I want to get into a topic that is, you know, is bad all the time,
but seems really weird right now during the pandemic,
which is comparison. I have 55 planned activities for my kids. I've developed a six-pack for my new
exercise regime, and I'm making sourdough bread, and I've redesigned my house. Tell me about the
Olympic medal study and your takeaway in terms of stretching and
chasing around that study. This study freaks me out big time.
This is a study comparing medalists at the Olympics. What the research was looking at was
how are people happy and what are they feeling after the Olympics? And you would think that there would be a very natural hierarchy to this.
Obviously, you win the gold medal, you're going to be the happiest.
And then the silver medalist, because they came in second, and second is awesome still.
And then the bronze medalists.
And then after that, the people who didn't medal might actually be a little upset because
they didn't even get a medal.
But actually, what the research shows is the least satisfied people among the gold, the silver, the bronze, and even the non-medalists are the silver medalists, which is crazy because
Oh, my God, it's crazy.
They came in second in this Olympic competition.
And the question is why? And
it really goes to comparisons and what your reference group is. The silver medalists aren't
appreciating and grateful for coming in second place in this world-class competition. They're
thinking about how they just missed the gold medal and how close they were to that gold medal.
And that changes their perspective inordinately.
And they're less happy.
And you can look at footage of Olympic medalists and you see that the silver medalists tend
to be the least happy of the group.
The bronze medalists who objectively perform worse than the silver medalists are much happier
than the silver medalists because their perspective is also very different. They're just grateful they got a medal.
And I think that teaches us an important level, especially in the pandemic about
who our comparison groups are because, you know, social comparisons are largely human nature
because it's a form of making meaning. It's a way of taking stock of how we're doing. And
it's sometimes hard to do
that without looking across the world. And I think in the pandemic, through social media,
these problems, our reference groups are expanded because we're not only just looking
at our neighbors, which also is problematic in some respects, and we can talk about that,
but we're looking across largely the world right now and seeing all of these things being done. And it's like, my goodness, I'm like trying to get
my work done. And now you want me to run this school and we've got eight subjects with my kids.
And by the way, we're going to pick up three different hobbies during the time and start the
remodeling job. It's like, it's overwhelming just, just thinking about it. And I think we need to
start dropping those comparisons because they're
unhealthy for ourselves and they don't reflect the goals that we want. With Stretchy, when we're
being stretchy, we're thinking inward about our own goals, not what our neighbors are doing,
not what our neighbor's kids are doing. And if I can just detour just a second to
this study in the book about grass, which I think is emblematic of the
doctrine because right there's the cliche that says the grass is always greener. And this idea
that people spend a lot of money and a lot of time trying to get their grass pristine looking
because they want to outdo their neighbors,
the lusher the grass that you have, the more successful you are, the better life that you
live. This is kind of all whether than kind of like our ideas of, you know, kind of the American
dream and home ownership. But what's so interesting about the physics of how grass works is when you are literally peering over your fence, looking at your neighbor's
grass, their grass, because of the angle you're looking at it, looks greener, even if it is
actually the same lushness as your own grass. And that's just crazy. And I mean, it really
teaches us perspective because when we're looking over other people, sometimes their lives look remarkably amazing.
And we know like, you know, people disproportionately share only good news on social media.
You know, people talk about their promotions on LinkedIn.
They don't talk about when they got fired and so on.
So we have a very jaded view of what other people are doing and how they're living. And if we start comparing ourselves
to them, we're just making comparisons that we're just destined to fail. So we need to stop these
social comparisons and realize, look, no matter, even if their grass looks greener, our grass is
really probably just as green, if not more. You're speaking right to me. Yeah. And it's
so funny that the grass is actually greener from the other side. I mean, is that perfect or what? Yeah, now I know.
Okay. I want to talk about our kids. I want to talk about parenting. This book really
woke me up in some ways. It's also helped me learn how to talk. So both of my kids have some weird math
ability where they can answer a very complex problem, like the problem of the day or the
problem of the week on the board, but they don't get good grades because they don't show their work
in the way that they've been taught. They get to the answer. In fact, there's been a cheating accusation one way.
Like there's no way you could have gotten this answer without these exact steps.
And then really we had to walk the teacher through the steps and say, this is how it
came to be.
How has this research changed how you parent your daughters differently? What have we learned about coming at problems differently, about resources?
Help us.
Yeah.
So I think parenting is always challenging.
And I certainly started rethinking about my own.
I've got 13 and 8-year-old daughters about thinking about what it would be like to
raise stretchers because, you know, there's things we can control in life and things we can't control
in life. And sometimes, you know, just the, the ups and downs of life, we can't control the amount
of resources we have. So for me, it's really important to instill resourcefulness. So I know
as a parent, like my first instinct is you want to, you want to be good to your kids and you feel like they ask for something, you want to give it to them right
away. They want a new toy. You want to, you want to, you want to go out and buy it for them,
especially if you can, can afford it. And what I've been trying to do is really instill in them
that, look, you've got lots of stuff already around you. How, how might you put these things
to different use? So you can
combine different types of toys together, and then you've created an entire new experience.
So that was kind of like the younger, the younger phase of, of teaching them to kind of get creative
with it. And what they've realized is there's actually a lot of pleasure you get into being
creative and using things in different ways. And so I think they've, they got that lesson. So that
one, that one was, was a little easier. Maybe, maybe younger kids are easier, but you know, as my kids
have gotten older, I think we've come across the education system that you've seen with your kids,
an education system, which teaches conformity, which teaches people and children to think in
very specific ways. And what I'm trying to encourage them to do is to recognize that,
you know, sometimes look, you know, you've got to learn to play by the rules of the game. And
there's just a pragmatic thing. So I'm not going to tell you to tell your kids or I'm not going to
tell my kids that says, you know, just blow it off when kind of the teacher wants things. There
are just people who are going to demand that certain things go in a box. And that's a useful skill to have.
But I don't want that to take away from the gift that you have and the gift that I think every child has, which is your unique stamp on the world, the way that you approach problems,
the way that you look at problems. So I'm trying to empower them to think about,
even though you might have different experience or or you might not, you know, take as many, you know, classes in this area as someone else,
you still have something to give. And it's that kind of outsider perspective that can help
make a contribution. Don't just check out because you feel like someone around you has more. That's
actually the time to check in because it allows you to give a different type of gift.
It's really interesting when I think about teaching, stretching, and chasing, and I think
about the impact of also trying to model that with our kids, right? Like also trying to, I just, we're re-releasing The Gifts of
Imperfection. It's the 10th anniversary this year. And I, as part of the 10th anniversary,
I read the book because the first audio of the book was not read by me. And so
our community was like, please read the book. So I read the book. And when I was reading it, I was reminded of,
this was again, I wrote it 10 years ago, where Steve and I put a joy list together.
And we wrote down all the things that brought us joy. And we actually started the exercise
to make sure our acquire and acquisition list was still right, all the things we wanted to buy,
all the things we wanted to earn and get. And so we wrote down this joy list and it was so
painful because everything that brings us joy as a family still today has nothing to do with acquisitions and accomplishments and
acquirement. It was like we cook together at least four times a week. We have family dinners.
We go hiking. We swim together. All these things that really bring us joy. And then of course,
let's get Maslow here. We've got financially all of our basic needs met. So
this is not saying who needs money cooked together. I'm saying we have the basic needs met.
But when I compared the joy list with kind of our dream list about buying this or acquiring this, it was so telling about time
as the resource that is just the most precious and unrenewable, right?
Is that a part of stretching and chasing?
Yeah. No, it is because time is really one of the hardest resources to renew. It's fixed. And we know from the research
that how we spend our time and experiences we have matter so much more for life satisfaction than
buying the latest fashion item or electronic gadget. So how we choose to spend our time is
going to make all the world of difference. Now, when we're stretching,
we need to be more mindful of how to get the most out of our time. And this is where I've,
you know, when I think about everything from when my kids were really young to what they are now, is we try and create these collective experiences that allow us to do, you know, multiple things at
once to kind of save time. So for example, you know, I love to walk. So I would,
you know, I would spend time walking my daughters in strollers when they were young. And that was
a way of spending time with them and chatting with them while still being able to walk. You know,
cooking is something we've been doing a lot together as a family as well. So, you know,
we're, you know, we're kind of checking off multiple things at once and having that quality time.
And that's a way of expanding what we have.
But another big part of it is just not wasting time. I mean, we waste a lot of time chasing after the things that we think we should want and
losing touch with the things that really bring us meaning and joy.
And I think for a lot of people, no matter their circumstances, if they just cut out those activities and things that they're doing that really aren't bringing them any type
of meaning or pleasure, like real, if they held up a mirror and said, am I really doing
this because I enjoy it or am I doing this because I think I should be doing it?
I think people would find that they actually have a lot more time than they realize.
It reminds me a little bit of my own research around comfort, true comfort versus numbing.
If you're, you know, if you want to sit down and take true comfort and watching two hours
or three hours of Law & Order, go for it.
But if you're just numbing and it's not filling you back up at all, just scrolling through
or just, you know, it's really thoughtful.
I have to say that I'm going to work on, I'm going to continue to work on the chasey in me.
Oh my God, if I won the silver medal, I'd be pissed off. That is not a good part of my
personality. I'd be like, oh no, I would be really mad. If I won the bronze, I would be thrilled.
I'm just happy to be here and medal and like, wow, but that's not a good
part of me, Scott. Look, it's hard. It's not easy for you. It's not easy for me. It's not easy for
anyone. But again, just calling ourselves out on it and holding us accountable for it is such an
important step. Okay. You ready for our rapid fire questions? Okay. All right. Fill in the blank.
Vulnerability is? Hard, but definitely doable.
You're called to be really brave, but the fear is real. You can feel it in the back of your throat.
What's the very first thing you do?
Just jump in and start acting.
What is something that people often get wrong about you?
That I'm always super serious. I actually have a pretty playful side to me.
I can vouch for that, actually.
Thank you.
They just can't see your Vita first. If they see your CV first, you're going to have to be really,
you're going to have to come up with some knock-knock jokes or something.
Okay. The last TV show that you binged and loved?
Suits.
One of your favorite movies?
Back to the Future. Oh my God, of course.
I finally introduced my kids to it a few months ago too, and they loved it.
I got to say, some of the movies that we loved growing up did not age well. So that one is one we've watched with our kids too. It's a good one. Okay. A concert that you'll never forget. Counting Crows.
Good one. Favorite meal?
Anything involving dessert, I would say.
Favorite dessert?
I'm going to go with chocolate babka.
Chocolate babka?
Babka, yes.
Babka.
Yeah. It's like a kind of a chocolate infused coffee cake with lots of
layers of chocolate, almost like a combination between a croissant and a coffee cake filled
with chocolate. We're going to have to get you one of those if you've never had one.
Oh my God. You know where they used to sell those? Scott and I live close to each other.
They used to sell those at Three Brothers Bakery, which is not here anymore. But yes.
Oh my God. So you're a chocolate lover. That's chocolatey.
Yes. I do love chocolate.
Okay. What's on your nightstand?
Well, right now we're in the middle of moving. So I got a flip cardboard box as our nightstand
until our new one comes in. But it usually has sparkling water and something my kids made me.
Oh my God. But that's very stretchy of you to use the box that way.
I like it.
Yeah, we donated our real nightstands a few weeks ago.
So that's what we got.
That's awesome.
A snapshot of an ordinary moment in your life right now that gives you joy.
So right before this pandemic started, my older daughter had her bat mitzvah.
We had our entire family together here in Houston.
And unfortunately, I just don't
know when we're going to get back together all in the same room. So I'm really cherishing that moment.
Tell me one thing that you're deeply grateful for right now.
My health and my family's health.
Amen, right? You just, that is, you know, even when I see see something on email that says, Dear Brene, I hope you're well,
I'm like, wow, that just has different meaning. Yeah. It's no longer just something tried and
banal. When you say it to people too, you've really got to mean it because what's happening
right now is pretty remarkable. Okay. We asked you for five songs that you can't live without.
So you've got Don't Stop Me Now by Queen, Walking on Sunshine by Katrina and the Waves,
Stick It to the Man, which is from the Broadway musical School of Rock, written by Andrew
Lloyd Webber and Glenn Slater.
Only You by The Platters.
Now, is that the Only You, that song?
Yeah, you got it.
Oh my God, I love that song. And then you've got one of my favorites on your list too,
Bridge Over Troubled Water by Simon and Garfunkel. What does this playlist say about you?
So I think it says, you got my playful side in there with Don't Stop Me Now. I think Bridge
Over Troubled Water is just, it's such a calming song. And it's something that, you know, with
just everything going on in the world right now, from the pandemic to racial injustice to just
uncertainty, it's something that just brings me a lot of calm right now. Stick It to the Man,
I think is just, it's kind of like that inner
rebellious part that I have that says, I don't want to be a conformist, even though I'm living
in a system that completely rewards conformity. And there are just times when we just want to
get out there and kind of revolt. It's also an amazing workout song too. And so I love doing my
workouts to that song. Only You was first dance at when Brandy and I got
married. And I think it just reflects just the specialness of our relationship and what she's
really meant to me in our lives. And Walking on Sunshine, I mean, what a fun, happy, uplifting
song. And if you just change the letters around, uh, the, uh, leathers around this walking on sun and shine and it just gives me so
you've got your own song. Oh man. Okay. My own song is I'm going to get, so I'll take it. I'm going to start calling you Scott walking on sun and shine.
Thank you for being with us on unlocking us.
And thank you for this remarkable book.
Oh, thank you so much for having me on.
It's just a total delight.
And I will, we'll walk soon.
Yes.
Yeah, we'll definitely walk soon.
And I'm going to bring a chocolate popka.
Oh my God. Then we'll walk soon, yes? Yeah, we'll definitely walk soon. And I'm going to bring in chocolate popka. Oh my God, then we'll walk a lot.
We're going to need to.
Wait, just so that this Unlocking Us community just feels like motivated,
how many steps do you get in a day?
So it could be between 18 and 20,000.
I mean, I am a serial walker.
My meetings will go walking. My ideation
process will go walking. So it's a lot, but you certainly don't need to do that many to feel good
about yourself. But that's kind of my thing I do. Yeah, it is. And we've had meetings before,
walking meetings before, which are so, it's just so much better. I've got, at the end,
I'm sweaty. I got no notes, but like my life has been changed. So I love it. Scott, thank you so much. I really appreciate you.
All right. Thank you too. Take care.
Okay, y'all. Isn't Scott walking on sun and shine just the best ever? I hope you enjoyed it as much
as I did. I just have so much fun talking to people who are,
you know, dedicating their careers to unlocking us. Did you see what I did there?
Okay, so his book is called Stretch, Unlock the Power of Less and Achieve More Than You Ever
Imagined. You can find it wherever you buy books. It's wonderful. It's a fun team read.
If you're working with a
team, it's a good family read, a great family discussion. You can follow Scott on Twitter
at Scott Sonenshine, S-C-O-T-T, and then Sonenshine is S-O-N-E-N-S-H-E-I-N. Instagram
is Scott.Sonenshine, and his website is www.scottsunnenshine.com.
He's nothing but predictable on these social media and websites.
Speaking of books, just some fun news in case you haven't heard or seen.
The 10th anniversary edition of The Gifts of Imperfection launched today on September 8th. Really exciting. This is the book
that launched our community. And it was so weird to kind of redo it because when we asked people,
what do you want? They said, don't change anything. Don't change any stories. Don't
change the text. Give us a new forward. Let us know what's been going on, but don't change
anything. So I wrote a new forward. We didn't change anything,
but we are going to do a webinar series on it. We have a new hub on bernabrown.com. You can take a
free assessment called the Wholehearted Inventory, which we spent several years developing and
validating. And it will let you know kind of what your strengths and opportunities for growth are based on each of the 10 guideposts.
We also have beautiful
graphic design downloads
that you can get for free on the hub.
So visit brennabrown.com
for all things,
the gifts of imperfection
and join us on the webinar series.
That's going to be really fun.
Barrett, I'm looking at Barrett.
Am I forgetting anything?
You say hi to the people? Hi to the people.
Yeah, I'll have a good one. Stay awkward, brave, and kind.
Unlocking Us is produced by Brene Brown Education and Research Group. The music is by Keri Rodriguez
and Gina Chavez. Get new episodes as soon as they're published by following Unlocking Us on your favorite podcast app. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Discover more
award-winning shows at podcast.voxmedia.com.
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