Hidden Brain - Close Enough
Episode Date: February 12, 2019Today, more and more of us are living through the people on our screens and in our headphones. It's not real, but for many of us, it's close enough. ...
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
It used to be that if you wanted to feel what it was like to do something, you had to go
out and do it.
If your dream was to see the Grand Canyon from a raft, you'd head to the river.
If you wanted to gaze up close at the Mona Lisa, you'd go to Paris.
If you wanted to know what it felt like to walk hand in hand with a lover on a moonlit
night, you'd have to go out and find a partner. wanted to know what it felt like to walk hand in hand with a lover on a moonlit night.
You'd have to go out and find a partner.
But something in our culture has changed.
As we sit on the couch and eat takeout, we watch kitchen virtuosos whip up gourmet
meals from scratch. Turn it over, look at the color.
And it just makes the house smell like home to me.
And then we watch other people eat meals.
So if you were alone on Thanksgiving,
I hope you would have your Thanksgiving dinner with me.
I mean that literally, there's a popular genre on YouTube.
Okay, my mouth's seriously celebrating right now.
Well, you just watch other people, binge eat.
Okay, I'm starving.
I'm starving.
There's a lot here.
Oh my God.
It has never been so easy to bring the world
into our living rooms and kitchens and bedrooms.
And the world that enters our lives has never looked better.
You can get the ocean without the seaweed
and sunsets without clouds.
You can scale a rock face without the fear of a fall.
You can experience love.
Rebecca, Joe Kufren, my Becca, will you marry me?
Without the risk of rejection.
The smiles are bigger.
The emotions are more spectacular.
What?
I will be... The risks and rewards seem greater, The miles are bigger. The emotions are more spectacular. One, two, three.
The risks and rewards seem greater, even though neither really belonged to us.
We're in games!
We just got a game!
These other lives we've come to inhabit can seem more beautiful, more exciting, more satisfying
than anything in our actual lives.
They come in multiple camera angles
with all the boring parts spliced out and all the recipe ingredients pre-chopped in
those little prep bowls. I definitely vicariously live through cooking
shows. I catch myself spending hours a week watching climbing videos on Instagram.
I've even built my own climbing wall but I don't use it. Why? My husband watches a
Navy SEAL talk about discipline and hard work while eating cereal at 11 p.m.
Today, we're thinking about how many of us are outsourcing our lives to virtual alter regas.
We'll hear stories from listeners about the lure of losing ourselves in the worlds of other people. And we ask,
what happens when we do this, when we live through the people on our screens and in our
headphones? The delights and the dangers of living vicariously this week on Hidden Brain. In most areas of his life, John Sharp is a doer, not a watcher.
He is good with his hands and worked for a while as a carpenter's assistant.
So a few years ago, when he bought his first house, he made sure to get one with a garage so he could build a wood shop. It's
tiny but he's proud of it. Right now I've got a nice 14-inch bandsaw, a
three-horsepower cabinet saw, I've got some festival products which are very high
end. One of his most important tools though is YouTube. He teaches himself
everything he needs to know by watching instructional videos.
It's his first stop for most of his projects, like the crib he just built for his new bond
daughter, and the desk he's been working on for his wife.
And I've got, you know, probably three or four projects that are just halfway complete
or in the queue, if you will.
But John's a sixth grade teacher, and he's usually worn out by the end of the day.
And so he's been finding himself spending less time in his shop and more time on his couch
just watching those how-to videos.
And what I do is I usually use it as a to decompress after work.
So I go home, open up YouTube, you know, like the other night I was watching at how to build a barn door,
because I'm also building one in my house,
and I thought, oh, I just wanna get different ideas.
What's going on, everybody?
I'm Bruce Ulrich, welcome back.
In today's video, I'm gonna show you.
And it just becomes like this vortex
where I'm just like, oh, there's one cool one.
I love sliding doors.
I think it's cool.
And oh, look, there's a different one.
I'll watch that one.
I built this out of an embrojemental slab.
It's not actually one big slug. And then, you know, it seems like
30 to 45 minutes of pass while I watch videos on, you know, people fixing car
engines. Super clean your engine bay. So clean that you'll be able to eat off
or how to build decks. So we're gonna start out by putting the ledger on the house
or how to renovate houses. Hey guys, this is my kitchen
And it's just non-stop. It's just I mean I could be on there hours and hours and just I mean on a weekday
I'll usually watch on average two hours, but on a weekend if I don't have a lot going on
You know, I will watch four to five hours easily in a day
At first it's entertaining.
There's definitely a pleasure aspect of it at the beginning.
But after 45 minutes or so, that feeling of enjoyment goes away.
And it's just like guilt, then it totally switches from pleasure to, you know, oh, you
lazy ass, why are you sitting here when you could be out there?
And as he sits there there watching instead of doing,
he feels like he's losing something.
When I watch the video, what I think I'm losing
is I'm losing the ability to gain the skill.
I think I'm tricking my mind to think that,
you know, oh, I'm getting that skill, I watch the video,
I know how to do it.
In reality, that's not true.
I can watch a 20 minute video and that person has shown in 20 minutes what probably has
taken them days to do, and I am losing the time and the skill of practice for myself.
So instead of going into my shop and practicing the skill that I've seen or this new technique
that I'm interested in, I'll just watch another video.
Watching experts do expert things is not a new phenomenon. In the 1700 in his autobiography, it has ever since been a pleasure to see good workmen
handle their tools.
In 19th century England,
spectators watched surgeons dissect corpses,
sometimes accompanied by the music of a flute.
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perform other athletic feats in the ancient Olympic games.
What's different today is that our access to experts has exploded.
Never before in human history has it been possible to see so many people display their talents.
And never before in human history
have so many things counted as talents.
I can't remember when I started watching YouTube videos.
I think it really started to get popular back when I was in middle school or high school.
This is Irene Yeh, a software engineer in Santa Monica, California.
Irene is busy.
She can easily be at work for 10 hours a day.
In the morning she wakes up, grabs something quick for breakfast, and she's out the door
in about 40 minutes.
At night she sometimes doesn't get home until 10.
After she's taken a quick shower
and had her dinner delivered,
she often wanders over to YouTube
and pulls up a video of someone else's bedtime routine.
And for a while, she enters an alternate reality.
Hey guys, so for today's video,
I'm gonna be showing you my nighttime routine
to de-stress and relax after a long day at work.
I usually stop.
These videos are people, mostly girls, take of themselves,
showing how they come home from work.
So when I come home, the very first thing that I do
is I take off my outside shoes and I put on my house shoes.
They make dinner and I always like to have some sort of high protein, vegan option mixed with a
They unwind and go to bed.
I fluff my pillows, I pull back the sheets, not sleeping with the comforter.
So I just slept with them.
And I usually get a really good night's sleep after doing this routine.
I genuinely sleep like a baby.
So I hope that you guys, I...
Irene suspects these women don't actually live like this.
But she doesn't mind the Artifice.
She herself doesn't have the bandwidth right now to make side dishes or exfoliate.
She'd rather watch someone else do those things and for a few minutes escape into another
person's life.
It's cheaper, it's simpler, and the emotional results close enough.
Honestly watching these people do all the hard work and make up their perfect
license, it's like a lot easier for me to get a taste of what this type of life could be,
while I lounge in my amapid and eating my Chinese takeout.
in my amapered and eating my Chinese takeout.
Living vicariously makes us feel like we have the things we want, even when we can't have them. It's a substitute for the real lives we lead and for the things we lack in those lives.
Living through others also fills even deeper needs. It can fill the holes in our psychological
lives and serve as a self-esteem pick me up.
A listener from Florida shared a story with us along these lines. She requested that we
only use her first name in order to protect her privacy.
Okay, I'm Natalie. I live in Miami. Right now I'm working in human resources.
Natalie is 23 years old and says she was always on the quiet side.
She had a rough time in high school and withdrew into herself.
High school and I guess all of primary school, you know, before I went to college was kind of hard for me.
I was very quiet, a little insecure.
Natalie felt she was overweight.
She got bullied.
She was interested in music and singing, but her low self-esteem meant she rarely put
herself out there.
So, you know, I never really tried to get feedback, because I was afraid of getting a bad response.
Her family would sometimes notice her drifting off into her own world.
They would always say, not only what are you thinking about because I would just be staring
off into space going on little tangents in my mind.
One time Natalie was with an aunt on a cruise.
She was staring off into the distance, lost her thought for more than an hour.
And she finally asked me,
what are you thinking about?
And I was thinking about a TV show that I had been watching,
just like imagining myself being on the production set
or something like that.
Everybody quiet, officer, cut.
Why did the others?
Over the years, as new forms of technology sprang up around her, Natalie found new solutions
to the missing pieces in her life.
She takes out her phone and opens Instagram to a photo of a woman with long, brown hair.
She has a long sleeve top tucked into some high-waisted shorts.
She looks like she's in really, really good shape.
Her makeup is perfect. And when I see her outfit, it's beautiful. And I know that I would never
even think to put those clothing items together. Like I could never, you know, put an outfit that
stylish together. I asked her why she felt that trendy outfits were not for her in real life.
I still, you know, feel like that little girl sometimes and I don't want to stand out.
I don't want to bring too much attention to myself. Other times, Natalie Thumbs through Pinterest.
I have like folders for each of the rooms in my home. It's almost like I can go into my Pinterest bedroom
and see my beautiful bed and the sheets are very expensive.
So I have one called my first home.
I have one called beauty.
I have one for my wedding that's coming up.
I have one for do-it-yourself projects,
which I have never attempted.
Natalie drives more than an hour to work each way five days a week.
Along the way she listens to music.
Actually, listening doesn't quite describe what she does.
And when I listen to music I'm always the musician.
Like I'll be singing in my head.
And I'll even like start the song over if I missed my favorite part
because I want to see myself singing the best part of the song.
So I'll make fun of myself that I can listen to the same song
50 times just to get it right in my fake performance.
Give me an example of the kind of song that's happened the last time too.
Oh my god.
Tiny dancer by Elton John this morning.
Natalie imagines herself singing and playing the piano.
I'm a great musician in my head. I play every instrument. I can sing any song.
And there's something else.
This is so embarrassing, but I want somebody else to be watching me.
Like, I'll kind of be performing it in my head in front of an audience.
I'm an amazing man.
In the audience, I see my parent.
I'll think, okay, well, I want my best friend there, so then I'll focus on what my best friend
would look like in the audience watching on the highway.
Of course, you wouldn't be able to spot Natalie the magnetic performer if you passed Natalie
the driver on the highway.
No, if you looked at me, I would look completely normal.
Ten and two on the steering wheel.
She scrolls to her phone and pulls up a duet,
featuring Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga.
Are you tired trying to fill that void?
Or do you need more?
I'm falling
And all the good times I find myself falling
For change
And all the bad times I hear myself
I'm on the deep end, what just I can't hit the nose that she's hitting right now.
I asked Natalie what she thought these daydreams were doing for her. It almost feels like it's filling a void that I haven't been able to fill ever since
in high school.
That was the closest I ever came to being a musician.
Natalie's fiancé bought her a guitar after she told him her dream of being a performer.
The instrument has mostly sat unused.
The daydream versions, the ones on her phone, those versions are so much better.
Watching or hearing someone else do things makes Natalie feel good, but only for a moment.
Yeah, well, I mean, when you're watching them do it on TV, it just, it looks so easy and nobody
talks about how hard it is. And, you know, I think that's also why it makes people feel so bad
about themselves because, you know, this person on TV, it's so easy for them. Why is it so hard for me to get these things done?
What's wrong with me?
Many of us have experienced what Natalie is feeling, a mix of emotions as we watch others
perform difficult tasks with ease. We find it inspiring and we find it deflating.
Coming up, the quirk in our heads that makes watching others so compelling. I'm Shankar Vedantam and you're listening to Hidden Brain. This is NPR.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Hello, I'm Bob Ross. If this is your first time with us, let me extend a personal invitation
if you'd drag out your little paint brushes and some paints and paint along with us each show.
Tell you what, let's get right to it.
If you happen to watch public television in the 80s and 90s,
you may have come across the painter, Bob Ross.
And let that knife just float. Let it have come across the painter, Bob Ross.
And let that knife just float, let it float right down the side of the mountain.
Think about where light would strike.
With his gentle voice, kind eyes, and halo of brown hair,
he made you feel, soon, got to make his little noises or it doesn't work right.
That you could absolutely learn, how to paint like a master.
Just pull.
See, they're not easy that is, so take a little blue,
a little tiny bit of blue.
Edelbrayan knows why so many Americans fell in love
with Bob Ross, and why they felt after watching him,
just let your imagination take it anywhere you want to go.
That they could be painters too.
You could also hear in that clip just the warmth and encouragement.
I really, you really are kind of inspired to jump right in and try yourself.
It is a behavioral scientist at the University of Chicago's Bootschool of Business.
Along with colleague Michael Cardis, he studies mental simulation.
What we think a new experience will feel like.
One thing we find is that, you know, instructional videos, other videos you can pull up on YouTube.
They teach you something, so they tell you objective details about that experience.
But viewers come away thinking that those things have taught them everything.
And that discrepancy is at the core of what we're interested in here.
Did you and Michael ever experience this yourselves?
For sure, I mean, you know, as a consumer myself, you know, at the sports end of things, interested in here. Did you and Michael ever experience this yourselves?
For sure, I mean, as a consumer myself,
at the sports end of things, you can catch yourself screaming
at the TV, why did the quarterback not make that throw?
Kind of catching myself wondering, it's probably
a lot harder in real life than I think
about sitting on this couch.
So certainly, experiences like that.
And also for my professional life,
you know, when I started as a professor here a few years ago, one major part of the job
is teaching. And one thing we do here at the University of Chicago is have new professors
sit in on a class. So I spent a whole quarter watching someone else teach before I then
the next quarter jumped in and taught. And that was also an interesting learning experience
for me.
After 10 weeks of watching someone,
you kind of feel pretty confident.
I've invested a lot of time and effort into this.
And then the next quarter rolls around
and I'm the one in the suit now standing in front of the room
and all the eyes are on me.
And I quickly realized it's a lot easier
to watch somebody do something
than it is to actually do it yourself.
So also in the professional world,
kind of learning through getting a taste of experience, you often realize how much harder
things are in practice.
It's interesting because as you talk, I'm reminded of the very common experience that many
of us have watching people who are very good at doing things, which is they do make it
look easy. You watch a chef chopping vegetables or you watch a musician playing the piano and people
who've been doing things for a long time, there is not just a skill and an excellence in
what they do, but there's an effortlessness in what they do.
And you pick up on that and you say, all I have to do is sit before the piano and let
my fingers relax and surely I can play Mozart too.
I find that very interesting.
This idea that making it look easy, we might have a hard time appreciating expertise.
We can have underappreciate what other people are performing, what other experts are doing
for us, technicians that fix things for us, athletes that perform for us.
The best of them, ironically, make it seem like it's the easiest possible performance from an observer's perspective.
So I am really interested in that discrepancy.
Do we kind of struggle to fully appreciate the talents of others?
Ed wanted to test the hypothesis that watching experts perform a skill, watching them over
and over again, improves people's confidence, but not their ability.
So he came up with some clever experiments.
In one of them, he had 400 volunteers watch an instructional video
to learn how to do the tablecloth trick.
Three, two, one, heart.
And the crowd goes wild!
Thank you! It's that magic trick where you pull a tablecloth out from underplates and silverware
without disturbing anything on the table.
Ed had lots of videos to choose from on YouTube.
I've got both plates, cups and saucers, do you like a cup of coffee?
Well, thank you.
Many videos talk you through the trick, step by step.
Step 5.
Pull the cloths straight down toward the ground.
Pull quickly and with confidence,
so that the tablecloth slides out from under the dishes and cups.
Ed wanted to test the effects of learning through watching.
So he found a nearly silent video
where a bearded science teacher demonstrates the magic trick for students.
The teacher's hands bob up and down as he holds the ends of a tablecloth,
and he concentrates on three bowls and some silverware. Then he pulls the tablecloth,
the dishes and silverware barely move. It's all over in less than 15 seconds.
Nothing to it, right? I'm interested in that video because
on the surface it's such a hard task.
Anybody should recognize that this is a really complicated thing to pull off.
It doesn't matter if I just watched a video 20 times.
This is really, really hard if I've never tried it before.
We thought this was going to be a conservative test of the hypothesis that, of course, merely
watching a video shouldn't make me better off.
This is something that I'm going to have to practice a bunch of times. And yet we find that if you watch this video 20 times, for example, and we specifically
ask you, imagine you jump in right now with no other practice than what you've just had,
how well would you do on your very first attempt?
You jump in and try to pull the tablecloth out.
And if you've watched a bunch of times, you think you could pull it off, which I find rather surprising because of how obviously complicated that skill is. I would find it
very unlikely that participants can pull it off merely from watching the video many times.
And you found in fact that there was in some way sort of a dose effect relationship, the
more times people watch the video, the more they watched it, the more they felt they could
do it themselves. Exactly.
And what's especially interesting there is we compared that exposure to other kinds of
training you could do.
So we had people watching videos and the more that they watched videos, the more confident
they became.
But this wasn't true for other kinds of training.
So if we had people spend more time just thinking about the trick or spend more time reflecting
on the trick or spending more time reading written instructions about how to about the trick or spend more time reflecting on the
trick or spending more time reading written instructions about how to do the
trick, more time didn't lead people to be more confident. So there seems to be
something special about having lots of practice with videos above and beyond
other kinds of practice. In other words to summarize what you were saying, reading
about the skill does not seem to communicate the same transfer of expertise
than merely watching someone perform the skill.
Exactly. Watching seems intimately connected to our perceptions that we're learning.
Now, now please tell me that with the tablecloth experiment you actually had beginner stand before tablecloth and actually yank the tablecloth out.
Please tell me that actually did happen.
I am very regrettably informing you
that we did not run that condition,
but I think I will after this discussion.
You'd have to invest a fair amount in new China, I'm guessing.
We would, we would.
I mean, we did try to bottle this in a more fun way,
so not exactly with the dishes,
but we have this moonwalk experiment.
And slide the left leg back and then switch.
And so this is the instructional video that we had participants watch a clip of that was
supposedly going to try to train them.
This is exactly how you do the moonwalk.
You're going to slide the left leg back and you're going to switch weights.
So the right leg goes down, you push the left back.
When you're pushing the left leg back, keep it flat on the ground.
Switch, switch, switch.
All right guys, here we go.
One music.
Five, six, five, six, seven, go.
One, two, three, four.
But again, the key thing that we're interested in is, you know, once you're actually trying those
steps, it turns out there's also some internal reactions and feelings and emotions and nerves that make it harder than it seems.
So in this study what we did was we took this same exact instructional video and participants either
watched it once or watched it 20 times. So again, this is our key manipulation here, getting people lots
of exposure to video watching, how does that affect
their perceptions of learning, and how does that affect their actual learning.
So we told them to imagine that there was a panel of judges who would then watch them
perform the moonwalk once across the screen, and they were going to judge how well they
performed the moonwalk.
And we asked them to predict, what do you think, what score do you think you're going to get based on your performance?
Then what we did was set up a video camera and participants actually then made an attempt at the Moonwalk.
These are very, very fun videos to watch. We have a whole battery of these things in our research library.
And truth be told, we showed them to a panel of judges.
So the judges had no idea whether this performer had watched the video once or watched the video
20 times.
In fact, both sets of participants, whether you watched once or 20 times, didn't do very
well.
But again, the key insight here, if you watched 20 times, you thought you were going to
kind of win that performance.
When, in fact, you performed no better than other participants. This is what we are doing right now. I have no idea how to do that.
That's what I was going to do.
God, awful.
I can't find out.
Of course.
Of course.
So these are our participants actually trying their moonwalk attempts.
And it's great in some of these videos, as you can hear,
are kind of verbalizing the difficulties of doing this task.
They jump in and they start to try to emulate
what they saw in that video, move the right foot back,
move the left foot forward,
and it turns out they're literally verbalizing
how difficult it is.
Good.
I don't know if I'm doing it,
but this is better than you go get for me today. And again, what's especially interesting for us is some of them told us
before they made that attempt they're really going to do it well. They're going to nail
this attempt. And only in the act of trying to realize oh I guess I didn't learn nearly
as much as I thought just from watching that video. When this happens, do you think it changes the way people
watch the next videos?
Does it possibly once you learn that your overconfidence
was not warranted in one video, do you believe
that it's a guard against overconfidence
when you watch the next video?
I do think it's interesting to consider the possibility
that people who jump in and they're really, really confident
and it turns out they fail miserably.
That's a pretty big gap between who you thought you were
and who you find out you are.
And I suspect that for some participants,
that's motivating and they realize,
okay, I'm gonna have to invest a lot more practice into this.
But I wonder if for a lot of people,
that's just demotivating.
That the giant gap between perceptions and reality
leads them to think, well, I'm not meant for this task
after all.
I'm never going to pick up this ability.
And so they don't practice again.
And that's something I'd love to keep researching.
But I do think that's a very real possibility
from this effect.
How do you balance the idea that in some ways, you know, watching people who are
very good at doing something can be a source of inspiration for us. You know, you
watch LeBron James playing basketball and you're motivated to go out and try and
play basketball yourself because what he does is beautiful and it's beautiful to
watch. How do you balance that with the fact that when you actually get to the court having
watched LeBron James, you might now be more disinclined to pursue basketball as a sport
and in fact just retire to watching LeBron James on the couch.
That's right.
I mean, I think it's really important for learners and people in general as we're trying
to pick up new skills to have a longer term mindset in place.
So I think if you have that mindset kind of in place,
it's good to feel inspired by experts
that we watch around us.
Like I said earlier, it's helpful to kind of inspire action,
maybe overconfidence is a good thing in some sense
because it gets us off the couch
and thinking we can do these things ourselves.
I think that is good as long as we realize, right, first time failure doesn't mean
something longer term about me. It's the fact that merely watching wasn't enough.
So now that I'm actually on the playing field, now that I've actually made an attempt and failed,
hopefully if people have that long-term mindset in place, they realize that they should stay here
and kind of have more real-time experiences that they're going to be in it for the long haul.
We only see LeBron James making that awesome dunk in the championship.
LeBron for the time!
When we think of, maybe I could do that too.
Maybe I have that inside of me.
When in fact so many other things, years of situations
and experience went in to allowing Lebron James to show that final product.
This Lebron goes one on one, pull the pads, one bullet under, pull the pads.
Ed wanted to know if there was a way to keep people from falling prey to the illusion
of overconfidence.
So before someone tries to replicate a feat they see on YouTube, is there a way to remind
them that it's more complicated than they think?
To test this, Ed had three groups of volunteers watch a short video of someone juggling with
bowling pins and
then told everyone that they would be asked to juggle too. He gave each group different
kinds of information about juggling, like the weight and dimensions of a bowling pin.
But in one group, he had volunteers actually hold a bowling pin for one minute. They didn't
juggle it, they just held it.
Would giving people this tiny taste of juggling make them better at predicting how difficult
the task would be?
The answer was yes.
All someone needed was that one minute of direct access into the first step of juggling.
That seems to be enough to remind people, oh yeah, it's not just about holding my hand
here and it's not just about this angle, but when I do those things, there's weight involved.
There's these physiological reactions that I'm having as I'm performing this trick that
will likely make it a little bit harder than I feel it is just from watching.
So one big take home from that study is to try to combine instructional video learning with
some form of real-world practice.
So even if you're just kind of mimicking along at home holding objects, right, it may not
be the bowling pin in the video, but holding a weighted object as you're watching this
thing should presumably make you much better off at appreciating the skills complexity than
if you were just merely watching.
Why do you think it is that merely sort of getting people in some ways out of their heads
and into their bodies seems to provide some kind of buffer or protection against this
overconfidence?
Mental simulation just isn't built to incorporate kind of physiological reactions in eternal
states.
Those are states reserved for experience.
So, unfortunately, we spend so much time just in a state of mental simulation.
We're constantly just thinking to ourselves, what would happen if I do this, what would happen if I do that,
if I move to this city, if I try it out this skill, we're constantly just simulating things.
And in those simulations, we lack the bottom-up real-time experience of actually performing,
of actually experiencing
those events that we can only find when we jump in and try.
As Ed's research suggests, watching experts is powerful because we have the sense that
some of their expertise rubs off on us.
Watching them creates the illusion that we can be them.
To put this another way, our screens offer us a mental shortcut.
Without having to learn all the difficult things that experts know,
we get the feeling that we can play that beautiful piece of music or build that bondore ourselves.
Watching others can also provide us with a safety net. When life gets too hard,
our screens can serve up solace. Stay with us. After we posted a call for stories on living through others, a listener named John got
in touch to say he wanted to talk.
I am 26 years old, I'm living in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Currently just a utility technician.
John didn't say what he wanted to talk about.
He asked that we not share his last name.
John went to high school in a conservative part of Ohio. For most of those years,
he didn't tell anyone that he was gay. Coming out just wasn't a thing you did in high school.
He had dates, but not real ones. Mostly, he went out with friends who were girls as a way of blending in.
It would just be like meeting girls on dates, just going to the high school prom or home
coming.
That was more the main aim.
There wasn't any romantic relation other than you were just kind of just friends that
liked each other enough.
John came out to friends in college.
He wanted to date, but it was hard to figure out who was single and who was gay.
So he looked for signs.
I'll look at something they do.
Is their hair a certain way or their fingers a certain way or do they say certain things?
John thinks back to a guy in his engineering class sophomore year.
He had long hair and red infinity tattoos on his wrists. John thought, hmm,
he's cute. But it didn't go anywhere. He could never figure out if the guy was gay
and he didn't have the courage to start a conversation. He still finds it hard sorting
out who's gay, who's straight, who's single. That's why he turned to Grindr, the dating and hookup app. It removed all the
guesswork and at first Grindr was great.
His senior year, John found a familiar face on Grindr, someone he'd met his
freshman year. John suggested that we call him Ryan. It's a pseudonym. Ryan looked
like he spent a lot of time in the gym. He had a great
body, blonde hair, and kind blue eyes. For two weeks, they talked through the app about
their lives, about music, politics, sexuality. They clicked.
You know, we had a lot to talk about, you know, and maybe we'd talk more about it in person.
So John asked him,
Hey, um, could I get your number? Like your actual real number, not just like, you know, and maybe we'd talk more about it in person. So John asked him, Hey, um, could I get your number, like your actual real number, not just like, you know,
your Facebook or your Instagram account?
Ryan said yes.
They went to the movies.
It was the Martian with Matt Damon.
John was nervous, but he took Ryan's hand and kept it there the rest of the movie. At the end,
during the credits, Ryan leaned in and gave John a long, confident kiss. They kept kissing
as the credits rolled and the music played. The song was love train.
John hoped this was the start of something real.
Then Halloween came.
It's the weekend.
And John finds out that Ryan has made some last-minute plans with a friend to go to Kent, Halloween.
This is the annual party scene downtown
around Kent State University.
John asks, hey, maybe could I come, you know,
and he was like, um, sure, you can come.
So he makes a costume really fast.
I guess I was a mix between kiss and Adam Lambert.
Adam Lambert, that pop star who kind of looks like George
Michael, but with more makeup.
And so what I did was I got like a wig with a faux hawk on it and then I put on what white
makeup and lipstick.
So I guess I looked like a Goth Adam Lambert.
That's the best way I can explain this.
And he goes out to the bars by himself to wait for Ryan.
He starts to drink and he starts to text.
When you guys showing up to Kent Halloween, when you guys showing up to Kent Halloween,
Ryan texts back.
We'll be there in an hour.
An hour goes by.
No Ryan.
John texts again.
Ryan texts back.
We'll be there in another 15 minutes.
No Ryan.
So he asks again.
When you guys showing up at Kent Halloween, Ryan says, we're almost on our way or something
that it goes on and on like this.
And as John waits and drinks, the night just gets later and later and later.
It starts out at 10 o'clock.
It's 10, 30, 11, 30, 12, 30, 130,
and I'm just, you know, waiting around at a bar.
Ryan and his friends never come.
And it turns out that they went somewhere else
in town to go hang out and like I wasn't really
invited to go around and that
was like where things just fizzled out. I mean you must be really upset and
heartbroken when this happened. Oh, me I think I was. I think I I think this is my
senior year and I this is like the I goes about to graduate and you know I had
so much like work I had to do and like I really was, I was depressed after this. I was totally devastated.
Then it got worse. Ryan broke things off with John through a text.
It wasn't even a text with actual words that he had written himself.
He sent me like some sort of like, it was a gif.
A gif, one of those tiny trivial video clips that runs in a loop.
And it was basically said, I don't like you. And that was it.
Oh, it's really painful, isn't it?
It is very painful. And I think that's kind of set me down like, you know, other relationships.
It's just kind of... It still stings a lot.
And that's why I kind of really don't want. I just don't want to get hurt like that again.
After Ryan, John still held out hope for Finding Love.
He poured his feelings out in songs that he had recorded,
including this one that he wrote and posted on Facebook, not long after Halloween.
He also went back on Grindr and met other guys. But when he got sick of all the one night stands,
he started to have this
dim sobering thought.
You're probably not going to find anybody that you like in particular. Maybe there perhaps
is nobody out there that's going to really kind of click with me and I kind of, I'm
satisfied with that.
Here's why John is satisfied for now.
Because about four times a week,
he says he pulls out his phone
and escapes into another world.
Where all the texts are answered,
the love is required,
and everyone has great abs.
Where it's clear who's gay and who's not.
Where people have incredible sex.
I'm talking, of course, about porn.
Yeah, really?
Maybe.
It's right there and you have like,
your tips to your fingers is like, you know, all video.
I don't understand, I mean, like, you do griffin'
on the human record, it feels like.
But what about college?
I don't care, as long as I have you.
But what about college? I don't care, as long as I have you.
John says that for a lot of reasons, porn is easier than dating.
For one thing, it's cheaper, it's usually free.
And it feels effortless.
With a boyfriend, he'd have to figure out,
where is this going?
How long will this last?
Does he really like me?
And then the boyfriend will start making requests like,
Oh, can you also be my bank account and also help me out with chores around the house?
All this stuff.
It's stress and obligations he doesn't want, and he's got more urgent things to do.
Like I have to, you know, build up my career right now and also pay off my loans and try
to figure out, do I want to buy a house or not and
There's something else
Unlike in a bar or on grinder the people on the screen
Can't see you they don't know who you are which John feels is a good thing. I am mixed so
A lot of people of color when you're on a dating app it is
Harder to find people just because they can see who you are
They know what you look like. You're not sure if like they don't like you because they don't like you as a person
Or they don't like you because they just don't find you attractive because of your race
But then like versus porn if you if you discriminate on porn, it's not as big of an issue.
With porn, nobody's dumped through a gif
or left alone at a bar looking like Goth Adam Lambert.
Nobody's heart gets broken.
There's no kind of messiness when it comes to feelings
and relationships.
No feelings hurt.
I mean, there probably are feelings hurt
with pornography, but...
John's two ones real intimacy.
But as he says, he's put that on a shelf.
You know, we always have like dreams of becoming like rock stars
and so we buy a guitar and then we play it for a while.
And then after things just not working out,
we just put that in the case for a while and then after things just not working out we just put that in the
case for a little bit and hopefully maybe when we get more time we can go take that thing
out and start playing it again. That's kind of how I feel about relationships. It's
like I haven't really given up completely. I have so many problems but a relationship
doesn't have to be one of them right now. When it comes to relationships, John has worked hard to be where he is today,
open about his sexuality, willing to start a conversation,
ready to take someone's hand in a movie theater.
But for now, watching other people be intimate will have to do.
Sometimes though, he does wonder about the bargain he's made, trading real people
for virtual ones. I feel I've lost something but I just can't name what I've lost when I do watch
for. There's something it feels like you've lost when you've kind of committed to using it as a
substitute, then actually, you know, being in a relationship. I think it's a lot of it is that the empathy of it,
there's no empathy in that transaction
when you're on a pay for site or anything that's not real. All of us are recruits in an extraordinary uncontrolled experiment. No one has asked you if you want to be part of this experiment, and it's hard to extricate
yourself.
As entertainment and fantasy and the feats of experts flow into our brains through our
screens and headphones, it's easier and easier to live through other people.
There is no simple answer to whether vicarious living is good or bad.
Watching experts can inspire.
It can also demotivate.
Maybe the real question is not whether vicarious living is good or bad for you.
It's whether you are actively choosing it.
Being deliberate about when you turn a screen into a replacement for your life means that
when the time is right, you also get to turn off that screen.
This week's episode was produced by Laura Correll and edited by Tara Boyle and Jenny Schmidt. Our team includes Raina Cohen, Path Shah, Thomas Liu, Kat Shuknecht and Lushik Waba.
Our Ronsang hero this week is Veronica Zaragovia who recorded our interview with Natalie, our
listener from Florida.
It was a hot day and Natalie spoke to us from her car.
We asked them to turn off the air conditioning
so that the hiss wouldn't come through the recording.
We would chat for a few minutes,
and then they'd pause to turn on the air conditioning
and cool things down.
Thank you Veronica for sweating the small stuff
and helping our shows sound great.
If you liked this episode,
please consider sharing it with a friend
and help them to subscribe
to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedantum and this is NPR.