Hidden Brain - Happiness 2.0: Cultivating Your Purpose
Episode Date: February 21, 2023Having a sense of purpose can be a buffer against the challenges we all face at various stages of life. Purpose can also boost our health and longevity. In this favorite episode from 2021, Cornell Uni...versity psychologist Anthony Burrow explains why purpose isn’t something to be found — it’s something we can develop from within.Did you catch the kick-off episode to our Happiness 2.0 series? We talk with psychologist Iris Mauss about how to stop chasing happiness and build a lasting sense of contentment. And if you're enjoying this series, please consider supporting our work. Thanks!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
In all our lives, there are moments when the ground starts to shake beneath us,
when our world becomes destabilized and everything changes.
Sometimes, this untethered feeling comes after we lose a job or end a relationship.
Sometimes, it comes on us more gradually, with a slow realization that the life we've built
isn't fulfilling us in the way we thought it would.
These moments can feel disorienting, upsetting, but they can also allow us to see things in new ways.
Today, we continue our Happiness 2.0 series with a look at something simple but essential
that we all need in our lives.
Purpose is an ancient concept.
We, as a species, have been grappling with this concept forever.
How cultivating a sense of purpose can help us weather life's biggest storms this week
on Hidden Brain.
Cornell University Psychologist Anthony Barrow has spent much of his career studying what
it means to have a sense of purpose.
He has examined how we can cultivate purpose and how having a sense of purpose can transform
our lives.
Tony Barrow, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me.
Tony, I want to play your short clip from the 1967 movie The Graduate.
In this scene, a young Dustin Hoffman plays Benjamin Braddock.
He's a fresh out of college, lounging in his parents' pool when his dad confronts him.
Ben, what are you doing?
Well, I would say that I'm just drifting here in the pool.
Why?
Well, it's very comfortable just to drift here.
Have you thought about graduate school?
No.
Would you mind telling me then what those four years of college
were for, what was the point of all that hard work?
You got me.
Now listen, Ben.
Tony, do you ever come by people who sound like Ben, people
who are just drifting through life?
Frequently, I do.
Certainly, at some point in our lives,
we all feel that way that what we're ultimately
doing is sort of drifting through life, although not everybody's in a pool when doing so.
I'm thinking that some of these moments must come especially during transitions in life.
When young people are leaving college and going into the workplace or people are in the
middle part of their careers, they're deciding whether they want a second career or whether they want a retire
or they're moving into retirement.
I'm assuming that these moments might be more likely than others to bring out the sense
of self-doubt.
Yeah, that's an interesting observation in that maybe feelings of languishing are actually
not as random as they may seem, particularly
the examples you've given at transition points of having just graduated or having just
retired, a lot of the identity contingencies, ways that the ways in which we think ourselves
are interwoven into the everyday life experiences.
And so the school relationships I have or the work relationships I have, when those things
end or come to an end, it might be that I start to wonder, well, who am I?
What am I going to do today?
And languishing isn't just a description of sort of wallowing in a pool, a float in a
pool.
It is an attempt to describe a whole set of effective, emotional, behavioral circumstances of simply not
feeling engaged with one's life. There's sort of a disconnection. And so you're sort of in this
space, as I've experienced it, where you can't fully make sense of up or down heads or tails,
because you're languishing, you can't keep score of how to
move forward and get more of what you want, less of what you don't like. You're sort of in the wind,
I think is a good way of describing it. And emotionally, I mean, self-doubt is probably at one
end of the spectrum, and at the other end of the spectrum, you know, it can probably go as far as
despair of really feeling like you don't know where you're headed and you don't know how to figure out how to get there.
I agree.
A truly unsettling situation would be to really not know what's next.
You can imagine how unsettling that would be for people and confusing, especially when
they're in context that are sort of demanding of them answers to the questions, what are
you going to do next?
And to not have an answer to that can be really off-putting and unsettling.
You once ran an experiment where you asked people to report in the morning how
purposeful they felt and then report in the evening how purposeful the day had been.
What did you find?
The people were largely inaccurate.
They tended to overestimate how purposeful they would feel that day.
So waking up in the morning feeling like today is going to be a very purposeful day.
But when you actually follow up with people at the end of the day,
they actually weren't as purposeful as they thought they were going to be.
Which is not wholly unsurprising. Life happens, right? And so over the course of the day, you get busy with the
tasks of everyday life. You go to work, you have conversations, and oh, by the end of the day,
I didn't get to the things I really set out to do. But what it reveals is that it may actually be
important to consider the subjective appraisal that we may feel purposeful
differentially across the day and we may wake up with a lot of energy to go out
and conquer the day. But over the course of the day, we may not get quite as near
that ultimate potential as we thought. Life can get in the way of feeling as
purposeful as we intended to.
You mentioned the idea of subjective experience a second ago, and I want to stay with that
idea for a moment.
Many people confuse a life that has meaning with one that has purpose.
You say that meaning involves looking backwards and purpose involves looking forward.
Can you explain the distinction between those two things?
Sure.
I certainly think these terms, meaning and purpose, can become sort of conceptually tethered
in our minds.
Meaning is sort of like making sense of the world as it's happened or is happening, whereas purpose may not be
as much about comprehending what's happened as it is about aspiring or attending to accomplish
something that's ahead of you.
Hmm.
I feel like we live in a culture that talks a lot about goals, you know, getting into
college, graduating from college, getting married, getting promoted.
Talk a moment about the difference between having goals and having purpose.
Goals might be thought of as intentions
that can be accomplished,
whereas we tend to think about purpose
as an intentionality or life aim,
meaning it is always in front of you.
So, for example, a goal of graduating,
I can accomplish that goal. I can set a goal of you. So, for example, a goal of graduating, I can accomplish that goal. I can
set a goal of getting a job, but a purpose might be something like being a caring father.
I can perhaps evidence it on a given day when I'm at my best, but it's hard to imagine accomplishing
that, being fully done with the task of that. And so a purpose might be an organizer of our goals, such that when I accomplish goals,
it's my purpose that tells me, what are the goals that I should be pursuing next?
You know, I'm thinking about the story of Andrea Agassi, the tennis player, you know,
in his autobiography, he writes at one point that even though he was a world champion,
he was desperately unhappy, you know, in a 2017 article in the Guardian,
he says, despite being good at it,
I had a deep resentment and even hatred of tennis.
I felt nothing, every day is groundhog day
and what's the point.
And to me, that's so poignant
that someone who is literally at the top of their game
can feel like they are drifting
just as much as Benjamin Braddock in that swimming pool. someone who is literally at the top of that game can feel like they are drifting just
as much as Benjamin Braddock in that swimming pool.
Yes, that's a fascinating insight, right?
Because it's a very profound goal to strive to be number one and to be successful and have
as much talent as it would take to be number one in the world and in anything that you're
doing.
And perhaps as you're en route to number one, there's always this intentionality. There's always a higher seed that you can move forward to.
But what happens when you've accomplished it?
The game changes.
Now it's the story of holding on to that, of maintenance.
And so I think that's a wonderful illustration of what can happen when we conflate a goal
with a purpose.
If a goal can be accomplished, it does raise questions about what becomes of you
once you've accomplished it.
PURPOSE is not synonymous with what the world sees
in front of you.
It is entirely internally driven.
The answer to the question, what is your purpose
is not something you can crowdsource.
It's not something that you can turn to others and say,
hey, tell me from your profile view,
which direction does it look like I'm heading in?
It's an internal quest and not until you realize that,
you begin to ask yourself the question,
who are you, what direction are you heading in,
what is your purpose, would it really show up
and become salient or actionable to you.
You know, I feel like poets and philosophers have talked about this idea for a long time.
And I love what you just said that in many ways,
purpose is not about what it looks like on the outside from your profile picture on Instagram.
It really is what's happening on the inside.
That's right.
And I think that actually is poignant
because there are many examples of people
who from the outside look one way,
look completely self-directed and clear what they're doing.
But when you ask them what direction they're heading in,
they may report symptoms of languishing.
heading and they may report symptoms of languishing. A lack of purpose can affect us at many different stages of our lives.
Young people, like the fictional Benjamin Brattick, might experience it as confusion and
uncertainty.
Working age adults might experience it as on-wee, unending drudgery and tedious routines.
Among older Americans, a lack of purpose may be linked to isolation and loneliness.
Purpose in other words, is essential to our well-being.
It buffers us against the challenges we will all confront at various stages of our lives.
It provides a measure of stability in uncertain times.
The good news is that purpose is also something we can cultivate.
That's when we come back.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
If you had to choose between a million dollars and having a sense of purpose, you might
choose the money. At Cornell University, psychologist Anthony Barrow might argue you are making a mistake.
Tony, I want to take nothing away from the benefits of having a great job or having money
or a roof over your head.
Those things are really important, especially if you don't have them.
But can you talk a moment about what purpose can give us that money and material comforts
cannot?
First and foremost, a sense of purpose could give you a basis on which to decide,
given the finite resources we have of money, of time, of energy,
how should we best allocate them to allow us to move forward?
And so money helps us purchase life's experiences.
Which experiences should we purchase?
It's fundamentally a different question
and having a sense of purpose could clarify that for us.
I want to play you a clip from the movie Lost in Translation.
A younger woman is asking an older man
about how to navigate some of life's challenges
and I want to play you a little exchange that they have.
Does it get easier?
No.
Yes.
It gets easier.
No, yeah.
Look at you.
Thanks.
The more you know who you are and what you want, the less the other things
upset you. The more you know who you are and what you want, the less you're going to
let things upset you. Can you talk about the role of purpose as a mood-regulator Tony? There seems to be accumulating evidence that one of the benefits of feeling a sense of
purpose is that it can help us remain even keel in moments of stress or challenge and
sometimes even uplifting experiences.
We've done studies where we ask people to report challenges
or difficult experiences in the unfolding context
of their everyday lives.
And as you might expect, on days in which people tend
to report stressors, they also tend
to report increases in distress.
They tend to feel worse on days
when they're reporting more stressors. However, purposeful individuals or those that tend to score higher
than their peers on measures of purpose in life, their stressful days kind of
look like non-stressful days for the rest of us. In other words, it's almost as if
it's helping them navigate or smooth the course for them. Now, I should say, it's almost as if it's helping them navigate or smooth the course for them.
Now I should say, it is not the case that purposeful people experience any less stress
or challenge in their lives.
In fact, in our studies, sometimes purposeful people report more day-to-day stressors
than their peers who report lower levels of purpose in life.
But on days in which people tend to report stressors, having a sense of purpose seems to buffer or mitigate the ill-intended consequences of stressors.
So it's almost as if having purpose allows you to keep your eyes on the horizon, if you will,
so that the day-to-day challenges that are both, you know,
the good and bad tend to knock you off course a little less, because in some ways your
eyes are focused on the future.
That's correct.
And what's remarkable about this growing set of studies is it seems to be evident both
in the context of stressors and in the context of positive events or uplifts. So on days when good things happen, as you'd expect, people tend to
report increases in things like positive affect, life satisfaction or self-esteem.
But individuals who score high and measures of purpose in life, on those days when
good things happen, they tend to look emotionally even keel. It's almost as if
that good thing didn't happen.
And I'll just say, although that may be jarring at first,
it's like purpose almost blocks you
from reaping the benefits of a good thing.
Over time, you would not want your emotional tone
to be bouncing around based upon the experiences
that are happening to you.
Over the course of one's lifespan,
it might be beneficial to remain even keel
or as close as possible to life's experiences
and feel good irrespective of what's happening around you.
You once asked volunteers in an experiment
to climb a steep hill,
and at the bottom of the hill,
some were asked to write about a movie,
and others were asked to write about something
that gave them a sense of purpose.
Can you tell us what you found once the volunteer has got to the top of the hill?
In this particular experiment, after writing about either the movie that they had seen or their sense of purpose,
individuals traversed a steep incline. And as they arrived at the top, we asked them to report how steep was this hill
and how much effort did it take them to get to the top. Now, for those individuals who had
written about the most recent movie they had seen, there was a pretty clear positive correlation
or a strong relationship between how steep they thought the hill was and how much effort they thought
it took to get to the top.
Whereas individuals who had written about purpose, briefly before traversing this incline,
when they got to the top, they showed less of a relationship between the estimated incline
of the hill and how much effort they said it took to get to the top.
One thing I should say, because I think it's relevant to the conversation, is we also
had another condition in this study in which we asked people to write about their goals,
that they intended to accomplish once they got to the top of the hill, to study with a
friend, to meet somebody for lunch, to go home, whatever they might say that they were
going to do once they got to the top of the hill. And those individuals who wrote about a goal,
they actually did not show the same relationship between estimated incline and reported effort
as the purpose-writing condition.
And I think the insight to be drawn here is,
goals can become obstacles to the thing you most want to do.
If you get me to think about my goal,
well then this hill is the effort.
This is the obstacle between me and where I'm going to be
in a few minutes when I get to the top,
whereas a sense of purpose seem to decouple those things
in a way,
because I'm not thinking about what I'm going to do immediately
at the top.
I'm thinking about my general direction in life.
I also understand there's been research that suggests
that people who have a sense of
purpose appear more attractive to others. Is that possibly true? There does seem to be some suggestive
evidence that individuals who report a stronger sense of purpose in life have a kind of interpersonal
appeal. This is the work of Tyler Stillman and his colleagues. They have shown that our sort of judgments
of attractiveness of people seem to have this sort
of latent relationship with how strongly
of a sense of purpose an individual might feel.
And it's not really, I don't think, a story
of just physical attractiveness,
but a story of just likeability
and wanting to be a round person
or wanting to be a round person or wanting
to be friends with them.
Their data suggests that people who score highly on measures of purpose tend to enjoy this
benefit of the world around them.
It's almost as if we can see that this person is heading somewhere.
There's something about them and they have a directionality to them.
You know, as I was reading Tyler Stilman's study,
I remember the poem that I had read some years ago,
this is by WHO Auden, where he talks about the very same idea.
He says, you need not see what someone is doing
to know if it is his vocation.
You have only to watch his eyes, a cook mixing a sauce,
a surgeon making a primary incision,
a clerk completing a bill of lading,
where the same wrapped expression,
forgetting themselves in a function. How beautiful it is that I on the object look.
I'm wondering Tony, when you listen to that poem, is this speaking to what you
said a second ago that in some ways there's something, it's not sort of
attractive in sort of a physical attractiveness sense, but it's something that
draws us to people who seem to be truly engaged in what they're doing.
First, I think the poem is beautiful, and interestingly, there is suggestive evidence that people who score highly on measures of felt purpose
tend to have broader and deeper social networks. So it's as if there may be something they're up to that requires
them to be in connection with broader circles of community. But it could also just as easily be
the case that when you're pursuing something that is meaningful to you, there's an attractiveness
to that. That people find you because you're headed in a direction and maybe goes back to this languishing point
with a person is not
directed, if a person does not feel a sense of purpose and start to pursue a particular aim,
it may be more difficult for the world around you to know just how to connect to you
But it seems like if you're if you're directed you're heading in a direction. There you know, perhaps there's an energy around that that is attractive and imperceptible
by others.
Tony and his colleagues measure whether people have a sense of purpose by asking some remarkably
simple questions.
You can ask yourself these questions.
In fact, you can ask yourself these questions right now.
Do you feel your life has a clear direction?
Do you feel your daily activities are engaging?
Important?
This leads us to a crucial idea.
A sense of purpose is not an objective truth,
but a subjective experience.
My colleagues and I tend to think about purpose as a sense, is not an objective truth, but a subjective experience.
My colleagues and I tend to think about purpose as a sense,
a perceptible sense that life has a sense of direction.
So it's simply feeling like your life has purpose,
which seems to be a strong predictor of health and well-being.
So let's talk about the idea of health and well-being for a moment.
What is the research say about the connections between having a sense of purpose and health
outcomes?
One of the most compelling findings I could think to share is that having a sense of purpose
of life predicts longevity.
But beyond longevity, there is a whole constellation of studies to suggest.
Purpose is associated with a whole host of physical and physiological health outcomes.
For example, purposeful individuals report lower incidence of heart attack or stroke.
Purposeful individuals recover faster from certain kinds of surgery.
Purposeful people report feeling less psychosomatic symptoms,
so headaches and stomach aches in the context
of their everyday lives.
So the health profile of purpose seems
to be especially positive.
I understand there are also cognitive benefits
that come with a sense of purpose.
Sure.
So there's also suggestive evidence
that individuals with a sense of purpose? Sure. So there's also suggestive evidence that individuals with a sense of purpose
show slower rates of cognitive decline over the course
of aging and lower risk of developing
Alzheimer's disease as well.
So there's indeed suggestive evidence
that purpose is associated with, again,
a host of cognitive benefits.
We spoke at the beginning of the segment
about a thought experiment where I was giving
you the choice between having a million dollars and having a sense of purpose.
In reality though, you and others have found that having a sense of purpose is not often
at odds with financial success.
And in some ways the two things might be correlated.
Can you talk about that work?
Sure.
In the context of our lab, we've noted having a sense of purpose in life is associated
with greater self-reported income and greater net worth. And I want to speak to this in
relationship to another study because I think there's an important relationship here, is
having a sense of purpose is also associated with lower levels of impulsivity. So in a study where individuals were given a chance to take right now a small monetary
reward, they tended to opt for a larger downstream reward.
And the notion that having a sense of purpose in life is implicated in lower levels of impulsivity, I think illuminates the long game
that purposeful individuals might be playing. They're thinking about not the here and now, but
about saving, about generating more for later. I'm wondering if you can talk a moment about purpose
not at an individual level.
And this might be difficult to do because it's harder to run experiments at a societal
level.
But it seems to me that there are times in the lives of different societies when societies
feel like they have purpose and when societies feel like they are adrift.
Can you talk about this idea of purpose as a driver of change, especially at the
large level, to societal level? You know, I have to confess, we tend to measure purpose as this
individual asset, this individual resource that a person could cultivate. But what does that
look like in a collective sense? I can say, I notice even in political rhetoric when candidates call on our
collective sense of purpose. It is a reminder that even as an individual we
belong to something larger than ourselves. I have me to go out to the mountain. I've looked over and I've seen the promised land.
I may not get that with you, but I want you to know the night that we as a people will get to the promised land.
In his articulation of a dream, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. invited us to imagine a world that was not yet present.
And I think that's a profound, yet again, a profound insight into a distinction between
a goal that we can accomplish and a purpose that long after us, we can still be
intending to move towards. The aspirational tone is so vivid, even in his reminder that he
may not arrive there with us, but it was still worth the effort. It was still worth the pursuit
and reminding us that we are empowered to carry this forward.
I want to play you a clip from the late Viktor Frankl, Holocaust survivor and author of the best-selling book, Man's Search for Meaning.
Here he is in an interview.
The less than one could learn in Auschwitz and in other concentration camps in the final analysis wars.
Those who were oriented toward a meaning to be fulfilled by them in the future were
most likely to survive. And this has been confirmed afterwards by American Navy and Army Psychiatrists in Japanese
Prison of War camps.
The orientation taught a future, taught a task, a personal task, waiting for them to be fulfilled in their future, or another person whom they were loving,
to be met again. This was what was decisively upheld in these people. So, the orientation
beyond oneself, you see, the question was not just survivors, but there had to be a why of survivor.
Tony, talk about this a moment because there's such an important and powerful idea that even
in the horrors of the concentration camp, the question was not just survival, as Victor
Frankel says, but there had to be a why in order to have survival.
It is the most eloquent putting of the question,
do you have a reason for living?
I guess the better way of saying this is,
there can be a physical death,
and Victor Franco was very keenly aware of that.
But before that, there can be a psychological death
where a person sees nothing else out ahead of themselves.
And I think what he's speaking to is the profound necessity of feeling like there is something out in front of you.
There is something that you have yet to accomplish that you can move towards
as a way of surviving, of psychologically surviving and persisting.
and persisting.
Purpose is an ancient concept. We, as a species, have been grappling with this concept forever.
But I think Victor Franco's contribution is that we can take seriously the psychological enterprise of purpose as a deep and profound resource that is worth taking our time to cultivate
the sense so that we see ourselves persisting in time and ultimately contributing
to the world that is before us.
When we come back, it's one thing to say that purpose is really important.
But if you don't have it, how do you find it? Is purpose something to be discovered or can it be developed, honed and cultivated?
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. Having a sense of purpose is like a secret superpower.
Psychologist Anthony Barrow argues it can improve your health,
your cognitive abilities, your longevity.
It can even make you appear more attractive.
We've talked about the tennis player, Andrea Agassi,
and how, even though he was very successful,
he came to hate tennis.
But that's not the end of Agassi's story.
When he realized
his life felt empty, Andrea Agassi decided to approach tennis differently. He realized
people were coming to watch and play that he was giving others joy. He started to see
himself as a role model. Here he is describing that journey of taking ownership over his
choices. Ownership meant feeling grateful for being and having the chance to start over.
Climbing out of that hole that I dug for myself, that's when I started choosing to believe
that each of us have a plan for our life, a purpose to fulfill,
body of work to create, a reason to be.
Tony, you seem to have had the remarkable good fortune
of having a sense of direction through much of your life.
I want to talk about some things you experienced growing up
that may have helped you on this journey.
You were adopted as a child, your black, your parents are white.
You could very easily have come to see yourself as a fish out of water.
But early on, you encountered a program called 4H.
Tell me where you grew up and for the many hidden brain listeners who are not in the United States.
What is the 4H program and how did it touch your life? 4-H is a national youth development program that has been in existence for over 115 years.
And when I was a child, I participated in a 4-H program. I was living in Iowa,
Northeast Iowa in Bremer County. So shout out to the Bremer County 4-H program that I was a part of.
My 4-H program was heavily centered on agricultural development.
And it gave the young people that were involved in this program a chance to learn agricultural skills,
how to grow crops, how to take care of animals, that kind of thing.
I never thought about being in 4H as participating in really a program.
It was just kind of the cool thing to do.
I didn't remember
joining anything or signing up. It was just all of my friends and the parents of my friends were
involved with 4H. It was a way in which we were socialized into the work that we did from day to day.
Help me understand how a program that taught you how to farm, how to raise animals, how does that
help you become a psychologist
at Cornell University? I don't see the path. That's a wonderful question. Within the context of 4H,
we had just a tremendous number of opportunities to practice different things. And one of the things
we were invited to practice was public speaking. We had to present lessons we were learning
to other four-age members in different venues.
Sometimes it was our closest friends and families,
other times it was strangers at county fairs or state fairs.
But over the years, I had a chance to present
on how to notch pigs years and the different ways
of doing that.
I had a chance to present on how to tie different kinds
of knots. In one particular time, I had a chance to present on how to tie different kinds of knots.
In one particular time, I had a chance to present on how to grow certain crops in different
soil types.
And over the years of public speaking and presenting, I think I actually got good at it.
I remember in one particular moment of presenting on how to grow certain crops and the judges paying
attention to my presentation, taking notes of my style and the delivery and the different
things I was saying about the soil.
But I also remember the audience.
There were people who were not actually judging me, but there to learn about different crop
types and soil types. And that, to be, you know, eight or nine years old,
presenting to an audience of adults,
teaching adults about the thing that I knew about
was a profound experience.
And I had a little jar where I was showing
different layers of the soil.
And I remember going away and coming back
and seeing the judges had placed a red ribbon
around my presentation, which essentially translated
to second place.
And I've always been pretty salty about that day,
that I got a second place on a presentation.
But it stuck with me, that I realized I had something
to say, and the way I went about saying it mattered,
because people might understand the world they're living
in differently as a function of what I'm saying.
I could get better.
There was room for improvement, but that was a profound experience for me as a young person.
So one of the things that jumped out of me at what you just said was that you discovered
that you had something to say.
And part of who was actually discovering a little bit of who you were, and what kind of a person you were.
Can you talk about this connection between programs that in some ways help people discover
who they are, discover a sense of identity, and the really vital connection between a sense
of identity and having a sense of purpose?
Right.
It turns out, after all, that 4H is, in fact, a youth development program, a well-intended program
of scaffolded experiences. And what's really neat about this is that there's a growing course
of studies to suggest certain features of youth programs have the ability to invite young people
to cultivate a sense of who they are and where they're going.
And I would nominate for each as one
that does this quite well.
Specifically, opportunities that told me,
I can learn something about the world
that the world doesn't yet know, right?
Or some, I can learn something about the world
that some people in the world don't yet know.
And I can share that information with them.
And that was a really important experience
for me as a young person. And I think from there, questions of who we are, or questions of identity,
are really important, especially informative years, of figuring out, who am I? What role can I play?
And once we've grappled with questions of who we are, we might begin to wonder,
where, who am I gonna be?
What direction am I heading in?
And I think there we see that the link between identity
and purpose is really important,
because if we were to ask somebody,
well, what is your purpose?
Well, the you or the you're in that sentence
requires that they know who they are.
And so I think we think we might start to think of identity as sort of a foundational
layer of self-understanding that when you are equipped with a sense of identity, you might stand a chance at figuring out and cultivating your sense of purpose.
So you sometimes, chief, at the suggestion that people should find their purpose or discover
their purpose, you would prefer that people think about purpose as something to be cultivated.
I can't help but, of course, see the farming metaphor there of sort of cultivation at work.
But can you talk about that idea that purpose might not be something that's lying in the ground
for us to pick up, but something that really might require our engagement with the soil, if you will, to cultivate it. Yeah, that's that's that's
right. So I suspect you can leave 4-H but 4-H will never really leave you because I do think of
in those terms is, you know, there's a kind of broad understanding and even prescription that
you can find purpose. And in fact, you should go out into that you can find purpose.
And in fact, you should go out into the world and find purpose.
I just don't see the evidence behind the idea that purpose can be found.
I do understand why we might arrive at an understanding that I can go out into
the world and find this thing.
If I just had the right flashlight, if you tell me where to look,
but I don't think that's actually how it works.
Purpose acquisition seems to arrive off of at least one of three pathways. Purpose might
be born out of a gradual, sustained attempt to engage with some topic or opportunity.
Kind of like a hobby. Whenever I have downtime, I find myself pursuing something over and over,
and over time,
I start to think, hey, is this a pathway that I'm on? Is this my purpose? Whenever I have time,
I keep going back to the same thing. I sort of arrive at purpose by gradual exploration and cultivation.
Or we might arrive at through reactive pathways, something happened in life.
Someone in my family felt ill,
and it need not be negative,
but in instances like that,
purpose may sort of call me into it.
You might think, this thing happened,
and now I know exactly the direction of my life.
What's interesting about those two pathways,
proactive and reactive, is those individuals
may feel equally purposeful, but one has clarity about where it came from, the reactive pathway.
They know exactly where that was from, whereas the proactive pathway might fail to recognize
when that really began.
It was like a snowball.
I kept pushing over time.
A third pathway might be the social learning pathway. There are some individuals who feel a profound sense
of purpose in life, but they nominate learning
about that purpose from other people.
So they watched somebody in their environment,
cultivate their sense of purpose.
Now, it may not be the case that you feel the
same sense that they feel, but it might suggest that you've seen what it looks like up close.
You saw what it looks like to wake up in the morning and to really go after it.
So to recap, Tony and other researchers have identified three different pathways to purpose.
In the first, purpose comes to us gradually as we pursue a passion or a hobby.
It can become bigger and gain momentum, like a snowball rolling down a hill.
Another pathway comes in response to a major life event.
A family member gets sick and needs our help.
We lose a job and have to reinvent ourselves. The third pathway is to observe someone else
who has purpose and to draw inspiration from their example. In his own life, Tony has
cultivated purpose by linking his childhood experiences with what he does as an adult. I have this wonderful opportunity to serve as a professor.
I get to teach people about psychology and human development.
And every spring I teach a large adolescence class.
I walk in and there's 300 faces looking at me.
It's super intimidating.
And every day before I've lectured, for the past 10 years,
I have a moment in the hallway before I walk into my classroom. And I really do think about all
of the experiences I've had presenting information to people that harken back to my 4-8 days in
Bremer County, Iowa. And it wasn't my purpose when presenting about soil,
which I got that red ribbon, by the way,
because I called it dirt and not soil.
That's why lessons learned.
It wasn't my purpose to end up as a professor.
But I did have a sense of directionality,
and I did have a sense that the lessons I was learning
and the experiences I was having and collecting over time
would bowed well for me in the end.
And so far, that's been true.
You know, one of the things you said a second ago about these three pathways to purpose,
you're pursuing a hobby and eventually you realize this might be something you want to do,
or you're reacting to something that happens in your life, or you have a role model
who has a sense of purpose and in some ways you're, you know, almost through all
smoses, you're basically acquiring a feeling of what it's like
to be animated by a sense of purpose.
What strikes me about all those three pathways
is that they do not involve someone sitting down on a couch
and ruminating about what their purpose is.
It's not sort of a mental process
that basically asks the question over and over to yourself,
what should I be doing, what is my purpose?
It's actually much more active,
it's actually engaged with the world
I'm wondering if you can tell me about a project that you're involved in called grip tape that is also
Similarly engaged with you know not just thinking about the development of purpose
But how you actually go about it you work with you that ask them what they actually want to do and in some ways puts
Caffleding under them. Tell me about grip tape and its connections
with what you have learned about purpose.
Grip tape is a wonderful program for young people
to guide their own learning.
The grip tape experience begins by asking young people,
what is it that you want to learn?
This can range from things like building bicycles.
It can be, I wanna learn how to code.
I wanna start a business.
It doesn't matter, the content.
And for 10 weeks, they engage in a learning challenge in which they go out into the world
and gain the information that they need in the spirit of what they want to learn.
Now, a couple of features about this is when you are selected into the Gryptate program
is you're given a champion, an adult champion who's going to learn along with you.
And the beauty of the program is these champions cannot have an expertise in the thing that
the young person wants to learn.
We typically think of mentors and champions as people who do have an expertise, but that
severely restricts the number of people who can serve as a champion by not having an expertise.
Grip tape, what they've done, is invited young people to learn with a captive audience.
There's an adult who checks in with them routinely and asks, what do we learn this week?
What did you do?
And you're sharing that information out.
And a group of collaborators and I are partnering with the GRIPTAPE program to study this process. How does directing your own learning help young people cultivate a sense of purpose in life,
curiosity, contribution, and well-being?
The GRIPTAPE program challenges the idea that seeking purpose is only for the wealthy
and well-connected, for students at Ivy League schools.
It suggests that cultivating a sense of purpose
is even more important for people who lack opportunities.
Tony is a fan of the rapper Kendrick Lamar
and his song Good Kid.
It's about growing up in tough circumstances
and finding your options are limited.
I'm a huge Kendrick Lamar fan, shout out to Kendrick.
This song is brilliant.
It's an invitation to
consider what it's like to be a young person growing up in a space where the
options to cultivate your purpose are especially limited. a better person, I know you're hurt, isn't probably inferior, but what am I supposed to do when the bling and a red and blue flash from the top of your roof and your dog has to say
roof and red.
And what real choices does that allow this young person?
So when people like me are hanging around saying, hey, let's cultivate purpose, right?
Well, we have to be mindful that some individuals are living in spaces or find themselves in
spaces where the opportunities to really think through the menu of possible selves may be quite
constrained. I think it's just a keen reminder that we all are implicated in everybody else's environment.
We all play a role in other people's purpose development. moment.
Tony also cites the astronaut, May Jemisin. In a speech at the University of Virginia,
May Jemisin talked about why humans dream about the stars, even when their own lives are
besieged by everyday problems.
In this clip, she cited a question posed to a scientist who was helping to build a telescope
in South Africa.
That people asked him, why would South Africa do that when it has issues and problems in
poverty?
He said, because people have dreams.
And dreams don't all revolve around just food.
He said, even a person sleeping on a floor in a mud hut
without a blanket, dreams of things bigger than they are.
And that our dreams are our hopes, that's where we move.
So, Dr. Mae Jemisin, the first black woman in space,
is a very inspirational person.
And her aspiration, her purpose, is to travel
to the nearest star and to really consider what it would take to do that. To say, what
kinds of technologies should we get busy building, what kinds of activities, self-understandings
are needed for us to build the kinds of technologies, the kinds of societies,
the kinds of working group relationships that would allow us to successfully make this
journey.
We don't currently have the kinds of propulsion technology to get there, not in one piece
at least, but when you sit with her ideas, you realize that it's sort of a trick.
It's really getting us to think about ourselves and what we need to do to work through our current challenges.
But the genius of that articulated purpose is that it really invites us to think about all the things we need to do as individuals, as collective, as communities,
from the arts to the sciences to survive that trip.
And so it's a profound metaphor for purpose. from the arts to the sciences to survive that trip.
And so it's a profound metaphor for purpose.
It's sort of playing a trick on us to look inward.
By talking about the nearest star and the journey
that we should be preparing for,
it's what we would do in the here and now
that may be the most important part of that.
Anthony Barrow is a psychologist at Cornell University.
Along with Patrick Hale, he's the editor of the book,
the ecology of purposeful living across the lifespan.
Tony, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for having me.
Tony, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Thank you so much for having me.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Annie Murphy-Paul, Laura Quarelle,
Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our unsung hero this week is Joanna Weber. Joanna is a marketing executive and longtime friend
of the show. We recently had some questions about how to connect Hidden Brain to new audiences.
Joanna hopped on a call with us while she was traveling and had great insights and advice.
Thanks Joanna for your support and for your friendship.
In the next episode of our Happiness 2.0 series, we ask which is better?
Burst of euphoria or less intense but longer stretches of happiness?
You might think of it as like two flavors of ice cream.
You know, experiences are like gelato with this intense burst of happiness, but then it's gone.
And then on the flip side, you know, material things are more like a big thing of froyo,
where they're not like as amazing in any one moment, but like you can have it for a while.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon. for a while.