Hidden Brain - An Ancient Solution to Modern Problems
Episode Date: December 13, 2022People in every country and culture mark important milestones, such as births, marriages and deaths, with intricately choreographed scripts. We even appeal to supernatural forces  to give our favorit...e sports teams an extra advantage. This week on the show, anthropologist Dimitris Xygalatas explains the psychological power behind the sacred and secular rituals that structure our lives. Did you catch our recent episode about the secret to good gift giving? You can find it here .  And if you like our work, please consider a financial contribution to help us make many more episodes like this one.Â
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This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
On the surface, people around the world lead very different lives. Some live in bustling
cities, others in tiny villages. Some are part of vast intergenerational households, others
live on their own. People in different countries follow a bewildering range of religious traditions, but atheism
is also on the rise in many places.
When anthropologists look beneath the surface however, they often find that humans around
the world are very similar.
They invoke supernatural forces when it looks like
their sports teams might lose.
They take part in annual festivals that demand time,
effort, and money.
They mark important moments, such as marriages,
births, and deaths, with intricately choreographed scripts.
These festivals, rights, and scripts are so much a part of all our lives that few of us
stop to ask why we perform them.
This week on Hidden Brain, theata works at the University of Connecticut. His research
has taken him across the planet. In his travels, Dmitri has found common cultural practices
among people living in far-flung places. Many of these practices involve dangerous, difficult, or expensive rituals.
The rituals themselves are often dramatic. They are also regularly incomprehensible to outsiders.
But when you peer beneath the surface, rituals actually reveal a great deal about the human mind
and the psychological features that people around the world haven't common.
Dimitri Zikolatas, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Hi, Shankar.
Thank you for inviting me.
Dimitri, some years ago, you found yourself in the Spanish village of San Pedro, Manrique,
and you met a man named Alejandro.
How did you first come into contact with him?
So I was doing a research on fire working rituals in Greece.
That was for my doctoral research.
And after that, I found out that there's another place in Europe where fire working rituals
are performed.
And this is the small village called San Pedro Enrique.
So I just showed up there.
I started asking people if they knew about this ritual and as it turns out
It was a really big deal in that community. So one of the first people
Who others pointed me to was Alejandra
People hold him in very high esteem in that village because he's one of the oldest fire workers
And he in fact has been doing this ritual for many decades
So I understand that he was in his 70s when you were talking with him.
Can you paint me a detailed picture of the of the fire walking ritual as it was practiced
in this small Spanish village?
We are talking about a village of 600 inhabitants.
That is in the middle of pretty much nowhere.
And yet people have built this large open amphitheater that can
host 3000 spectators. Wow and they only use it once a year for the purposes of this ritual. So
clearly this is very important to them. On the summer solstice, every June, people start gathering in the central square.
They engage in all kinds of processions and other celebrations throughout the day.
And in the evening, they all join hands and they form this human chain.
And they start marching up the hill and lockstep towards that venue.
And once everybody takes their place, at exactly midnight, people start taking off their shoes,
and they face a large pit of coals.
This has been produced by two tons of awkward that has been burning for hours.
And it forms this bed of glowing coals.
We actually measured the temperatures there at 1,200 Fahrenheit.
That's enough to melt aluminum. My gosh.
And while faced with this bear of course,
they take somebody on their back
and they walk barefoot across it, on the burning fire.
What a beautiful day!
What a beautiful day!
What a beautiful day!
Wow, and this was true of Alejandro as well.
He would carry someone across this better
fire.
Correct. In fact, one time when I saw him carry his niece, who was significantly larger
than him, Alejandro is a tiny man. So, he struggled to balance her on his soldiers. People
offered to help him, but then he just waved his hand and he went through and did it.
You once asked Alejandro if he would ever stop engaging in this ritual,
I want to play you a clip of what he said in Spanish.
Can you translate what he told you, Dimitris? He looked at me, he thought about it for a while, and he says,
well, I suppose that they will come.
But when he does, he says, I will just not go up there.
And I said, what do you mean? He said, well, I cannot go there,
because if I do that, if I saw it without being able to do it, I would climb on the
belt tower and jump off and kill myself. So the following year Alejandro got some news from
his doctor. What was it, DeityMetres? I heard from Alejandro's son, Mamel, that his doctor told him
he had detected some arrhythmia and his heart and therefore he banned him from doing the ritual.
But things took a dramatic turn that night.
I was in the central square with his son,
preparing for the procession that would lead us to the venue.
And at some point, Mamel pulled me out of the chain.
I said, what's happening? Mamel says, come with me and you'll see. So he took me to his father's house and he announced,
he said, Dad, I know you cannot do the ritual, so I'm going to carry you through the fire.
And Alejandro just looked at him for a few seconds, he hugged him and then they cried together.
He hugged him and then they cried together. So we left the house and we walked towards the venue.
And indeed, Mamel was one of the first persons to walk across the fire.
He took off his shoes, he took his father on his back,
and he crossed the burning coast.
At that point, the crowd was extenent.
Everybody was cheering. His family
rushed to hike him. But then suddenly Alejandro turned towards them and with a sharp gesture
he told them to stop. Everybody went completely silent, 3,000 people. You could hear a pin drop
as Alejandro turned around, facing the fire, and he just went ahead and crossed it again,
biting himself this time.
All right, all right.
You say it again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Go, go.
Go, go.
Go, go.
You talked to Alejandro about his choice to
endanger his heart against his doctor's advice.
What did he tell you afterwards to make sure?
It was actually not the first time I've heard this from a far walker.
He said something like,
my doctor said that if I do the far walk,
something terrible might happen to my heart.
But does he know what will happen to my heart
if I don't do the far walk?
You know, it seems almost that there is a theme that shows up again and again in your research into rituals.
When you look at them from the outside, they can seem incomprehensible bewildering, but
seen from the inside, the people who practiced these rituals really cherish them,
even when they carry significant costs.
And in some ways, that's what you were hearing from Alejandro, wasn't it?
Absolutely. Yes, across all kinds of different contexts,
they carry so much meaning that people consider them to be a fundamental part of who they are as individuals
and an equally fundamental part of their collective identity, who they are as group members.
So we've looked at one example of a ritual that carried enormous physical risks, but of
course, rituals also carry other forms of risks and other, another costs, tell us what pilgrims endure during the Kummela festival in India.
The Kummela is one of the most important Hindu pilgrimages in the world.
And this is arguably the biggest congregation of human beings in known history.
Last time somebody counted, there were about 150 million people attending the
festivities. It takes place every 12 years and it happens on the banks of
four sacred rivers, the Ganges being one of them, and people might take several
weeks to travel there from all parts of India and beyond, and when they
reach it the festival lasts for a month. Some people actually stay for the entire month.
And during that month, you can imagine in such an incredibly crowded place, people live in tents.
They bathe in the river, they drink from the river, and the ganges is possibly the most polluted river on earth.
So there's definitely a high risk of infectious diseases spreading.
It's very hot during the day, but it's freezing cold during the night.
So this ritual is full of hearts.
I mean, at a more prosaic level, you've also studied rituals that are just financially
costly and many rituals fall under this category.
Certainly, staying in a place like India,
there are many families in India who celebrate weddings
by going into extreme debt.
Can you talk about that, Dimitri?
This is something that is actually very similar
to what I've seen in my home country.
I come from Greece, so in rural areas of Greece,
certainly when I was younger, when I was a kid,
I've seen many instances of people going into debt
to finance their children's wedding.
In India, there's this local NGO
which estimated over 60% of all Indian households
they turn to money lenders in order to finance
their children's weddings.
And of course, they have to pay extortion and rates.
And in many cases, they will sign contracts
that get them into voluntary servitude over a period of years. So, intensive labor to be able to pay
those debts off. So, hearing about these ordeals, people on the outside might wonder, why would anyone
voluntarily go through such hardship? And one thing you've done is actually ask participants that very question, and you've discovered
a paradox when you ask someone like Alejandro or a pilgrim in the cummele, why they do what
they do?
What do they tell you, Dimitris?
I have asked hundreds, if not thousands of people, this question.
Why do you do your rituals in general, or why do you do this particular ritual?
And one of the most astonishing things that never sees to you, amaze me, is that even in
the case of rituals that involve extraordinary material costs, physical effort, physical
risks, most people would just look at me and say, what do you mean, why would you do our
rituals? This is just what we do. This is who we are.
You call this the ritual paradox, unpacked that idea for me.
So the paradox is that on the one hand, people attribute tremendous meaning and importance
to those rituals.
Sometimes they will tell me this is the most important event
of their lives. And yet, when I ask them why they do it, they very often cannot come up with an answer.
So you had first-hand experience of what it was like to participate in one of these rituals. When
you were a small boy growing up in Greece. I understand
when you were eight years old, your dad took you on an important, let's call it an expedition.
Can you describe where he took you and what you saw?
So this was a football stadium. And by football, I mean, what in the United States people call
soccer, which in many parts of the world, my home country included can be an almost religious-like activity.
People have very strong loyal tears towards their team.
So at eight years old, I went into a stadium packed with 45,000 people.
And I noticed that as soon as the game started, everybody jumped up and never sat down again. And what followed from that moment
on was one of the most unbelievable experiences of my young life.
People lit thousands of flares and torches and fireworks and the entire stadium turning
to this ball of fire. It really looked like a volcano. People chanting and synchronizing,
jumping up and down and synchronizing, lighting those flares, which of
course meant that as soon as the game started, it had to be paused for several
minutes just for the air to clear. And my father kept picking me up so that I
could watch the game, but I didn't even care about it. All I cared about was all
of those incredible collective rituals that were happening around me.
So as I was hearing the story Demetrius, I was sort of seeing the eight-year-old version of you
essentially becoming an anthropologist before our eyes, observing all the people around you
and asking why they were doing what they were doing.
But it's also the case that you became a fan of the sport, but also of this particular team.
See, most people, they don't show up at the temple when they're eight years old,
just because they had an internal yearning to worship. Typically, they're parents think them.
But it is through the act of participation itself that one becomes religious or becomes a fan,
that one gets bonded with this group of people.
Because when people come together and they engage in all those kinds of ecstatic like rituals,
this conglomeration of individuals ceases to be that and suddenly it becomes one unified group.
And even from the perspective of an eight-year-old looking at this group,
that's exactly what it seemed like.
It ceased to be 45,000 individuals and it was simply one large pulsating unity that was
chanting and it was jumping up and down together as if it was a single organism.
And I was part of it.
When we come back, the psychology of how and why rituals affect us so deeply. You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. At the University of Connecticut, anthropologist
Dmitri Zikalatas has found that rituals exact significant costs in time, money, even
pain and suffering from the people who practice them.
Irrational economists might say it would make more sense for people to make sacrifices
for activities that improve their lives in some tangible way.
But everywhere and in every age, including our own, people divert significant attention
to seemingly ceremonial activities.
Dimitrius you call this the ritual paradox from the outside,
ritual seen pointless, and yet they are experienced by participants as something truly vital.
In your book, ritual, how seemingly senseless acts make life worth living, you say that it's a mistake to think of rituals as
primarily being about what we do in the outside world. The real purpose of rituals is for us to hack into our own
inner worlds? Absolutely. And the idea is that just because ritual does not have any immediate,
direct effects on the physical world, this does not mean that it has no impact at all. In fact,
it has a huge impact on our internal world, the way we perceive ourselves, the way we feel, the way we connect with other people,
and ultimately our well-being and our quality of life.
So one immediate question is why we need to do this, because after all we are capable of
introspection, we're capable of reflection. There are a lot of ways that we can talk to our internal cells.
What is it about the challenges we face in life
that prompt us to do things on the outside,
things like walking across a bed of fire
to change what's happening inside our own minds?
Well, the simple answer here could be because it simply works.
Sometimes we don't really have to understand that a particular
behavior helps us reduce anxiety or cope with grief or connect with other people, but viscerally
it does so. So when we go out and we dance and sing with our friends, we don't stop to ask
the question, why are we doing this? Isn't dancing pointless? And yet, there's a fundamental function
to act like dancing or singing or celebrating
or performing any kind of ritual together.
One of the really interesting ideas that you and others explore
is that there is something of a mismatch between
the minds that have been handed down to us by evolution, our physical brain,
and the challenges that were often called to address in the actual world.
And I'm not a fan of the idea that the brain is like a computer, because the metaphor is not exact.
But if you were to think about the brain as a computer, it's almost as if this computer was designed to solve a set of problems, but the problems have now changed in some dramatic way.
And we have a software patch that can essentially get this older computer to function in this
newer environment.
Is that the connection that you would make with rituals?
That rituals in some ways are functioning like a software patch?
Yes, that's a good analogy, I think. And one example would be the way we handle
stress and anxiety. Stress is a useful thing. It's an adaptive response. It motivates our behavior.
It motivates us to seek solutions, to avoid certain things that are stressful to us.
But in the modern context, we see that levels of anxiety are higher than ever.
That's because our environment has changed, not our biology.
We're living a life that is way faster than anything our ancestors would have experienced.
We're living in social contexts where most of us, or many of us at least, live very far
away, removed from our social support networks, our family, our best friends.
We move around, we live with anonymous strangers,
and all that can be very stressful. So by finding ways of soothing these kinds of anxieties and
these kinds of pressures, we might be able to solve these new problems that our biology has not
had time to solve. This is an old idea that goes all the way back to an anthropologist called Bronisl
of Malinovsky. Malinovsky noticed that in the Trobra and Islands, the Pacific Ocean,
where he was doing his field work, the local fisherman would perform a lot of rituals
before going out to fish in the open sea, but not before going out to fish in the shallow waters of the lagoon. Now, he's realised that this was because fishing in the ocean is dangerous, it's stressful,
and it's uncertain. You never know what you're going to catch.
You never know if you're even going to come back alive,
if you have to battle the waves and hunt sharks and whales.
And this is a theory that has been taught to unspull the students for about a century,
but there was very little evidence to support it. Within the last couple of decades,
we now have tangible evidence that ritual actually helps alleviate anxiety.
One of these studies took place on the Indian Ocean Island of Mauritius. Tell me about that experiment, Dimitris, and what you found.
For this study, we went into a small fishing village, and there's a Hindu temple there.
The local women will visit this temple frequently, and they will perform these prayers.
They consist of repetitive movements, performed in front of several statues of the Hindu pan-film.
And before going in there, we used an anxiety inducing technique.
So we asked them to think about natural disasters like cyclones and floods.
And this is very salient to this island because it's very often threatened by such natural disasters.
And then we allowed them to do their rituals in their normal way.
And we also had a control group
who went into a secular space
and spent the equivalent amount of time just sitting down.
And afterwards, we measured their anxiety levels,
both in terms of how they perceived their anxiety
and in terms of what their body said.
We measured heart rate variability,
which is an indication of our body's ability to cope with stress. And we found that performing this ritual actually helped people reduce
their anxiety more than those in the control group. I'm wondering how this actually works inside
our minds Dimitris. How is it that rituals can actually soothe people's anxiety?
What is it that they are doing, do you think?
So the idea that my colleagues and I are proposing here is related to the way our brain works.
Our brain is not just a computational machine, it's a predictive machine.
It makes active inferences about the state of the world.
Our brain does this in all kinds of contexts and all the time. This is a very
useful cognitive architecture to have, of course. But one byproduct of that architecture, one side
effect is that when there's uncertainty in the world where we cannot make accurate predictions,
we experience anxiety. And we think this is exactly where Richel comes in, because if Richel is anything, it is structure.
It is predictability.
When I engage in a Richel, I know exactly what to do, and I know exactly when to do it, and how.
And this gives my brain a sense of control.
And at the end of the day, it doesn't matter whether this sense of control is real or illusory,
as long as it has tangible effects, and we do see that it does.
There's been research showing that performing rituals doesn't just make people feel better,
it can actually lead to better outcomes. One study investigated the effect of a
made-up ritual on people's performance in a stressful activity. Can you tell me what that study found
images? Yes, this was a study performed by Alison Brooks who asked people to prepare in order to
engage in a series of stressful tasks. Those were tasks like taking a math test or participating in
a public karaoke competition. So the researchers asked participants
either performer artificial ritual, which resembled a magical spell, or perform no ritual. The ritual was consistently enjoying a picture of how they're feeling right now and then
sprinkling the insult on the picture, counting up to five, and then ritual destroying the paper.
What they found was that performing this type of ritual helped people actually perform
better.
So they evaluated the carotchee performances or the mathematical tests so that people were
able to perform better.
And of course, not through some kind of magical causation.
When they looked at the mediating factors, they found that it was through their reduction
of anxiety and an increase sense of control that they were able to improve their performance. So, we've looked at different ways in which rituals might help us address questions of uncertainty,
questions of stress. Another problem of living that rituals address is the pain of loss and grief.
Dimitris, can you help us understand why there are so many rituals associated with death and dying?
Every human society we've known has had elaborate burial rituals.
Now, why is that?
Well, this again has to do with the way our brain works.
We are hypersocial animals, and as hypersocial animals, we have a number of particularly
strong forms of attachment.
We see, for example, when young children are separated
from their parents, they experience what we call separation
anxiety.
When lovers experience a breakup, they
might go through this very painful period.
And when we look at it from this perspective,
we realize that the capacity to grieve
may have stemmed from evolutionary adaptations, but grief itself
is not adaptive.
There is an obvious benefit to the child who experiences anxiety when separated from its
mother because they can cry for help.
But when we lose somebody because they're no longer with us, there's not much else we
can do.
So from that perspective, grief is not necessarily very adaptive.
And to be able to cope with these debilitating emotions,
such as the experience of loss and the fear of our mortality,
every human culture has developed a set of rituals.
And what do you think these rituals are doing?
I mean, is it the case that they're actually
emeliorating our grief, channeling our grief in a new direction?
What do you think the rituals are accomplishing here?
They can make the process of separation from the deceased
a little bit more gradual.
So they give us time to digest the fact that they're no longer with us.
And if you look at burial customs throughout the world,
you will see a lot of those customs.
They involve keeping the deceased in the house for one day, three days, a week, in the case
of some tribes even for a year.
Another thing they do is that they help keep the deceased alive in our memories.
So they now turn them into ancestors, they turn them into beings with which we will interact in the future again
through these periodic rituals, we will make offerings for them, and therefore they provide a sense that they're still with us just in some different way.
So we've looked at two areas where rituals can be very helpful in managing anxiety and in managing grief.
A third problem of living has to do with the challenges that come from living in groups,
getting people to coordinate and cooperate with each other, especially as you point out,
in modern societies where large numbers of people are living amongst strangers.
How do rituals help us rise to this challenge, Dimitris?
This is perhaps the biggest of all sounds as for us, because we are a social species,
but once again, we now live in conditions that are very different.
So now we live in these very large societies of an animal's strangers,
and cooperation is always going to be a problem.
And this is why we have more collective rituals than any other animal in order to get people
to feel more bonded and cooperate. For example, collective rituals might have people
dress in similar ways. Their studies that show that when people appear to be similar, our brain makes inferences that they are indeed similar,
because also in nature, people who look like us, they're more likely to be our relatives.
Another way is to align our movements. So we move in synchrony, we chant in synchrony.
And again, there are studies that show that people who move in synchrony,
they feel closer to each other, they are more rapport and they like each other more.
Another way is to align our emotions
when we feel the same thing.
Again, we feel more connected
because who are the people that you feel the same things with?
Who are the people that you will mourn with
and you will laugh and you will cry with?
Typically, those are members of your family
and your close friends. And by getting anonymous strangers to do those things together,
rituals can create the sense of community and likeness. So we've looked at several ways in which
rituals can produce social good, but any psychological force that is powerful enough to get people to
walk over burning coals can also have bad outcomes.
I want you to listen to this news report from CBS News
about a student's death in California.
Good morning.
Noah Domingo's blood alcohol level was more than four times
the legal limit.
The UC Irvine freshman was found unresponsive
and the house behind me after a party in January.
His father says Noah was taking part in a dangerous
and long-standing fraternity ritual, where Noah was compelled to guzzle a so-called family
drink to become part of his big brother's family.
Dimitrius, talk about the connection between the bonding power of rituals and the initiation
rights we see at college fraternities.
So these types of rituals, the very intense types of rituals, they actually do carry great risks. And these risks have to outweigh the
costs. So if you think of the kinds of contexts in which these rituals would have been used,
society is that face more warfare, for example, they have more intense initiation rituals.
And it is one thing to go through initiation ritual that involves a lot of pain and suffering
even if you're doing this with the elders of your community, your cohort, everybody you
grew up with.
And that's a ritual that has been performed for a thousand years, so there's a lot of trial
and error going on.
But when we take those rituals out of context, and we perform them for no good reason, perhaps
for fun.
They can become something very different. It's a very different thing to take that ritual out of context,
tweak it, and try to use it to get the same benefits
in an entirely different setting.
One of the things that I find fascinating about your work
is that in recent years, you've started to use technology to assist you
in understanding how rituals work.
And one of the forms of technology you're using are heart monitors.
So using heart monitors, you've collected data during the San Pedro Firewalkers.
You found something extraordinary in the heart monitor data when it came to what was
happening in different people's bodies
at the very same time.
What did you find, Dimitris?
So this project started from hearing some of the things that people were telling me in
some Pedro.
Again and again, I heard them say the same thing.
They said that when you go out there, there are 3,000 people, but you feel like one. They said things like, I cannot put it into words, they would say.
But there's this feeling of togetherness, like our emotions are aligned.
And this to me sounded very much like what early anthropologists had said.
Emil Dirkheim described this feeling of collective earth of essence. He described it as if there was this jolt of electricity running through a group
of people that congregated and turning them from a group of unrelated individuals into this cohesive
group. So I started thinking how do we actually measure this feeling of oneness, this ineffable feeling
of emotional alignment and that my participants describe, but nobody has actually demonstrated.
So what we did is that we put those monitors on firewokers, but also members of the group
who are just watching and even unrelated strangers who had been there just
as curious tourists towards the festival.
What we found is that during the ritual their heart rates began to synchronize to a really
impressive degree.
In fact, they were more synchronous during the ritual where some of them are walking on
fire, some are watching, some are preparing for their own walk.
They were more synchronous during that time than the time they were marching up the hill in synchrony. But we also find that this effect only holds for group members because we also
mapped the social network of the village. So we knew who was related to home and to what degree,
whether by blood or by friendship.
And we see that we can actually use the degree
of social proximity to predict the degree
of physiological synchrony.
So this is a fundamentally social phenomenon.
When we come back, in an increasingly rational world that looks with suspicion at anything
that's max of superstition, how do we harness the psychological power of rituals?
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Anthropologist Dmitri Zigalata is the author of Ritual,
how seemingly senseless acts make life worth living.
He's founded over a very long span of time,
groups of humans in different parts of the world
have independently home-dined on the basic elements of rituals
that make them effective in manipulating our inner thoughts and feelings.
Dmitrius, you found that rituals always display an important characteristic,
one that sets them apart from other actions,
and you call
this causal opacity. What do you mean by this idea? And why is such causal opacity important in
the performance of rituals? This is one of the key characteristics of ritual. In fact, it goes
to the very definition of ritual. Rituals are those actions that have to be performed repeatedly,
Richels are those actions that have to be performed repeatedly, and they have some symbolic value, their treatise are special,
and yet they either don't have any specific goal,
or there's no visible connection between the actions that one undertakes
to achieve a goal and the goal itself.
So, if I take a shower in order to cleanse myself,
there's obvious utility to this. But if I perform a shower, you know, to cleanse myself, there's obvious utility to this.
But if I perform a purification ritual that involves perhaps rubbing mud on my hair, there's
no clear connection, there's no obvious connection between the action that I'm performing and
the outcome that I'm seeking.
And this is very important because by virtue of the fact that racial actions are arbitrary,
that means that they can now take any kind of symbolic meaning.
And this makes them very efficient group markers because if we are the group that rubs
month on our hair to perform our purification rituals, then we can be fairly certain that
no other group does it and that allows us to discern those who don't
belong and also to discern the members of our own group who we're more likely to cooperate with.
I love this idea that in some ways rituals transform everyday actions to the realm of the
symbolic and so in some ways the causal opacity might look like a bug, but in fact, it's actually not a bug, it's a feature.
Exactly. There are actually laboratory studies that have looked at this ability of ritual to make things
special. So when they showed people different types of drinks being prepared beverages, in one case,
the beverage was served in a pretty straight-up way. In the other condition, it was served up in a ritualized way.
So perhaps somebody would bow to it or would turn it around three times before consuming it.
And then when they asked participants which drink they would prefer,
when they asked them which drink thought was better,
when they asked them which drink they thought was special,
they all picked the ritualized drink.
thought was special, they all picked the ritualized drink.
So in addition to this opacity regarding cars and effect demitries, you've noticed that rituals tend to have three
qualities, repetition, rigidity, and redundancy.
Can you explain what these are?
So ritual obviously involves a lot of repetition.
Once a day, once a week, once a month, once in a lifetime, but it's always repeated.
But even within each particular Ritual performance, there tends to be a lot of repetition.
So sometimes people chant on 108 times.
Some people will count the rosary and perform repetitive prayers for hours.
By rigidity, we refer to the fact that ritual actions must be performed in a specific way.
There are actually studies that show that if you try to intervene
and change the way a ritual is practiced, people get morally upset.
Now this has actually happened historically.
FDR moved things giving by a week,
so that the holiday period could be extended and people would spend more money. Now this has actually happened historically. FTR moved things giving by a week
so that the holiday period could be extended and people would spend more money.
And people were morally appalled.
Most states actually refused to enforce it.
And they referred to it as Frank's giving
and it caused an uproar.
And finally, the third aspect is redundancy.
And this refers to the fact that rituals go well beyond what is functionally required.
What I mean by this is that maybe 20 seconds of washing your hands would be sufficient to keep them clean.
But in something like a purification ceremony, the relevant rights may go on for hours or sometimes even for days.
So besides the fact that rituals have these characteristics, you've conducted studies that find that when people are experiencing setbacks or anxiety or stress,
their actions sometimes naturally take on some of the characteristics of rituals. Can you explain
the study for me please? We brought people inside a laboratory and we wanted to see whether inducing
anxiety in that context would lead them to perform more ritualized
behaviors.
And what we found, we used motion trackers to quantify the movement of these people.
And as they became more anxious based on a task that they had to perform, their behaviors
spontaneously became more ritualized.
So they started performing the same actions again and again and again.
And I think what that tells me is that when you think about how rituals evolved, it may well be that they actually evolved through these mechanisms where people were naturally
turning to some of these systems in moments of stress and anxiety and then over time,
those behaviors get codified. That's exactly what I think that happened, that ritual evolved as a sort of mental
technology that helped individuals cope with all kinds of anxieties, and then was co-opted by groups,
by cultures, who then transformed into a very important social technology. We discussed earlier
how when people are engaged in a ritual, they often feel as if they
are part of a larger organism.
You felt this way when you were in the soccer stadium with your dad, the people at the
fire walking ritual in Spain felt the same way.
Is the reverse true as well when people do things in synchrony?
Does it change the way they think and feel?
Yes, absolutely.
And this is one of the reasons why rituals are so powerful.
Our brain simply refers that if we move in the same way as other people, then we are more like those
people. And we feel more rapport with those people. This has been demonstrated by different studies,
one of which we did in laboratory where we induce synchrony.
So we have people move either in tandem or with slight variations. You can imagine this as performing
a dance, either with somebody who's a good dancer or with somebody who's a bad dancer and
sometimes forgets the steps or makes mistakes. And we found that when people moved in synchrony,
their endorphin levels were elevated.
Now the release of endorphins is related to social bonding.
And not only that, but we found that they liked each other more.
They perceived their partners to be more cooperative
and they trusted each other more.
And we see this not just in the self-reports,
but also in their behavior in a trust game,
where they actually have to trust each other with real money that they could be putting in their pockets.
And of course this now makes perfect sense why you would have so many rituals built around
music and chanting, especially in group settings.
Absolutely.
Dancing and singing and chanting, those are some of the most primordial ways of for human beings to connect.
And you find them in all kinds of contexts, and especially ritualized contexts.
One of the things that you say is that high arousal rituals that stimulate many of our senses at the same time,
that these high arousal rituals can produce some of the most powerful effects
on our emotional states and memory.
What do you mean by this, Dimitris?
One way in which they do this is by creating
this powerful episodic memories that become a part
of our autobiographical self, the very sense
of who we are as a person.
So some of your episodic memories may involve
the first kiss or the time
you find yourself in battle or the time your house burned to the ground so they can be some of the
most important moments of your of your life. And those moments typically involve a lot of emotional
arousal. Richels use this by by putting people into situations where they exhibit very high arousal and they
do this collectively.
So when I share the same exciting moments, when I cry with you, when I laugh with you, when
I'm in danger or in pain together with you, it feels like we are essentially brothers.
One of the implications of this, of course course is that the more important the moment,
the more extravagant the ritual might need to be in order to mark that moment, because of
course moments that are engineered to have this heightened sense of ritual significance are going
to be seen as more legitimate, more important, more emotionally salient in our minds. Exactly.
And this is why, for example, you see that state
rituals tend to be very extravagant. And in fact, particularly state rituals that have to do with
leaders who have less popular legitimization, leaders like kings and dictators, they tend to have
more elaborate, more lavish, more flamboyant rituals. That's because those rituals add to that sense of authority
that they so desperately need.
I wonder if you could tell me about one particular night,
when you got to experience the power of rituals firsthand,
you were conducting field walk-in Mauritius,
and you'd been living in a coastal village
for a number of weeks
preparing to observe an annual fire walking ceremony.
And one day you were standing near the temple when you noticed some of the local men engaged in lively discussion
and every so often they would look in your direction and eventually one of them, the temple president called you over.
What did he say? So this was a practice that the local temple president
and when he summoned me there,
he said, the metrics you've been living with us
for how long now?
And I said a couple of months, I said, right.
So you're one of us now.
And I merely knew that he hadn't called me there
to tell me that.
And I said, well, I don't want to pretend to be one of you.
I'm here to learn about your traditions.
And he just cut me off.
He said, well, so you should also do the firewalk.
And I was stunned by this request, because in other parts of the world where I started
fireworking rituals, this would not have been allowed.
This was something only for the locals,
people had either drew their ancestry from the village or were part of this
religion. My first reaction was to politely decline. I said I don't want to
pretend to be one of you. It's very important for me to be able to document
this ritual. So on that day I'll have to take pictures and take notes.
And Prager's got me off again.
And he said something like, if God wants you to do it, you will do it.
To which I responded, trust me, Prager's God does not want me to walk on fire.
All right.
So then you're wearing your researcher hat and you're watching the fire ritual unfold.
Tell me what happens next.
So I had permission to be inside the enclosure where all the fire workers were, because
I wouldn't take photos.
And I was looking through my camera lens, so I didn't know what was happening around me.
And the ritual itself is so captivating that I was completely immersed in this. The smells
and the color of the fire and the chance everybody's having all the Shakti, as people were crossing
the fire one after the other, the emotions in their faces, and at some point, the practice
stopped me on the shoulder. And I looked up and I said, what? And he said, stand up. And I stood
up. And he said, turn around. And I turned up. I stood up. I said, turn around.
Then I turned around and I realized that the entire village was looking at me.
I was facing the fire and everybody expected me to walk across it.
What did you do to matches?
At that point, there was nothing else to do.
I obviously didn't want to insult my hosts.
It would also be humiliating to back out at that very last moment.
All I had time to say was, please hold my camera.
And then I turned and I faced the crowd.
And to be honest, taking that first step was very scary.
But once you've committed, your body just takes you across.
But once you've committed, your body just takes you across.
Now you were someone who knew that the temperature of the coals could range from 750 degrees to 1500 degrees Fahrenheit. Was that going through your mind as you stepped onto the fire?
Of course, when you're faced with a fire like that, you cannot be unaware of the fact that you're walking on a surface that is hot enough to melt metal.
And you actually feel it. You feel yourself, your face is getting roasted by that heat.
And I've seen people go across that fire. I've seen the sparks fly off their feet.
I was wondering whether the same thing was going to happen to me.
I have seen people get hurt through the fire working, so the thought certainly crossed my mind.
But I just took that first step and just like people had described to me, your mind is completely
empty, there's nothing but you and the fire.
When you're walking through the calls, you go into this mode that some researchers have
called flow.
And in that state, your peripheral vision almost disappears.
So you don't see anyone.
It's just you and the fire.
But there was one step in particular
where I just knew this was going to leave a blister.
So there was probably something sharp under my foot
and it hurt.
And it did leave a blister afterwards. But when this adrenaline kicks in,
you don't really worry about the pain. That's the last thing that you feel.
What did it feel like as you got to the other side, Dimitris?
The first thing that happened was that it's as if a cloud has lifted. So suddenly you're aware of
your surroundings again. But what I also felt
was this jolt of exhilaration. The last it not just for a few minutes, not just for a few
hours, but in fact for several days. And I was amazed at all those powerful feelings and emotions
that came through such a brief moment of participation. That got me wondering, if I, as an external observer, as an anthropologist, as a visitor, as a guest in this community,
if I come to experience such strong emotions through this brief act of participation,
how much more powerful would that be for a person who grew up in the community, for the insiders. For whom this ritual has a deep meaning connected to a thousand-year-old tradition.
Dimitri Sikalata is an anthropologist at the University of Connecticut.
He is the author of Ritual, how seemingly senseless acts make life worth living.
Dimitri, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
It's been a real pleasure.
Thank you.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget
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