Hidden Brain - Happiness 2.0: The Path to Contentment
Episode Date: February 7, 2023Many of us believe that hard work and persistence are the key to achieving our goals. But is that true when it comes to the pursuit of happiness? This week, we kick off a month-long series we're calli...ng Happiness 2.0. We talk with psychologist Iris Mauss, who explains why happiness can seem more elusive the harder we chase it, and what we can do instead to build a lasting sense of contentment. Did you catch our two-part series on the science of influence? You can find part 1 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 Vedantam.
In the summer of 1776, 33-year-old Thomas Jefferson drafted one of the most important documents
in the history of the United States. The Declaration of Independence laid out a vision for a new country
and said all men had God-given rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
86 changes to the draft were made by John Adams, Ben Franklin, and others. Like many writers, Thomas Jefferson is said to have been unhappy
with the changes his editors recommended.
But the line about how we are all entitled to the pursuit of happiness endured.
In recent years, many elements of the Declaration of happiness endured.
In recent years, many elements of the Declaration of Independence have come under scrutiny, including its omission of women, the poor, and enslaved people from its vision of equality.
We've examined some of these ideas in an earlier episode that looked at Thomas Jefferson's complicated life story.
that looked at Thomas Jefferson's complicated life story.
This week on Hidden Brain, we launched a new series we're calling Happiness 2.0.
We start today by exploring Jefferson's psychological claim about what makes for a good life,
with research that examines what happens in our minds when we pursue happiness, when you ask people what they want in life, nearly everyone will tell you they want to be happy.
After all, that's the point of finding a great job, starting a family, or going on wonderful
vacations. At the University of California Berkeley,
psychologists Iris Maas studies a paradox associated with our pursuit of happiness.
Iris Maas, welcome to Hidden Brain. Thank you so much for having me.
Iris, about a decade ago, you achieved a major milestone in the life of a scholar. You got
10 years at a great university. How long of a scholar. You got tenure at a great university.
How long had you dreamed of becoming a professor at a school like UC Berkeley?
I think forever.
So this was a really big deal for me.
I'd been working toward this for a long time and had been really looking forward to that moment, hoping I would get
tenure. Getting tenure is a big deal of course. I would get to be with the most lovely colleagues
I could imagine and doing what I love in a beautiful area.
Now, whenever I visit UC Berkeley, I'm struck by how beautiful it is. I mean, Berkeley really is absolutely gorgeous.
So, mission accomplished, Iris?
Well, not quite.
It wasn't quite the way that I had imagined.
It's sort of like the thing wherever you go, there you are.
So, I was still the same person somehow
and worries and stressful things still happen.
Although at first, at least in the sort of year after getting tenure, those sort of small
worries hit me almost more than before because they have this element of, wait a minute, shouldn't I be happy all the time?
Is there something wrong with me
that I have 10 years now?
And yet, I still have worries in my life.
I understand you had a similar experience
more recently, Iris,
when you took a trip to the Italian island of Sardinia, what was your state of anticipation
before the trip?
This was the first trip I took in a really long time and I was going to get together with
my very oldest childhood friend, she lives in Germany, I hadn't seen her in two years and we had this trip planned and I thought
this is just gonna be
Amazing. I'm gonna be relaxing. I'm gonna be happy. I
Visualized it almost like one of those Tuscan Italian movies, you know, we would be on the beach
We would be drinking wine
in movies, you know, we would be on the beach, we would be drinking wine, eating delicious food, we would go boating around the little island and just floating happily in those beautiful
turquoise waters. So I had every expectation and so much anticipation that it would be just the perfect
participation that it would be just the perfect 10 days.
So what happened Iris? Well, we had a lovely time, but little thoughts or moments snuck in where I would be thinking about work or I would worry about something going on at home.
So these little thoughts started to appear and I would think, wait a minute, this isn't right, this isn't supposed to be here this thought. What's going on? Have I lost the ability to relax?
Is there something wrong with me?
Is there something wrong with the vacation?
Why am I not happy every moment of every day?
So you're on the strip with your childhood friend
and her partner.
Did your restlessness affect your travel companions, too?
I think I maybe I drove on a tiny little nutty because I started to suggest
sort of all kinds of things to bring about the continuous happy state that I had anticipated.
So I would say, let's go to this other beach today or let's rent a boat and go around this little island or let's go to a different restaurant and
Maybe that was a little bit much for them. I have a colleague who describes vacations like this as March or Die
There's no sitting in one place you either either march or you die. A little bit like that.
I want to ask you about another episode in your life, Iris,
and I think this one reveals how our approach to pursuing happiness
is something we do not only for ourselves, but something we encourage in other people,
including our kids.
Back home in the Bay Area, you got busy throwing a party for
your son's eighth birthday. What were the preparations for the party like? I mean I
always tried to make his birthday parties really nice but this one in particular I
wanted it to be perfect and so I had reserved a picnic spot at the local park. I got a coronavirus pinnata or you sort of
bash a pinnata that looks like a coronavirus filled it with candy lots of
games that I had thought of and decorations of course my friend who's an amazing baker, made this enormous stunning cake. And of course we had pizza.
And when you visualize what this party would be like, I'm imagining you saw your son just basically
being ecstatic the whole time and frolicking and playing with his friends. That's exactly right. Extatic the whole time, frallicking,
based in golden rays of sunlight, exactly like that.
So I almost hesitate to ask you the question,
given the pattern that we're starting to see here, Iris.
But how did the party turn out when you arrived on the big day?
Well, the first thing that happened was that this is in June,
and it never rains in the Bay Area in June,
never except that one day.
And it was raining the morning of the party.
So we had to sort of switch gears, like sort of text
that everybody come a little later, hoping crossing my fingers, it would stop
raining. We still went to the park to set up because my son was very impatient
and intent on having his party. So we go in the rain, we're setting everything up,
we're getting drenched. And of course, people, I told them to come a little later,
but my son had the start time of the party in his head, 11 o'clock. And 11 o'clock comes,
in his head, 11 o'clock, and 11 o'clock comes.
Nobody is there yet, and he starts to lose it.
And I still sort of have that image in my head of him sort of standing in the rain,
getting drenched, falling.
And you must have felt like your heartburns breaking
because you had put so much time and effort and thought into making this the perfect party.
Yeah, I was really upset, but it did stop raining and we went ahead and other things went wrong, of course. the pinata, you know, had gotten drenched in rain. And so when the pinata
bashings was supposed to happen, it took just one swing and the whole thing
just sort of sadly flopped down. And kids, they didn't want to play the games
that I had planned for them.
They did their own thing and it was a big disappointment and should have like bordering
on disaster.
When my son was bawling, standing in the rain, I thought, wow, this is actually the worst
birthday party ever.
What Iris did is something we all do.
We dream about what it would feel like to accomplish something,
to get something, or to be somewhere.
We imagine how it would feel if we got into a great school,
or found a great job, or fed in love with a perfect person who loved us back.
Sometimes when those dreams don't work out, we are heartbroken.
But even when they do work out, we often feel let down, cheated.
We achieve this difficult thing, obtain this amazing relationship, accomplished our dreams, why
we find ourselves asking, are we not happier?
When we come back, the problem with our theory of happiness.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Iris Mars has first-hand experience about what it feels like to chase a dream, only to
feel let down when she obtained it.
In her research as a psychologist at UC Berkeley, she has run a number of experiments to try to
understand the phenomenon.
Iris, lots of our listeners are people who are used to working hard to accomplish difficult
things.
If happiness is the most important goal of all, we tell ourselves, okay, let's work at
it, let's accomplish it.
You've studied people who chase after happiness in this way.
What do studies reveal about their mental health and well-being?
We found that people who are very intent on
being happy, those same people somewhat ironically,
in general, have lower levels of well-being, higher levels of depressive
symptoms, and paradoxically lower levels of overall happiness. So it seems that the more,
perhaps, the more intent they are on being happy, the less they actually manage to be happy.
So your research has identified several reasons for this.
One has to do with the effects of high expectations.
And perhaps we've heard some echoes of this in the stories you told us about becoming a
tenured professor at UC Berkeley or the vacation in Italy. What is the role of high expectations
in shaping our experience of happiness, Iris?
High expectations in other life domains
can be a good thing, right?
We might strive toward doing really well in school
and then we work hard toward getting a good grade.
We might fall short of it, feel disappointed,
and that might motivate us to work harder.
But in the domain of happiness,
there's sort of a paradox there, right?
In that if we're disappointed
when falling short of our goal
that we're striving for, the high standard,
that disappointment in itself contradicts the very goal.
So the more we strive toward the goal of happiness, the more we undermine our ability to actually get there.
And of course, once you actually get there, even if the experience is very good but not
perfect, it might still fall short of the very high expectations we had.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
So you've cited a study carried out by the psychologist Jonathan Schuhler and his colleagues.
They studied people getting ready to celebrate the start of a new year. Tell me what the study found Iris.
Yeah, so this was actually for New Year's Eve 2000, so it was a particularly big one. And a lot of
people had really high expectations for what the big millennial New Year's Eve celebration would bring.
And they asked people ahead of time how happy they expected to be and how much time they
spend planning for the New disappointed with the celebration.
And then the second really interesting thing that they found is that the more enjoyment
participants expected having the more disappointed they actually ended up being. So it's not like greater expectation and working
more toward enjoying the party would pay off with greater enjoyment. Actually the exact opposite
happened. More expectation less enjoyment. I'm assuming this means that people who plan bigger parties might
paradoxically have been less happy than people with smaller gatherings. That's
exactly what they found. There's another reason that chasing happiness can have
the inadvertent effect of chasing it away. What is the effect of checking to see
if we are happy on our experience of happiness. Checking how happy we are is very much so bound up with thinking that happiness is an important thing.
And it's also something that we do, I think, very automatically. In all of the examples, I think,
that I gave from my own life, it's very much so that the moment I checked in on
how happy am I, how is this going, that's when I realized, oh actually I'm not
quite as happy as I hope to be. And various studies allude to that, or have examined that relationship
between what's called experience,
hedonic experiences, and metaconsciousness.
So that sort of overlay of being self-consciously aware
of how we're feeling.
One domain of research where this has been examined is in the research of flow.
And this is researched by Mihali Txik Santi Mali.
He and colleagues have shown that when people are in a state of flow,
they report later on being incredibly happy. So it's a state of deep happiness, but
what's important is that it's also characterized by being completely unaware of the self. So it
means that the self almost feels like it's dissolved during these states of flow, and in fact it's
interrupted and destroyed when you check in with yourself and ask, how am I feeling now?
You know, I'm reminded of something that the 19th century philosopher John Stuart Mill once noticed,
he said, ask yourself whether you are happy and you cease to be so.
And that's saying exactly what you are suggesting, Iris, which is that the act of turning that
spotlight inward and asking, am I happy?
Even when you are happy, it tends to have the effect of diminishing the experience of happiness.
Yes, so those ideas have been around for a long time.
John Stuart Mill thought about hedonic experiences,
of course, a lot.
And there's another quote that I really like
and that gets to the heart of another problem
with striving too much to be happy.
And he said, those only are happy who have their minds fixed on some object other than their
own happiness.
On the happiness of others, on the improvement of mankind, even on some art or pursuit,
followed not as a means, but as itself and ideal end.
Aiming does it something else, they find happiness by the way. And I
really like that quote because it gets at another problem with overvaluing
happiness or valuing it in the wrong way. And that's the idea that if we strive for our own happiness at the expense of what's
going on around us, that's when things can go wrong and backfire.
In many ways Iris does get to another idea I wanted to talk with you about, which is,
is it possible that one reason pursuing happiness is an ineffective strategy is that we often
don't know what it is that's going to make us happy.
And so by pursuing things that we think will make us happy, we sometimes take our eye off
the ball of the things that actually will make us happy.
I think that's really right.
Dan Gilbert and others have found that humans are actually pretty lousy at knowing what will make them happy.
And one of the things that makes people most happy is spending time with others and being connected and close to other people. And sort of this overly intense pursuit of one's own happiness,
that can come at the expense of connecting with other people.
We did a study that gets at that question asking whether
if we don't pursue happiness in a way that sacrifices connection with other people,
maybe we can get around the paradoxical effects of overvaluing happiness.
And we took advantage of the fact that cultures differ with respect to what happiness tends to mean to people.
And we sample participants from cultures
that are more socially oriented,
East Asian cultures, Japan and Taiwan,
all the way to cultures that tend to be more
individualistically oriented,
less socially oriented, the US.
And then we had two cultures in between Russia and Germany.
And in each of those samples, we as participants, how much they valued happiness,
but also what happiness means to them.
And then we looked at their overall levels of well-being. And what we found was really interesting because it suggests a way to get around that paradox that we've been talking about.
So in the US, we found that valuing happiness was very much bound up with a more individualistic, less social pursuit of happiness.
And here we found that exact link that we've been talking about, the more people valued
happiness, the less happy they were.
But then as we went in the social direction on that gradient, to Germany, to Russia, to East Asia, we found that pursuit of happiness
was more and more connected with helping other people and being close with other people.
So what we found is that the more socially people interpret the value of happiness, the more that valuing happiness was associated
with higher levels of well-being.
So we've looked at several ways in which pursuing happiness
in a very individualistic fashion can paradoxically make us less happy.
It ramps up our expectations, which diminishes our satisfaction.
It causes us to ask ourselves if we are happy, which is often not a good way to actually experience happiness.
And it makes it more likely that we will turn away from others and experience loneliness.
I want to talk about one of the really important idea, Iris.
Besides chasing happiness, many of us also spend a great deal of time trying to escape
unhappiness.
I want to take you back to your days as a graduate student and have you tell us about the
negative emotions you experienced whenever you had to make public presentations about
your work. So like many people, I used to have anxiety about speaking in front of audiences.
And as a psychology graduate student, when I first started to have to give research presentations,
this anxiety was actually pretty intense, almost overwhelming at the time.
And I remember particularly clearly, I think
this was the first talk I had to give as a graduate student to faculty and other students in the
area I was part of. So maybe a group of 30 people. So for weeks before that talk and any talk,
So for weeks before that talk and any talk, I would have all these worries circling through my head
about all the incredibly foolish things I would definitely
say, but how I would freeze,
sinking feeling of doom really,
and lots of sleepless nights,
which doesn't particularly help.
So my approach was to think, well, wait a minute,
I need to get rid of this anxiety, telling myself, it's just a speech, come on, get it together,
try to ignore it, but, and I think this is pretty common, the anxiety would always return.
And maybe even stronger than before, because it would then return along with the feeling that it confirms
there's something wrong about me.
And this is so revealing, Iris, because what was happening here was not just that you were distressed, but that you were distressed about being distressed.
Yes, so these were what's called negative meta-emotion.
So feelings about my feelings, and those were almost worse, maybe than the initial round
of feelings, because there's a saying that goes, pain is inevitable, but suffering is optional.
And these meta emotions, that's the suffering
that we layer on top of negative emotions.
I was wondering, did these concerns
and I guess these concerns about these concerns,
were they serious enough that you started to think
that maybe you were not cut out for this kind of career?
Yeah, absolutely.
Because giving research presentations
is a really big part of the job.
And so it just became so bad that I consider dropping
out of grad school.
One of the things you just told me you did
when you had these negative thoughts
was to try and find ways to suppress them,
to make them go away.
And I think many of us do this.
You've reviewed research that finds that ignoring
or pushing away negative feelings
can negatively affect how we relate to other people.
Tell me about this research, Iris.
Yeah, there's quite a bit of research on this,
how suppressing our own emotions can be bad for ourselves,
but also especially bad for interpersonal contexts.
So in a recent study, we brought dating couples into the lab,
and we had them carry out two conversations.
The first one, we wanted them to talk about something that is a problem in the relationship.
So things like how often do you visit each other's families, disagreements about finances, disagreements about housework.
And so the couples had basically a fight in the lab.
And then we had them carry out a positive conversation where we told
them to tell each other how much they appreciated one another and
what they loved about one another and those were
lovely conversations. Now, after each conversation, we asked them how much they had suppressed their
feelings while they had talked with their romantic partner. And we also asked them how well they thought the conversation went and how connected they
felt to one another.
And what we found is that no matter whether we were looking at a fight or at the loving
conversations, when people said that they had suppressed their emotions, and that was true for positive and for negative emotions,
the more they suppressed them, the less they shared them with their partner, the less well the conversations went, and the less connected they fell to one another. So that suggests that holding back emotions,
even if it's negative emotions,
seems to disturb social connection.
As we've heard, chasing happiness in a highly individualistic manner does not work.
Trying to elude unhappiness doesn't work either.
When we come back, what does work?
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
The conventional way most of us go about accomplishing anything is to work hard at it.
When it comes to happiness, many of us say, if this is something I really want, I need
to go out and get it.
This might be especially true in the United States, where the Declaration of Independence
celebrates the pursuit of happiness. The problem is, pursuing happiness can have the paradoxical
effect of chasing happiness away. Trying to elude unhappiness can be similarly counterproductive.
unhappiness can be similarly counterproductive.
Psychologist Iris Maas has spent many years asking herself what does work when it comes to living a happier life. A crucial moment of insight came from her own life.
Yeah, so when my son was really little, baby, I'd say between six months and maybe it went all the way till
three years. He would have what is sometimes called witching hour which is exactly
what it sounds like. It's long hours of crying and fussiness and so he would
cry. It's time to go to sleep, I needed to rest. I would
rock him back to sleep and really, really gingerly put him in his crib and he would instantly
wake back up and it would start over. Repeating itself up to like two hours, maybe even more at a time. And I remember being really
distressed about it just because it's exhausting and pleasant, but really thinking,
here's my poor baby, he ought to sleep peacefully. What am I doing wrong? So just asking, what's wrong with me, what's wrong with him?
Why can't I get him to be peaceful, comforted?
Why isn't he happy?
And really, the more frantically I'm trying to comfort him,
the more upset he and I would become
sort of like a vicious cycle really.
So there came a moment when you changed your approach to his distress.
Tell me what happened, Iris.
Yeah, so it kind of came to a head because I read one too many sleep advice books.
You know, they all tell different advice.
Keep a schedule, go
with a flow, hold the baby, rock the baby, bounce the baby, blow a hair dryer on
the baby, keep it quiet, get the baby used to the noise. That kind of thing and
as a new parent it really can drive you a little nutty. I think it just came to a point where I was
reading all that and I'm like, I can't do this. And I realized in a way, it was really not
in my control because trying all these things hadn't yielded the expected hope for effects.
So in a way, I hit a wall and I had to accept what was.
What did you do differently once you had this realization?
I didn't do anything differently, but my perspective on it changed.
differently, but my perspective on it changed. And I let go of the ought to control it, he ought to be peaceful, he ought to go to sleep, he ought to be happy. And that perspective change
was almost like a little magic because the moment I changed my perspective, that very moment,
a lot of the tension just left.
He still cried, so it didn't change anything about the crying per se, but the moments or
the times of crying almost became pleasant. I mean, it's weird to say that,
but it was almost pleasant because it wasn't something that I had to make go away that I was
layering all this judgment on, but rather it was something that we shared. and I thought, well, he's comfortable showing his distress to me.
And it sort of was an experience that we share together and part of the richness of our
relationship in a way rather than something to try and avoid.
So you went on to conduct research on the effects of practicing emotional acceptance.
Can you tell me what effect this has on our moods when we do it, Iris?
Yes. So people differ in the degree to which they tend to accept their negative emotions.
to accept their negative emotions. So some people naturally do something that I had a hard time doing. They encounter negative emotions and they don't judge them as good or bad.
Other people have a tendency to do what I did, which is tell themselves, I shouldn't be feeling the way I'm feeling.
This is wrong.
And what we found is that the less people accept
their negative emotions, the more the pressive symptoms,
the more anxiety symptoms they experience,
and the less well-being they have. And this, by the way,
tends to be true for men and for women across different ethnic groups. And in that same study,
we also wanted to find out why that is. And we tackled that question in two ways. In one study, we brought people into the lab,
and we have them, ironically, give an impromptu speech that people tend to find stressful. It's a
really common anxiety. And so we measured how much negative and how much positive emotions
they felt. And people who tend to have an accepting mindset responded to the stressful
speech with less negative emotion. They on the whole felt a little bit less anxious and a little bit less distraught.
And there was another part of the study where we gave people daily diaries.
So every day for two weeks, we asked them, what was the most stressful thing that happened
to you today?
And what were your emotional responses to that?
How much sadness, how much distress did you feel?
But also positive emotions, how much strength, how much hope, how much joy did you feel during
your day's most stressful event. And what we found was that people who have
a accepting mindset in their daily diaries
reported feeling less negative emotions
in response to the day's most stressful events.
And in turn, that emotional response
explained why six months later,
those same people had better mental health.
So these sort of daily emotions
in response to daily adversity
seem to be a really important active ingredient in that link.
You know, as I'm listening to these ideas
and this research, I can't help but reflect on the fact
that there have been philosophical and religious
and spiritual traditions going back probably many centuries
around the world that have talked about the same ideas, the ideas that you should actually
accept your emotions for what they are, you shouldn't get overly caught up in those emotions.
Do you sometimes reflect on the fact that your work as a psychologist in the 21st century
and some ways is mirroring the work of ancient scholars and sages?
Yes, absolutely.
So many of those ideas have precursors in world religions and philosophies.
And one of the biggest representation of that idea is Buddhism of course and Buddhism is the precursor to mindfulness
and acceptance is a really big part of the larger philosophy of mindfulness.
And so there's a huge intellectual that owed to Buddhist scholars as well as Buddhist practitioners and researchers
on mindfulness.
You know, I'm wondering whether this idea of emotional acceptance might be especially hard
to, you know, accept for Americans.
Many Americans I think might associate acceptance
with ideas like resignation or defeat.
I'm wondering whether your participants
in your studies ever report that, Iris?
That's a great question that we are really concerned about
because we wouldn't want people to accept bad
unjust situations even if it helps them feel better and so in the research we
also asked participants about their tendency to accept bad situations, in addition to their tendency to accept
their own emotions and their own negative thoughts. And this is really important because
these beneficial effects of accepting your own emotions and thoughts, were connected with better mental health
while accepting bad situations was not.
So it's a separate thing and accepting how you feel
does not mean accepting and resigning yourself
to bad situations.
In other words, I might feel badly about something
and I can accept that I'm feeling badly about something,
but that doesn't necessarily mean I'm turning a blind eye
to the thing that's actually making me feel bad.
Yes, exactly.
And I think actually it might help people in a way
to address bad things in their lives because if you look your
negative feelings in the eye and don't get overwhelmed by them, that might help you more effectively deal with addressing bad, unjust, stressful situations.
Do people ever share the worry with you that accepting negative emotions means that those
negative emotions are now going to stick around forever?
I think it's a really common worry and it explains something that's a little bit of a mystery,
which is, acceptance sounds really easy, right?
You literally don't do anything.
You have your emotions, they're there,
you don't try to control them,
you don't spring into action.
So it sounds incredibly easy. And yet, we have a really, really hard time
doing that. Even I myself, I've seen the benefits so often, I still, my first instinct is often to
Oh, bad. Make it go away quick. And I think the underlying belief is that I'm going to get overwhelmed by it. And so I need to clamp down on it quickly. So I think it's a really
deeply ingrained belief that many of us have. And it explains why we don't naturally embrace acceptance. We don't do it all the time.
So we've been talking about the importance of accepting feelings of unhappiness, negative emotions,
but we started this conversation talking about the problem with chasing happiness.
You mentioned earlier that having high expectations for happiness can be a prescription for disappointment.
What should we do instead, Iris?
I think one overall recommendation is to have an accepting mindset
for both our negative and our positive emotions.
Don't monitor as much, don't try to avoid, for both our negative and our positive emotions.
Don't monitor as much, don't try to avoid, don't try to strive too much for something else.
One way to think about this is that it kind of replaces
a mindset of I need to be with a mindset of I prefer.
So I think we can still have preferences. The problems come in where we tell ourselves,
I must feel a certain way or else I can't have a good life. That's I think what we need to avoid. So preferences
with a light touch are good for our mental health and well-being. It's the need and the concern
that we want to get away from.
So if you could take this insight back to when you were setting up that birthday party for your son in a park as it's raining, what would you tell yourself in that moment, Iris?
What would you advise that Iris today?
I would tell myself that it's okay to prefer to have a wonderful birthday party, but that I don't need it
to be the perfect birthday party, where all the kids are completely happy, 100% of the
time, and that my son and my life and all the important things are going to be okay,
even if it's not.
You know, I'm thinking about the fact, Iris, there are so many books and podcasts and blogs about
how to be happier and in some ways they constitute something of a happiness industrial complex.
You know, and this industry tells us
that we need to work hard at being happy.
And in so many ways, it sounds like you're saying
we need to do exactly the opposite.
Yes, I would say that feeling joy,
feeling happiness is a universal human preference. So I'm not saying we should get rid of all of those
books and all of the advice, but I do think we need to fine-tune a little bit just how single
mindedly we go about the pursuit, as well as how we go about that pursuit. So connecting with other people, engaging in
experiences over material goods, those are things that tend to work.
So I'm wondering Iris, after studying the power of acceptance, both when it comes to dealing with unhappiness as well,
as when it comes to dealing with happiness,
has this changed your own life?
Do you find yourself in moments being able to tell yourself
not to judge your negative or positive emotions
but just to accept them?
It's actually pretty difficult to do, at least for me, because the way we encounter happiness,
the way we encounter positive and negative emotions is really deeply ingrained in our upbringing
and in our culture.
So these are deeply ingrained habits of the mind. And so even though it's literally doing nothing,
not judging, not trying to control,
it can be really difficult for people to do it.
But I absolutely try to do it.
And one example where I feel like I succeed it is
when I reconnected with my childhood friend after a really long time,
she actually had gone through cancer and had surgery and chemotherapy. She was in recovery,
but still seeing her physically, it was difficult. And there were many feelings of sadness and grief
for seeing what she had to go through the toll it had taken on her body. I
think I managed to stay with those feelings because I was able to see how the journey of going through cancer, it's a normal reaction,
it's part of life, and what it feels like is almost like watching clouds in the sky or
watching a peaceful river go by, right, Where you don't try to control the clouds,
you don't try to control the water,
you don't judge the clouds or the water.
And by doing that, viewing your own emotions
as well like a river that is just flowing by
or through you, we're able to accept what it is and let it go and let it flow on.
Iris Moss is a psychologist at the University of California Berkeley.
Iris, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
It was so lovely to talk with you.
Thank you so much.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul,
Kristen Wong, Laura Quarelle, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
For today's Unsung Hero, we bring you a story from our sister's show, My Aunt Seng Hero.
Chewy Clinton grew up on a ranch in Idaho.
As a teenager, he was a typical small town kid working at a hardware store and going hunting
with his friends.
But he was also holding on to a secret that he felt made him different from everyone else.
He was gay. He hadn't told anyone the truth, even his closest friend,
a classmate named Spencer. He was my best friend in high school for a number of years.
And he was just fun. We like to go to punk rock together, play video games, and he was just,
he was good to talk to. He was fun to talk to.
Yeah, he was a really wonderful guy.
Spencer is my unsung hero,
because he is the first person I ever came out to
and it was wholly unexpected.
My parents were away and it was the one and only time
I ever had a party out at my place. Just tons of people had a great time and spent so many of her hanging out and
he was drinking and you know having problems with his girlfriend at the time.
And he was just like frustrated and upset and he wanted to go home. Well I wouldn't let anybody
go home in their cars that night who had done any drinking whatsoever. And then I was like no,
no, no.
Let's just go walk around a talk.
I mean, walking and talking.
And he was sort of unloading to me as frustrations with his relationship.
And there was just a low on the conversation for a couple of miles.
And it was nothing that I would ever expect.
And plan to tell him and plan to say it even if we started walking
because it was something I never thought I could say to anybody who had grown up with because it was
really dangerous. It just it broke in me. It broke in me and I just said it. I said Spencer, I'm gay.
I'm gay.
And,
there was a momentary silence.
Without anything else, he just put his arm around me as we were walking.
And he said,
that's okay.
You're still my best friend.
And I still love you.
And for him to respond that way.
For somebody to tell me they loved me when I told them that was unlike anything I could
have ever asked for.
It was like a relief valve.
And I still couldn't tell most people, but it was like this constant weight that had been building on me suddenly
lived a little bit. For as long as our friendship went on, he just asked questions and nobody
had, and I'd never had anybody that I could tell things to. I'd never wanted to tell anybody
anything. I'd never expected anybody to ask me questions.
I could never have known what it would feel like for that
to have that kind of friendship.
Chewie went off to college.
He and Spencer slowly drifted apart
as high school friends often do.
But he says he'll always remember the compassion
that Spencer showed him.
I've come out to hundreds of people since that time.
In fact, I live my life in a way in which visually and personality, I would be offended if
somebody didn't know I was gay.
And I'm never afraid.
I'm never afraid anymore I'm never afraid anymore. To say that, to anyone, because I love who I am so much.
I have thought about it enough times to know that he's a part of the reason for that. Chuwi Clinton, now lives in Washington, DC.
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I'm Shankar Vedantan.
See you next week.