Hidden Brain - Happiness 2.0: The Only Way Out Is Through
Episode Date: February 14, 2023It's natural to want to run away from difficult emotions such as grief, anger and fear. But what happens when these feelings catch up with us? This week, in the second installment of our Happiness 2.0... series, psychologist Todd Kashdan looks at the relationship between distress and happiness, and how to keep difficult emotions from sabotaging our wellbeing. Did you catch the first episode in our series on happiness?  You can find last week's conversation on how to build a lasting sense of contentment here.  And if you enjoy the show and would like to help us make more episodes of Hidden Brain, please consider supporting our work. Thanks!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
How do you cope with unhappiness and distress?
It's a question humans have wrestled with for thousands of years.
It's a foundational issue for many of the world's religions.
It's also what we have kept you up at night this past week.
Lots of us have techniques to deal with pain.
We hang out with friends to make ourselves feel better.
We exercise or turn to music.
Some of us turn to drugs and alcohol.
In recent years, researchers have run experiments to see what works
and what doesn't work when it comes to dealing with distress.
Some conclusions of this body of science are counterintuitive
and some
dovetail with lessons learned hundreds of years ago.
Today in the next installment of our Happiness 2.0 series, we examine the difficult emotions
that often sabotage our well-being. How to deal with distress?
This week on Hidden Brain.
When Todd Caston was growing up on Long Island, his mom was the center of his emotional life.
She raised him and his twin brother by herself.
Todd's relationship with his mother has informed the next several decades of his life. He is now a psychologist at
George Mason University and he studies the science of well-being. Todd Cashden
welcome to Hidden Brain. So good to be here. Todd your dad left the family when
you were a toddler. What was your relationship like with your mom? Well the way people
refer to it was I was the mother's boy of my twin brother myself and
everywhere she went I was in her lap next to her holding her hand inseparable. I
understand that she was unwell through much of your childhood. What what
happened Todd? So this is from the perspective of a 13-year-old.
And when you're told that your mom has breast cancer
and you're told that there are these stages,
none of it makes sense to you.
And so for much of my childhood, as I remember it,
is she was losing her hair, she wore wigs,
and I knew something was wrong, but the idea
that there's the possibility that your mom might die is just not something you even consider.
When Todd was 13, his mother was hospitalized.
My grandmother took us to the hospital, my twin brother and myself.
And when we got there, it was so excited because it had been days or weeks since we had seen my mom
that we'd get to run into the room and go give her a hug. And when we got there, we were told that my mom didn't want to see us because
she knew she was dying and she didn't want to taint our memories of what she looked like and what it was like to be with her.
memories of what she looked like and what it was like to be with her. And if you can imagine through 13-year-old boys, we're going on our toes, waving our hands,
trying to get her attention at the little glass window in her hospital door, and we're jumping
up and down, and we could see her, and we could see that she was gaunt and pale, but she couldn't see us. And that experience
has lingered so deeply in my psyche, where I could see the person I love the most and the
person that gives me the most ability in my life. But that person has no ability to even
notice that you're there. And that's the lasting memory,
because that was the last moment that I sort of saw
but wasn't able to interact with my mom.
So you were in middle school when she died.
How did your school and your classmates
handle what had happened?
So this is something it's worth thinking about
in the aftermath of death is my twin brother
that I walked into school. People avoided eye contact with us. And if I saw one of my
close friends and I waved at them, they give that halfway where their arm doesn't even
go above their hip and then they looked away and kind of we were basically ghosted and
we walked through this hallway wondering
what to do with all these emotions and thoughts that are uncomfortable inside of us.
I have no judgment of anyone because I had no idea how to respond either. In some ways,
I have a little bit of beef with the school itself of making this announcement and
a little bit of beef with the school itself of making this announcement and are setting yourselves up for having this awkward, uncomfortable social interaction where nobody is skilled
and how to deal with grief, and we just walked right into that trap, my twin brother and I,
and we didn't know what to say or do either.
For the next several days, friends came over to Todd's house to offer their condolences.
Todd and his brother
would bring them to an upstairs bedroom. And who knows what you're supposed to do at
the age of 13. And my brother and I, not knowing what to do with these emotions, we just
did karaoke, playing loud music, we're doing impressions of teachers, and every emotion
existed except for grief in those absurd bedrooms.
I close myself off from everyone.
That moment of being able to see my mom in her last moments of suffering and not be seen
is left thread where my capacity to love things, activities, people was there, but nobody
was in a gain access to understanding me.
And so I lost myself in listening to heavy metal music and going into mosh pits and slamming
it to other boys and some women at concerts, and then it switched to being interested in
bodybuilding and weightlifting, and I became obsessively passionate about that.
And then I spent many a day, which my grandmother never knew,
where I would just sit in a softball field in a Friday Saturday night
with a 12-pack or 24-pack of beer with my friend Martin or my friend Mark,
or even by myself.
And it was just oscillating between trying to numb myself
and just have as much entertainment as humanly possible just keep that negative
stuff away.
Perhaps you know people like Todd.
Perhaps you know firsthand what it's like to look away from pain, to find distractions,
laughter, entertainment, anything really, so long as you don't have to acknowledge the elephant-sized hurt in the middle of your heart.
Notice also how the word conspires with us to look away from our distress.
Todd's mother kept him from seeing her as she was dying because she wanted to spare him from pain.
School friends were only too happy to talk about anything other than grief.
As Todd grew older, he found plenty of peers who were willing to drown sorrows in loud music and alcohol.
All of this makes intuitive sense, of course.
Pain is unpleasant.
Grief can feel unbearable. When we come back, more of Tad's journey to
understand the role of distress in our lives. You're listening to Hidden Brain,
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta. When Todd Caston was a sophomore in college, he fell madly in love. The woman he adored was way, way out of his leak. Then something
amazing happened. She agreed to go out with him. The woman had recently been engaged to be married, but her fiance had broken off the
relationship.
Todd was the rebound guy.
That was just fine with him.
He was ecstatic.
This is my first love, sophomore year in college.
I was in her apartment, and she was on the phone with her ex, and I could only hear her end of the conversation.
I'm sitting on the floor and I'm thinking this will be a five minute conversation.
And on this phone call, she's saying things such as, no, he's not that important to me.
Of course, it's not like you.
Of course, I'm not going to be engaged to him.
Like he's just, it's something to do in the
interim. And this goes on for, I'm going to say like 50
minutes, an hour and 20 minutes. And she hangs up that phone.
And I'm only hearing her side of the conversation. And when
she's finished, no apology, she just lunged towards me, kisses
me. And I pretend as if nothing happened.
And I had this thought in my head of, this woman is so above my league.
She's so physically attractive, she's so intelligent, she's so witty, I'm so lucky to have her
that I just took all of this embarrassment and regret and self-loathing and dismay from this moment.
And it was just like taking too fists at just shoving it down my throat and pretending.
It didn't even exist.
So we've seen two examples from your own life, Todd, where you were encouraged to look away from pain when you were a child, and you actively chose to look away from pain as a young adult.
Soon after college, you trained to become a clinical psychologist, and you started working
with one client who was a war veteran.
Tell me how you met this man, and what he said about his experiences in the Vietnam War.
Yeah, this is at the Charleston Veterans Administration Hospital and in introducing himself to a group
of about 20 other veterans.
He mentions that he's a Vietnam War veteran, so we're talking 20 years after the war.
And he told this story that when he came back and entered civilian life, his friends bought
him tickets to a next game of just so excited that he survived and just to have him back in their lives and
He's in the stands and if you've never been to a professional sporting event the
The amphitheater goes black and then if it's a home team you've got this loud
Speaker introducing the players. There's pyro techniques and there's fireworks and explosions, and the diamond vision
screen has all this huge sound effects and neon lights, and when this guy responds to
the loud sound the noises, he jumps out of his seat, climbs below the bleachers, and
is hiding where people drop their pretzels and spill their beer. And when the lights came back on, his friends found him there and they pointed at him and they left.
And as he's telling this story 20 years later, he is crying tears streaming down his face.
He looked at them, ran out of Madison Squaregarg, never spoke to those friends again,
and never gone to a public professional
sporting event ever again.
In some ways, the man was doing what Todd himself had done in his own life.
In response to an emotionally traumatic event, he had withdrawn into himself.
Clinicians were seeing similar patterns and patience across a wide range of emotional problems.
After something bad happens, any contact with a source of distress, even the memory of the distress,
can produce unpleasant physical and emotional reactions.
As a result, the person does everything in their power to keep the pain at bay. One of the things that cuts across is the unwillingness
to be in contact with ugly, undesirable thoughts, feelings, memories, even bodily sensations
like an increased heart rate. And this was a person experiencing physical tension in
their legs, experiencing their hands shaking in front of other people. I was trained to have a combination of two things.
One was called narrative exposure therapy, which is a disorder does not define who we are
and we can actually experience joy, meaning, and richness, and vitality even if we're suffering
from a disorder.
It's supposed to be the title or the subtitle of your story.
You know, here lies Robert a combat survivor with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Try to move it in the narrative of this doesn't define you. It's really chapter three,
paragraph three and four of you were in war and it was difficult to come home and there were
some traumas that you experienced and so it's not you
It's an event that happened so one part of the therapy is realizing there are other parts of the narrative that you're ignoring
Your strengths your goals the things that matter most to you what you're gonna commit your life to and the other part of therapy is what's called behavior activation
And that's instead of trying to change a person's
thoughts or feelings, you say, what if we try to increase the number of potentially pleasurable
activities and realize it just feels good. Just being around other people, especially when you're
sharing things that are important to you and sharing your feelings. and by doing it as you take action with your body,
the thoughts and the feelings will follow with it.
This form of therapy is designed to reframe the centrality of the distressing event
in your mind. Instead of being the main attraction, it's now in the background.
your mind. Instead of being the main attraction, it's now in the background. You try to focus on other activities, other goals. The distress isn't gone, but it's been moved from the front row of
the picture to the third row. Doing this requires a form of metacognition, becoming aware of your thoughts
and trying to make conscious decisions about which thoughts to prioritize.
It was hard for him at first, it took us several sessions to kind of for this to sink in,
but it was the idea that there's a part of us that goes through a trauma,
like losing your parent at the age of 13 or being in combat and seeing your close friend die
right next to you on the front lines,
that is unharmed because you could notice that memory of what they looked like
and what it was like to touch the blood on their body and what it was like to see,
you know, the little bristles of hair on your mother who's dying from cancer
because you could notice that memory, there's a part of you that's going to observe that.
And so that part of you that that observer's self, is unharmed.
So the idea of, imagine if you're flying the wall watching this from the outside, it
taps into that observer's self, and then you can look at things with a little bit more
just doisys.
Intuitively, this makes sense.
Instead of spending a lot of time trying to avoid emotional pain, focusing on pleasurable
activities can deprioritize the role of pain in your life.
Many people do this, of course, even without therapy or psychological training.
Todd himself, in response to his mother's death death had turned to weightlifting and music.
Todd and his colleagues ran studies with veteran suffering from PTSD and people with social anxiety
disorder to show that patients who spend less time trying to escape the distress in their head
and more time engaged with the world had better outcomes.
So there are things we can do in terms of defining what we are striving
for in everyday life and building a life that matches up with our values where maybe we don't have
to work with any of the psychological symptoms that are bothering us. As opposed to trying to reduce
social anxiety, the fear that your perceived laws will be exposed visible to other people,
and you'll be rejected because of them. That's the core of social anxiety. We wondered,
if they're pursuing their primary purpose in life, what does their days look like one day after
the other? And we found that for those people with significant impairing social anxiety in everyday life.
If they devoted considerable effort on a given day to their primary purpose in life,
maybe it was like to be really present around their kids, maybe it was to be very compassionate with coworkers.
On those days, they had over a 20% bump in their level of meaning and joy in everyday life, they had nearly
a 15% increase in their positive emotions on that day and a 10% drop in their social
anxiety symptoms even though they weren't doing anything to try to reduce their social
anxiety.
Notice however, that this technique is only one step removed from trying to avoid distress and pain.
Instead of taking your pain and jamming it back down your throat, you focus on something that isn't your pain.
Focusing on positive goals that move your distress off to one side is certainly better than drowning your pain with alcohol and drugs,
but it still has the central goal of keeping distress
at bay.
The more taught thought about it however, the more he started to see that there was
a deeper thread that connected people who seemed to do well after physical and psychological
setbacks.
They weren't just able to deprioritize distress by focusing on something else. They seem to be able to endure distress.
You know, one of my favorite studies is by a friend of mine, Marcel Bonn Miller,
and he was interested in people that have a dependence on pot or marijuana. And wanted to know,
for people that want to quit, what's predicting whether they relapse one
or two days after starting?
And he finds that on the very first day of committing to quitting, if you break people
down by levels of distressed tolerance, those people that are intolerant of the withdrawal
symptoms, that 63% of them end up relapsing after one single
day of quitting. Where those people that are able to tolerate distress, you get only 32%
of people relapsing. That's a huge difference. And we see this with obesity, we see it with
people in terms of their comfort about the exposed to ideas from the opposing political party,
the people that can better tolerate distress, are more open and receptive to new ways of behaving,
and new ways of other people acting towards them.
All of this applies to positive things too. Think about starting a new exercise program, or a new job, or moving to a new country.
Each of these can bring rich benefits to your life, but each of them also comes with distress,
at least at first.
What are the effects of trying to avoid distress on our long-term well-being and success?
Is it really helpful when friends and family and co-workers do all they can to shield us
from pain?
It's a misunderstanding of what leads humans to develop strengths and grow.
I mean, if you think about it, there are so many positive consequences of pain that people pursue them intentionally.
So, think of first dates, roller coasters, horror movies, spicy foods, competition.
These are all events where they up-regulate the negative emotions we experience,
but many of us like them because they give
us an opportunity to show our metal. They give us an opportunity to see what capacities
do I have at my disposal. And the way it's like to think about this, it's like safely testing
the alarm system in your mind and body. Now that it's safe watching a horror movie,
maybe you can handle a little bit better
when you get exposed to a haunted house and then maybe even better when you get exposed
to a stranger asking you buy it three o'clock in the morning on a random Tuesday.
We've talked a lot about the idea of emotional distress and emotional discomfort Todd and
ways to not escape this emotional distress but to be able to sit with it, to be able to deal with it.
I'm wondering if this has any correlates in the physical world, is learning how to deal with physical discomfort,
connected at all with our ability to deal with emotional discomfort?
Yeah, this is a societal problem that my co-author Robert Buses was, either an I call, comfort addiction.
It's one of the bizarre byproducts of economic prosperity.
You have all the things that you described.
Because of all the safety, because of all the security, we become psychologically weaker.
All of a sudden, sitting on an airplane for a two-hour ride is unbearable and sitting
through a presentation from a coworker where you don't get to speak is you can't resist
the temptation of, you know, drawing on a piece of paper or whipping out your phone or
just anything else of the van listening.
And the consequences are we are able to have less mental and physical stamina. We tend to be more selfish, and we have greater difficulty of pursuing long-term goals
what Angela Duckworth calls, you know, being greedy.
In his life and his research, Todd had now come a long way.
He started out like many people, believing that distress was best suppressed and hidden away.
Then he found it was possible to deprioritize the role of distress and focus instead on positive goals and values.
The next step was the discovery that you could actually sit with distress, without believing it would destroy you.
If you think of distress as being an alarm, Todd's initial response
was to try and turn the alarm off. In his work with the Vietnam War vet and other patients,
he realized that you could leave the alarm blurring in the background, but turn your attention
to something else. That was followed by the discovery that people who do especially well at difficult challenges in life seem to be able to do more than deprioritize
their distress. They seem to be able to endure the blaring discomfort of the alarm.
There was one final discovery to be made. The first stage is where we tend to
avoid these uncomfortable thoughts and feelings.
We don't want contact with them.
The second one is what we've been talking about is we can tolerate negative experiences,
but that's kind of like white knuckling our way through a rollercoaster ride.
And so the third day is the acceptance phase, where you embrace that this is a part of being
human and a part of life.
But then there's another level that almost nobody's been talking about in psychology.
We discovered is has really good power in predicting high performance and high levels of
flourishing in life.
And that's harnessing negative emotions as fuel and motivation to push us to higher levels of effort and progress towards the goals
we care about.
To be clear, Todd is not suggesting we embrace masochism or pain for pain's sake.
It makes sense to be vigilant to trauma and to choose activities that make us feel happy.
The goal here is not to be terrified or to fall in love with pain. Rather, it's not to let the desire to avoid pain cause us to forget our values and our goals.
One set of experiments, led by psychologist Martin Seligman,
showed how this worked when it came to something many of us think of doing,
but that few of us actually do.
Writing a letter of gratitude to
someone who has meant a lot to us, and then reading the letter allowed to that
person. What's it like to share this letter? What's it like to wait for someone's
response? And their response might not be the response you want is just like the
story of me at age 13 walking through the hallway. For the first time after my
mom passed away,
people don't necessarily know what to do when you give all these beautiful compliments to somebody.
And when people come back from reading these letters, they talk about how it's awkward,
how they were anxious, how they were shaking, some of them were crying because they were so damn uncomfortable in the experience. It is very awkward
really letting yourself
Share to another person that I can't get through life without the benefits that you afforded me and in some way
We are interdependent and I'm not a self-sufficient person fully. I need you I
Crave your company and I've benefited from your company
I need you. I crave your company and I've benefited from your company.
The really bizarre part is how much laughter and joy was in the classroom as people were
sharing this very similar experience.
I understand that you've run a study comparing the effects of reading a gratitude letter
out loud to a benefactor as these students did, versus writing down those sentiments
in a private gratitude journal.
What do you find taught?
Yeah, this is led by my amazing colleagues and posthin pollant.
And what we want to know is, what's the best way for extracting the pleasure, the meeting,
the fulfillment from a gratitude experience?
Is it from journaling on a regular basis about all the affordances that you have in your life
from other people, from benefactors, or is it from giving this letter and reading it to another person?
And what we found was people experience more joy and meaning and stronger social bonds
after sharing this gratitude letter and having this conversation about
this letter than compared to journaling which is this intru personal activity.
But it's more anxiety provoking, it's more confusing, it's more ambivalent, and so this
is one of the reasons why people don't pursue this higher difficulty activity, but this exactly the activity that builds this gratitude
muscle where it becomes more of a habit that can not only give you good moments, but produce these
really positive healthy relationships. I mean it's another example of where if you're able to sit
with the uncomfortable emotion for a bit, you can actually scale a much higher psychological
and emotional peak.
In some ways we can think of all this in three simple parts.
One is noticing and normalizing the difficult emotions that arise.
In this case, we're talking about the anxiety of expressing deep intimacies in a gratitude
letter.
Then there's, as you're saying, sit with that.
And play with it, work with it, be curious about these emotions that arise.
And then it's taken another perspective, and that's the beauty of this conversation, is saying,
who might not like the feeling?
It might not feel good, but it's going to do good.
And that's really what we're looking for is, how do we construct a life
where there is stable architecture
where there are sustained building blocks for the things we care about
playfulness, feelings of competence, feelings of belonging, feelings of autonomy, feelings of satisfaction, and
it tends to be on average that when you go through the negative emotional experiences, you can get the greatest strengths and the greatest outcomes.
In 1963, the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. was arrested during civil rights protests
in Birmingham, Alabama.
On his second day in jail, he was passed a copy of the Birmingham News.
It featured a full-page letter about the protests signed by a group of white clergymen.
This letter advised protesters that their actions were unwise and untimely. King later said, when I read it, I became so
concerned and even upset and at point so righteously indignant that I decided to
answer the letter. The result was King's famous letter from Birmingham Jail.
King later read that letter aloud. I want to play you a clip-tot.
Non-violent direct action seeks to create such a crisis and foster such a tension that a community which has constantly refused to negotiate is forced to confront the issue. It seeks so to dramatize the issue that it can no longer
be ignored. My sighting the creation of tension as part of the work of the nonviolent
resistor may sound rather shocking, but I must confess that I am not afraid of the word tension. I have earnestly opposed violent tension.
But that is a type of constructive nonviolent tension which is necessary for growth.
It seems that King here is talking about the same idea at a societal level, Todd. We have
an impulse to turn away from anything that produces distress, to turn away from what King would call tension, but he's arguing you cannot have
growth and change without some amount of distress, without some amount of tension.
I mean, he's encapsulating this great body of discoveries.
And let me just pose a few questions, and every one of the answers to this question is that
it is better to experience tension and be south of neutral in terms of your emotional experience.
Which emotion is better at detecting deception?
Which is better at producing persuasive messages?
Which is better at restoring your social standing after a moral failing, which
is better at stimulating effort and performance, which is better for having less selfish behavior
in groups, which is better for soliciting cooperation and support and finding allies for
civil rights causes, for any causes.
Every one of these questions, it is better to be in a mild moderate state of anger
or sadness or irritability than being happy and yet this nuanced emotional palette of
tools. We suppress it, we can conceal it, or we pretend that it's better to be happy because that's what we think society wants us to be.
Todd Cashton writes,
Too often, our strategies to cope with distress,
while providing momentary relief,
bring us further away from the life we want and from our values.
Distress is an inevitable human experience that is not inherently problematic.
Distress itself does not impair functioning and well-being. The culprit is unhealthy attempts
to escape distress when time and effort could be spent elsewhere in meaningful activity.
When we come back, how to build a capacity to tolerate emotional distress?
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In day-to-day life, most of us have an instinctive desire to avoid pain.
This makes sense. Pain is, well, painful.
The problem, however, is that constantly seeking to avoid pain and distress can cause us to lead constricted lives
and keep us from reflecting our deepest values.
Psychologist Todd Cashton works at George Mason University.
He's the author of the Upside of your Dark Side,
while being your whole self, not just your good self,
drive success and fulfillment.
Some time ago Todd, someone pointed out to you that
as a state employee in Virginia,
you had access to some information.
What was this information?
Yeah, after a few years of working as a professor, someone told me that because we're state employees,
it's transparent, whatever one salary is.
And I downloaded a file of whatever one makes.
And I found that the salary I was making was not commiserate with what I was
producing and how much effort and how much time I was devoting to my work. And
there's some metrics as a professor in terms of the amount of articles you
publish, how prestigious those outlets are where you publish it, and how many
times you give a talk to a large audience, and all the numbers showed that it was absurd how
low my salary was compared to other people.
I'm wondering how this may do feel when you saw this information on this spreadsheet.
Well, you have a few thoughts that pop into your head.
So one is that I'm not worthy of making as much money as these people.
They've been around longer.
I should just be waiting
until it's my turn. Maybe I'm not as good as I think I am. Maybe my salary is indicative of what
my value is and I have an inflated sense of self-worth. And you also feel bitterness and you feel
uncomfortable with the idea of, I am one of the lowest paid people in a room of 80, and by no means do I view
myself as number 79. So you came up with a number of psychological techniques to process how you
were feeling, and one of those was something called cognitive diffusion. Explain this to me, Todd.
Yeah, this is about viewing thoughts in a more accurate, representative way.
So you look at thoughts as if this is something that the brain is producing.
And just like a friend who might give you advice that might be good advice, it might be
bad advice, your brain is the same way.
It's just constantly churning out thoughts and feelings and sensations.
And you separate the thought from you, the thinker.
And when you create this space, there's room to take actions that don't match up with
the thought itself.
And so when you have a thought such as, I'm not worthy of making a lot of money.
And then you add in front of that, I notice some having this thought that I don't deserve
to be making a lot of money.
It's just like being the fly in the wall of viewing yourself in a social situation, you
recognize it's like, oh, it's not going to stop me from crafting an email or making an
opportunity to actually schedule an appointment with someone to actually talk about my pay
salary. A second strategy you used was south affirmation.
Walk me through this strategy, Todd.
So this is when you basically clarify that your identity is bigger than any stressor
and to inflate the size and the complexity of who you are.
And so for me, I identify strongly with bravery.
And you start to note very clearly
your track record of being brave.
And so, for example, you would see that I had lost
my three bottom teeth and their fake
because freshman year of college
and I saw a guy knock out his girlfriend
and I stood in front of her
and would not let him near her again.
Because I don't know how to fight, I took quite a shot in the face and three of my teeth were lost in that battle.
And you think of events like that and you clarify exactly what your identity is composed of that can last a cross time in space and it centers you to realize that
no threat is going to have that much of a neutron blast to my identity because
it's so large and it's so sophisticated.
You know it's almost like you are a general who's sort of marshaling troops, but also assessing
the threat.
So you have these negative emotions, these emotions of feeling unworthy or disappointment
or anger, but you're not swept up in those emotions.
You're basically saying, all right, let me evaluate them.
Let me test them to see how accurate they are.
Let me figure out how much I should be paying attention to these different emotions.
And then you're cataloging all of the strengths
that you have that you could bring to this battle.
What do you think about this analogy?
That in some ways you're stepping back
from the field of battle rather than being swept up
in what's going on and essentially assessing
what your next move should be.
Yeah, no, I like that.
And another analogy that works is
you are doing an audit
of what resources and capabilities
psychologically, socially,
and even financially,
and emotionally.
Do you have your disposal
irrespective of what pops up
in terms of a difficult demanding situation.
So once you did this audit both of the emotions that you were experiencing as well as the
strengths and virtues that you knew that you possessed, what did you do next?
I scudged an appointment with the chair of my department. And they said that, listen, you'll eventually get a higher salary as you spend a longer
number of years in the department.
And I said, if I was dissatisfied with what you just said, would you be okay if I went
one step above you and made the appointment to meet with the dean of the entire college?
And they said, yes, like it's, it it's most people don't do it, but sure.
But this is where that affirmation of bravery allows you to withstand the discomfort of being told.
You're not doing what other people do when they feel they're not being paid adequately.
And when I made an appointment with the dean, before I stepped into his office, I created a spreadsheet
of everyone who is making more money than me.
And then I basically denoted all their productivity over the past three years compared to myself.
In terms of number of publications, presentations, how much grant money they brought in, these are the metrics of a researcher.
And the dean was laughing, was saying, you put a lot of effort in, and to be honest, the data don't lie. And although
I am reluctant to create a precedent where people come into my office and do this, you are
the pay raise. And it gave me a substantial pay raise.
So one important question here at Todd, which is, you know, how do we tell the difference
between pain that we should learn to tolerate and pain that we should seek to eliminate? I mean, I don't think that you would tell someone
who is in an abusive relationship that she should strengthen her tolerance for pain.
No, and neither should you put your hand in the toaster as you're in the middle of making
pop tarts. To me, it's as simple as, are these tools, and that's what emotions are.
They're tools. Are they helping or hindering you in your pursuit of goals that you care about?
In other words, if the emotional distress is in the service of a goal that you really care about,
that's emotional distress what enduring?
In some ways, if you think about what's your greatest fear and for a lot of people,
it's the fear of public speaking. Does the anxiety that's pushing you to want to actually say,
no, I'm not going to go on stage. Does that hinder you from the goal of resenting this information
that you think is valuable to impart to this audience? Is that showing respect and dignity to
those people that are about to give you undivided attention. And if you ask those questions and you really
grow, why is your mind evoking this particular emotional state? You'll realize it's mobilizing
you for action probably not to make you avoid getting in front of these individuals.
So it's been many years, Todd, since you, you know,
ran away from your pain as a young man, and more recently you've had opportunities to see
how far you've come in your journey to reorient the way you think about fear and distress and
and other unpleasant emotions, tell me about your encounter with rock climbing.
I met this guy, Matt Walker, and he knew I was an author,
and he said, listen, we trade skills. Go back to the old, old school bartering is, if
you teach me how to write a book, I'll teach you how to rock. Come out to Arizona, the
Co-Chee Stronghold, which I knew is this great mountaineering area, and come for a five-day
trip for beginners. And a book to flight went out there.
And once we got there the first night and everyone introduced themselves,
I realized we had very different definitions of what beginner means.
Because the person next to me was an ex-Navy seal.
The mother and daughter next to him had traveled to Patagonia
and rock climbed all over South America.
And then next to her was a, I forgot I
was a professional volleyball or soccer player but they played division one
ball and they were professional and then there's me who has a few
replights and it is a 700 foot climb called Moby Tick. This is not what
beginners should be doing. To give you an idea of 700 feet, a 700 foot climb just take an entire cold
to sack every single house and then stack them on top of each other and you were climbing
that and it's pretty much almost purely vertical. I just was so, I mean it's the most anxious
that I think I've ever been in my entire life. After climbing for just a few hours on a
practice rock, I was so nervous, I was
pushing my fingers so hard in the rock that I had gone through five layers of skin. It was so bad
that the first day of climbing, Matt had to take crazy glue and pour it over all of my fingers,
so I had fake layers of skin to protect me on the climb.
So on the day of the big climb, you're standing before Moby Dick, you have the 700 foot
climb before you.
What happens that day?
I could barely even breathe.
And when you're climbing with pitches, you are putting anchors into the rock and then
you are as you are going up you are taking all the equipment
with you to go for the next pitch and climb up the mountain and so there is no way down
until you get to the very top.
And Matt said this, the state into me which is listen, I can see how afraid you are.
Look at your fingers.
Here are the choices.
Either you stand by yourself in the desert
because we're all doing this and there's no one else down there. Or you climb up
this mountain with your fear. And your fear is going to be your friend. And you're going
to take it with you. Or your fear is going to be your enemy. And you're going to expend
so much extra energy to get up this rock and you don't need to.
It was like he just took off three vails of fear and defensiveness and coping mechanisms.
I was like, I'm going up the rock no matter what.
Why am I doing this with so much physical tension inside my body?
Again slow the actions down and just do one step and one handhold at a time. And he did something
further which was the last pitch before we got to the apex of the climb. He said,
Todd, you're going to be the last person and you are going to not only climb, but you're
going to pull the anchors out and put them into your belt as you climb, which means that
everyone is already climbed up and I am on, I don't
know, 500 feet in the air, by myself, a rookie, and there's no one there to help me because
everyone's already on top of the rock.
And this is what we call not gradual exposure to the things that you're afraid of, for
you, if you were afraid of spiders, you would start by reading Charlotte's web watching a movie of
like a rack nephobia and then maybe there would be like a spider in a jar behind a locked door.
This is called slutty. This is like I'm gonna drop you off in a pit of pain and despair and you're
gonna fight your way out of it and I did it. Tell me what it was like to get to the top of the mountain, Don.
When we got to the cop, everybody was cheering, everybody was hugging each other.
And I just said, can I just have a moment to just take this whole end.
And I just wanted to sit on the edge with my legs dangling and just take like a deep breath
of air and the landscape at the
Co Chi stronghold.
It's just this beautiful vista and I had this thought of like I know I'm strong and I know
that I can persevere at tasks but I didn't know how strong and how capable I was. And then it's like, this is why you do the work.
Because this sense of awe of looking at this landscape
and the sun sets, you just dream of sitting and watching.
It's just the reminder of the richness and the vitality
we're shooting for and that the pain is worth the effort.
Todd Cashden is a psychologist at George Mason University. He is the author of the Art of Inceboardenation,
how to dissent and defy effectively, and the upside of your dark side,
while being your whole self, not just your good self,
drive success and fulfillment.
Todd, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thanks for the therapy session.
You're welcome.
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