Hidden Brain - Healing 2.0: The Power of Apologies
Episode Date: November 27, 2023Why is it so hard to say 'I'm sorry?' In the final episode of our Healing 2.0 series, we talk with psychologist Tyler Okimoto about the mental barriers that keep us from admitting when we've done some...thing wrong, as well as the transformative power of apologies.If  you liked this episode, check out the rest of our Healing 2.0 series. And if you know someone who would benefit from the ideas we explored in this series, please share these episodes with them. Thanks!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
I'm sorry.
It's one of the simplest things to say, and also one of the hardest.
That's especially true when we're apologizing to the most important people in our lives.
When we've wronged a parent or a partner or a close friend,
working up the courage to make amends can sometimes feel really
hard.
Why is that?
Why do many of us find it difficult to apologize, especially to the people we love?
This week on Hidden Brain, we conclude our Healing 2.0 series with a look at the psychology of apologies.
We'll consider the mental barriers that make it hard for us to acknowledge when we've done something wrong,
the changing cultural expectations around apologies, and why it may be useful to think of an apology as a gift.
Think about the last time someone wronged you.
Did they apologize?
Now think about the last time you wronged someone else.
Did you apologize?
At the University of Queensland in Australia, Tyler Okimoto studies the psychology of apologies.
He examines the transformative power of apologies, and what happens in our minds when we say,
I'm sorry.
Tyler Okimoto, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you Shankar, glad to be here.
I want to take you back Tyler to the 2016 Rio Olympics, the star US
swimmer Ryan Lockty and other athletes said that they had been robbed at night
by armed men. It turned out the story was only a cover for what really happened
and that this is a classic example of how we often react when we're accused of
doing something bad. Yeah that's right that's right first reaction is deny, come
up with an excuse trying to paint yourself in the best possible
picture. And it turned out what had actually happened is that he had been
drinking, been partying, had thrown a tantrum in the store, had done some
property damage, and the security guard had tried to intervene and stop the behavior and locked the realizing that
this was going to be a PR problem for him.
Invented the story, put out a statement in expectation that something negative was going
to come out about him.
It was only with hindsight and time that he was actually able to step up and own up to
the fact that he'd blatantly lied.
So in some ways this is the adult version of, you know, the dog ate my homework.
I want to talk about one other incident which I think really reveals the power of what happens when apologies go off the rails. In April 2010, an oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico,
it killed 11 workers, it ignited a fireball that was visible 40 miles away.
This was the infamous deep water horizon oil spill. The rig was leased by BP one of the largest oil companies in the world.
Here's how BP responded according to news reports.
Almost from the moment on April 20th that oil began filing the Gulf BP seemed to view the disaster through rose-colored glasses.
May 13th Chairman Tony Hayward speaking to the Guardian newspaper.
The Gulf of Mexico is a very big ocean, the volume of oil and dispersant we're putting
into it is tiny in relation to the total water volume.
Five days later, Hayward again, to Britain's sky news, I think the environmental impact
of this disaster
is likely to be very modest.
The Gulf of Mexico is a very big ocean.
Tyler, what are you here in BP's response?
Well, it's a bit of a ryan locked you on the bigger scale,
right?
It sounds like the initial responses do seem
to be about minimizing the damage.
I actually remember Tony Hayward's apology quite vividly.
I was living in the state at the time, and I turned to my wife
after watching the commercial that BP put on television,
where I remember seeing it live, and turning to her and saying,
oh, this looks like a PR stunt.
It's not going to go well.
So BP initially said it was maybe 5,000 barrels a day that was flooding into the ocean, but at its peak it turns out there were tens upon tens of thousands of barrels a day flooding
into the ocean.
Now that's a really big difference.
Again as people heard this I think they heard exactly what you just said which is that
BP was trying to minimize the extent of the damage.
Yeah, yeah, that's right. And while I might try to give Tony Hayward the benefit of the doubt, and that maybe he didn't have all the information, and maybe that statement was to the best of his
knowledge, you know, it is a bit difficult to swallow an error of 60 fold. So if just seems like
in immediate reaction, seemed to be more concerned
with reassuring the company of what was happening rather than necessarily
thinking about what the public actually wanted from that situation.
I want to play you another clip of the next aspect of the BP Deepwater Spill saga
when a reporter confronted Tony Hayward,
here's what he said.
So here what says I'd like my life back.
And I'm sure that was the case, I'm sure he wasn't having a good time while this was unfolding,
but it does sound like he was seeing the problem
through the lens of his own self-pity.
Yeah, that's right.
I think there was a collective grown
across the entire PR world when he said that.
I can understand kind of what he was trying to get across.
He's trying to show that he's empathizing,
that I understand the pain. I'm feeling it too. But the way that he said it and the timing with which he
said it really made it come off as really I'm the one suffering here. And he seemed to
be more concerned with his own experience.
We've seen how our initial response to our own wrongdoing is often marked by denial, minimization, and
self-pity. These responses often produce an unintended consequence. They make
the victims of our wrongdoing furious. Here is a Gulf Coast resident responding to
Tony Hayward and BP. If you care, stop the oral from coming into our
estuaries. If you care, I don't think you do care.
I think you care about your image.
You don't care about us.
Now it's possible that people would have been furious, regardless of what BP did.
The spill went on to be one of the worst in history.
Hundreds of thousands of marine animals were killed.
But Tyler says that BP's response not only didn't help, but may actually have made
things worse. When you feel victimized and then somebody's response to that is insufficient,
it can really compound the negative feeling as a consequence of that. So it feels rather
than just an accident. This is an accident that nobody actually cared about, that there is no remorse. That makes it just that much worse.
As Ryan Lockty discovered, there is a very high cost to not getting apologies right. Three
months after the rig exploded, Tony Hayward was forced to resign as CEO.
BP's public image took a beating.
Coming up, saying I'm sorry is one of the first things parents teach their children.
So why is it so hard for grown-ups to apologize?
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. We all do things we regret or wish we could
undo. And we all know how tempting it can be to deny the harm we have done, or shift blame to
someone else, even though this can often make things worse.
Psychologist Tyler Okimoto of the University of Queensland in Australia has studied why
it's so difficult for us to admit we've done something wrong, and then to apologize.
Tyler, you've looked at what happens when people do something wrong
and then refuse to say they're sorry.
Tell me about the studies you've conducted
and how refusing to apologize can affect people's self-esteem.
Well, I think we've probably all experienced the kind of urge
to not apologize.
One of the things that happens when you apologize
is actually you are relinquishing
a bit of power and control in that situation
by admitting that you've done something wrong,
by saying that you're sorry,
in a way you're handing over the opportunity
for forgiveness to the other person.
So it's no longer in my control to decide
whether or not I'm a person of good moral
standing. It's now in your hands for you to decide whether or not I'm worthy of forgiveness.
And tell me about the experiments that you've done that have explored this idea, the experiments
that have looked at both the issues of control and the issue of self-esteem.
So we conducted a series of experiments to really try to
understand the psychological experience of refusing to apologize. What we found
was actually quite interesting when people came forward and essentially said
that I do not apologize for what I've done. It actually resulted in a short-term
boost in their reported self-esteem.
They actually felt better about themselves following a refusal to apologize. Now, what we did in the research is really tried to understand why that boost occurred.
And what we found was that when you've refused to apologize,
it gives you a bit of a feeling of increased power
and control in that situation.
And at the same time, by digging in and saying,
no, no, I've done the right thing,
it actually gives a bit of a boost
to your feelings of integrity as well.
Mm.
Mm.
Mm.
If you think about integrity, integrity is walking your talk
when you apologize, you're
saying, the way that I acted is not consistent with my values.
And refusing to apologize really digs in.
And so has that short-term beneficial effect to how you feel about yourself.
Now, you can draw the wrong conclusion here.
Tyler is not saying it's a good thing to refuse to apologize. He's
explaining why refusing to apologize can give you a short term boost. When I first feature
Tyler's research on NPR's morning edition, conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh picked
up on the story. One of the researchers, Tyler Okimoto, explained his interpretation of the result this way.
So when you refuse to apologize, it actually makes you feel more empowered.
It makes you feel more dominant.
It makes you feel less subservient.
It makes you feel not guilty.
As a professional broadcaster, I can tell you that there is an
adage. Don't care what you do. Don't ever apologize. Never. It was actually quite
interesting. My mother called me and said that my aunt had heard about my
research on the radio and was so proud of me and I said, oh, I didn't know that
she listened to NPR. And turns out it wasn't the NPR interview as Rich Limbaugh.
So in some ways, what I hear you saying
is that when we justify our behavior,
it allows us in some ways to maintain our positive
self-concept.
And in some ways, it's acting almost like armor.
Now, admittedly, this armor might slow us down. It might prevent us from doing
some things, but the impulse to dodge might actually come from this, perhaps, understandable
desire to protect our self-concept.
That's right. In the face of a threat, our natural psychological reaction is to protect
the self. The challenge then is that our self-concept is also not just about who we are as individuals,
but also our relationships and how we engage with other people and who we are as a group member,
and our immediate reaction to protect our self, our personal self sometimes comes at a cost of our
social self and our relationships.
I want to play you a clip that I came by recently.
The TV talk show host Ellen DeGeneres came on the fire some time ago for presiding over
what some employees called a toxic workplace.
Here's a clip of Ellen talking about these charges on the today show.
I am a kind person.
I am a person who likes to make people happy.
I am a people pleaser, you know, this is who I am.
And so when I started hearing, you know,
reading ridiculous things, and then it just kept going,
and going, and going, and going,
that made me think someone's trying to really hurt me.
And then right on the heels of that,
I hear in the, I read in the press
that there's a toxic work environment,
which, I mean, I had no idea.
So we talked a second ago about how we sometimes,
you know, build up armor to protect our self-concept.
But I want to explore the idea that one reason
apologizing can be hard is because in some ways
we have a self-concept that is very positive.
Now, you know, Ellen has disputed some of the charges
made about her workplace and I don't want to get
into who's right or what happened in this particular workplace.
But for our purposes here, I'm struck by her language.
She's telling us, I'm a kind person,
I'm a people pleaser. How could I possibly have presided over a toxic workplace? Is it possible
tighter that in some ways our positive self-concept itself can become a barrier to apologizing?
Yeah, absolutely. We get through life functionally because we can think about ourselves in a positive way.
And that is part of who we are.
A parallel that I like to talk about when I'm teaching is the idea of being a good leader.
So I think of myself as a good leader, but good leaders actually sit back, reflect, and
think about when they haven't been a good leader.
What makes a good leader is somebody who's reflective.
Same sort of situation here. Being a moral person is about being able to stop,
reflect on your behavior, and come to a judgment about whether or not
what you've done is reflective of who you want to be, and what your values are.
And when that break is there, when there's a gap, being a moral person
is about acknowledging
that and apologizing if that's appropriate.
It's interesting then that when people are justifying their behavior, I mean, it sounds
like they're justifying their behavior to us, but it seems to me that it's also possible
then that they're actually justifying their behavior to themselves.
Yeah, that's right. It seems to me that it's also possible then that they're actually justifying their behavior to themselves.
Yeah, that's right.
When we're being threatened, when we're being questioned,
we try to defend our self-esteem
because we don't want to feel bad about ourselves.
Nobody likes feeling bad on an ongoing basis.
And then when given the opportunity
to have a conversation that immediate self-forgiveness
can come out.
I'm wondering, have you seen this in your own life, Tyler, as somebody who studies apologies? Have you noticed that your own self-concept as a kind person or an empathetic person
that this is sometimes perhaps kept you from apologizing or acknowledging harms that you have done?
Well, it's funny that you say that because I tend to think of myself as somebody who
does apologize when I do things wrong.
But then of course with the question you just asked previously, it also makes me think,
oh, okay, so maybe I'm just a self-justifier.
I can't actually see.
Maybe I'm not good at apologies. I just think that I am because I'm just a self-justifier. I can't actually see. Maybe I'm not good at apologies.
I just think that I am because I'm that arrogant.
I'm not quite sure which one it is.
I want to just pause for one second and flag one thing, which is, you know, it is the
case that sometimes people, in fact, are accused of
things by mistake or they're falsely accused of something. So it cannot be that the only
appropriate thing to do when you're accused of something is to apologize for it. We had
a story on Hidden Brain featuring a man named Fred Clay who was charged and convicted
of murder when he was a teenager. And he maintained his innocence
and he said that he hadn't committed the crime.
But when he was finally brought
before the judge for sentencing,
the fact that he did not express remorse,
the fact that he did not apologize
for what the court had convicted him of doing,
that gave the judge reason to essentially
lock him up and throw away the key.
And as it turned out,
Fred Clay spent several decades
in prison, always maintaining his innocence.
And finally, his trial was thrown out
and he was recently exonerated.
And it just leads me to think that it cannot be
that the answer to an accusation always is an apology.
This is what makes it confusing.
Sometimes, saying, I didn't do it,
might actually be the right thing to say.
Psychologically, we want to hear that the person that we're accusing is remorseful and
that they admit what they've done is wrong.
But you're right in that that's not always the case.
And I think this is where the challenging situation that we tend to be in these days
is that a lot of these sorts of cases are, at least the ones that we read about, are quite high profile.
And the accused individual is actually being in a way judged not just by the victim, but also by the court system, also by the media, also by the public who consumes that media.
And the reason why the media tends to pick these things up is because they are symbolic
of a bigger problem, right? The judge Floyd case was interesting to people because it was about
systemic racism. The MeToo movement, the media is interested because it's beyond that individual
offender and victim. It becomes symbolic of the broader systemic problem. And they get judged
on this, you know, basically on this, this higher level. Let me see if I'm understanding what
you're saying, Tyler, you're saying that in some of these cases, the cases themselves
become a stand-in for something bigger than just a case itself. But if you're one of these
individuals who gets caught up
in one of these symbolic cases, it's perhaps understandable
that you might say, hang on a second,
don't put all of that on me.
I'm just an individual here.
This is just the fact of this case
is all that we should be paying attention to,
not sort of that grander, bigger symbolic story.
That's right.
In many of these situations it's the historical
problem that is being tried at least in the public's eyes. We hope that our court system
can get past that and make it really about the individuals involved. But when things are being
tried in the media it really is that bigger symbolic meaning that is really driving the strength
of people's reactions.
So it's interesting these conversations are actually happening at multiple levels, right?
So from a, when you have a police shooting, for example, the victim's family might say,
you know, this is part of a larger system of injustice that has existed for many years,
many decades.
From the point of view of the police officer who did the shooting, the police officer might
say, this was an individual case, and we have to look at just the facts of this individual
case and what the evidence says.
And the fact that one side is having a conversation about something that is structurally wrong, and
the other side is having an argument about an individual case.
This might be part of the reason we often have mismatches in our public conversations about these cases.
So when the courts, for example, have exonerated police officers in some of these shootings,
people feel the courts now must be part of the problem as well, without necessarily taking
into account that what the courts are set up to do is not, in some ways, try the symbolic
case or the larger case, but essentially the facts
of the very narrow case that's just in front of them.
You know, in fact, we've done a little bit of research on this exact question.
We like to talk about it as the appraisal gap.
What we tend to find is that when you're the member of a victim group, so when you're
a woman seeing the MeToo situation unfold, when you're an African-American viewing black lives matters issues
that you see in that those individual cases, you see the systemic problem and as a consequence,
the solution to those individual cases is a broader systemic solution. However, from the offender groups perspective, when I see something going wrong in my own group,
then a bit of a self-protective mechanism here as well,
tend to think of it as, okay, well, that's just a bad apple.
And so what you tend to get as a gap
between a victim group that believes
that a systemic solution is necessary
and really a group level apology gap between a victim group that believes that a systemic solution is necessary and, and
really a group level apology for talking about apologies versus an offender group that
doesn't necessarily believe that there's a systemic problem, that believes that the right
thing to do is to deal with the individual, punish that individual, and to have an individual
level apology.
Right.
This is perhaps why group leaders sometimes come out
and say that mistakes were made.
Not, we collectively made a mistake.
Clearly mistakes were made.
Mistakes were made here.
And he's right, mistakes were made.
Terrible mistakes were made.
How do these mismatches and expectations
shape when apologies are demanded, how they are
offered, and whether they are accepted?
Tyler and other researchers have found that people nowadays increasingly have a greater appetite
for apologies.
We want to see people come forward and say, I'm sorry.
But in an experiment, Tyler discovered something curious that comes about as a result of our heightened expectations for apologies.
What we found is at the same time
decreasing their satisfaction when actually receiving it.
I have to ask you, though, because I feel like I can see sort of a flip side to this,
which is that if we are as a society less accepting of apologies, in other words, someone
comes forward, does the right thing, does the difficult thing, and apologizes, and we basically say, no thanks, that wasn't good enough. Doesn't
that create a disincentive for people to actually apologize? And I feel like I see this in politicians
increasingly when they're accused of things, they're increasingly saying the smart play here
is in fact not to apologize because falling on your sword effectively accomplishes nothing.
Is there a risk that in some ways are unwillingness to accept apologies can
perversely cause us to actually receive fewer apologies?
Yeah, that's a fair point.
You know, if the purpose of an apology is to overcome the problem is to make the victim
forgive you, then yes, this does suggest that maybe the pay-off
or an apology is not as great as we think it is.
In fact, particularly in intergroup
context, these big systemic problems,
we do tend to find that apologies
for these big historical problems don't actually
have that much of a positive impact
on how the victim group feels and whether or not
the victim group is willing to forgive. However, I suppose the other side of this is that that's assuming that the particular
outcome is the purpose of an apology. So if the purpose of an apology is to get forgiveness, is to
make the other person feel better and to feel better as yourself than yes, they are losing their power. Right.
If the purpose of the apology is because it's the right thing to do, because it makes you better as a person,
because it makes our society better.
If that's the purpose of an apology, then it doesn't matter whether or not it follows with forgiveness,
or it follows with reduction in sentencing, or if it follows in reduction of your feelings of guilt,
it's still the right thing to do.
It's hard to admit that we're wrong.
It's easy to feel our own pain,
but much harder to see the pain we cause others.
The psychological barriers to apologizing
make it easier for all of us to ignore
and justify and minimize wrongdoing.
When we come back, why it makes sense to apologize even when forgiveness might not be forthcoming.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. We've talked about some of the internal and external obstacles to apologizing.
Why not apologizing can sometimes feel good, and how admitting that we've done someone
wrong can threaten our positive view of ourselves.
And we've looked at the gaps in perception
between victims and transgressors
that can cause apologies, even genuine apologies,
to be ignored or dismissed.
At the University of Queensland in Australia,
psychologist Tyler Okimoto does more than explore
all the ways apologies don't work or can go wrong.
He also looks at when apologies work, how to apologize better, and why we should.
Tyler, you ran an experiment that measured how likely people were to think an apology was genuine,
and you found a connection with the expression of remorse. Can you tell me what you found?
You know, one of the things that people are really looking for in a
apology is a sincere belief that the individual who's apologizing is
remorseful for their actions. In fact, judgements of remorse and sincerity of that
remorse are really influential in changing whether or not people are
willing to forgive after an apology. What kind of expressions have remorse to do study? So we looked at a
bunch of different sorts of expressions. You know we looked at traditional
apologies so the words that people say and the meaning behind them. We also
looked at physical displays, things like tears, things like your body posture, in a way, those nonverbal gestures are
apparently a little bit involuntary.
And so when you see individuals seeming to lose control with their emotions, with their
feelings of remorse and regret, then it signals to us that what they're saying is actually
true.
In fact, it's so true that they're losing
control, they're crying, they're flopping over in a gesture of submission. So that's
what makes a good apology is all of the pieces around it, not just the words themselves.
I'm thinking of a study by Alison Woodbroke who examined apologies at parole hearings
for crimes ranging from speeding to murder.
And she found apologies with a promise of good future behavior were more effective, whereas
apologies that included an explanation of why the transgression occurred tended to be
ineffective.
What is that telling us, Tyler?
That finding is actually quite consistent with what we find in the psychology literature. There's really two aspects to the reconciliation process.
There's the backward looking, trying to make sense and come to a shared understanding about
what happened, trying to understand the other person's perspective on what happened, trying
to share your own perspective on what happened, and come to some agreement about what the
offense was itself and what my
responsibility was in that.
Then the other half of it is a forward thinking, the future focused aspect of the apology,
which is really what's going to happen from now on.
What people are often looking for is a promise of future behavior. And some action that begins to evidence your willingness to move towards
that future behavior. The research of Cindy France found that apologizing too early can make
apologies less effective. What's going on here, Tyler? If you apologize in a knee-jerk sort of way,
then it really does come off like a knee jerk apology.
But at the same time, if you do delay too long,
I'm then apologized later on down the track.
It really comes off as, oh well,
they tried to get away with not apologizing,
but then finally cave to the pressure.
And so there does seem to be some sweet spot
about where the apology should occur.
In some of the research that we've done,
we actually looked at this timing pattern
within intergroup apologies.
And what we found is this problem with delays
to where if you wait too long, it comes off as cold
and calculated and insincere,
and you only did it because you had to.
But we did find a little bit of an antidote
if the offender group, the transgressor group, did it because you had to, but we did find a little bit of an antidote. If the
offender group, the transgressor group, is using that time for something
positive, is using that time to reflect, then that delay can actually turn out to
be a good thing. Right, so for example, if in the apology you say, I know it's been
a few weeks, the reason why we took that time is because we wanted to really understand the victims
and really speak with them to recognize and understand their perspectives before we could
make an appropriate response.
So in that sense, then that delay can be a good thing.
But in absence of that, in absence of an explanation, then it can be problematic.
It's really interesting, Tyler, because as you're talking, I'm seeing how complex
this issue is, because the line between what makes sense
and what's effective and what's ineffective
is actually quite thin, right?
So in other words, on the one hand,
apologizing too soon can be a problem,
and apologizing too late can be a problem, and apologizing too late can be a problem.
Some researchers found that when you justify
or explain your behavior and talk about your intentions
and say that I actually didn't mean to do this,
that can have a bad effect, and other research suggests
that it actually is helpful to put context to the situation
and say, this is not what I intended to do.
I know that I caused harm, but that it was not my intention.
It almost feels like it's, for every argument you can make
about what makes a good apology, there's another piece
of research that basically says you have to do precisely
the opposite.
Yeah, well, it is complicated.
In fact, this is why I personally find it so interesting
and challenging is because it's sufficiently complex
that there is no formula.
Yeah.
You know, there's writing out there that will say to have an effective apology, you need
these five things or you need the seven steps to this.
That might be true in a general sense, but every situation is different.
And the same apology, the same structure of apology, the same components are not going
to be similarly effective in all situations.
It also means that once you've apologized, you also need to reflect a little bit.
Maybe it wasn't good enough.
If you apologize and it's not accepted, try to learn from that, try to understand what
it is that is needed, try to understand the other person's perspective or the other group's
perspective.
It's interesting because I think when we see people sort of revising their apologies, our instinct is often to say,
well, this person is just, you know, caving to pressure,
or they're basically, you know, they're finally being brought
to their senses to do what they should have done in the first place.
But I suppose a more compassionate way to look at it is to say that
sometimes it does take people some time to actually understand what they have done. And in some ways the
fact that people are revising their positions should not be seen as a bad thing, it might
actually maybe we should say it as a good thing.
Yeah, that's right. In fact, you know, some of the research that we're doing currently
is really looking at diet. So a victim and a fender diet, and trying to understand how the apology and the forgiveness
go together.
And what we're actually finding is that,
we tend to think about these things as,
something's done wrong, you apologize, you forgive,
and then everyone shakes hands and moves on.
In reality, how these things evolve over time
is that
something's done wrong, you know, the victim
expresses the needs that they have in the situation,
the offender tries to respond with something
resembling an apology, the victim then
gives, you know, reacts to that.
And then of course, the offender then revises
what they've said.
And so really reconciliation is an unfolding process,
an unfolding process that's about what's going on inside the offender's head
as well as what they're communicating,
but also what's going on inside the victim's head and what it is that they're communicating as well.
You know, it's so interesting we spoke with the psychologist Charlotte Whitfleet some time ago, and she was talking about the psychology of forgiveness, and she said something that
was almost eerily similar to what you're saying, which is that forgiveness is not typically
a one-half decision.
Like someone says something to you, you say, okay, I forgive you, and you know, case closed
and we all move on, but it's much more of this unfolding dance, if you will, that involves multiple steps back and forth, and it often unfolds over a long
period of time.
Yeah, that's right.
And sometimes you don't know what the victim's needs are.
And so the offender also needs to engage in that process to understand what the issues
are and how to best respond to them.
If I give my own conversations with my wife, you know, sometimes I don't understand why
she's upset about something and so my apology might not be appropriate.
It's really through that conversation and that understanding over time that we come to
realize why it is that the other person is really upset.
And only then can we respond in a way that is appropriate for their needs in the situation.
I want to talk a moment about collective apologies and apologies on a larger scale.
On January 30th 1972, British paratroopers opened fire on protesters in Northern Ireland
and they killed 13 protesters. The event came to be known as Bloody Sunday.
13 protesters, the event came to be known as Bloody Sunday. 38 years later, the British Prime Minister David Cameron offered the following apology.
I never want to believe anything bad about our country.
I never want to call into question the behaviour of our soldiers and our army,
who I believe to be the finest in the world.
But the conclusions of this report are absolutely clear. yn y fwyfnwyr. Mae'r cyflwyngor y fwyfnwyr yn fwyfnwnd ind i'n mynd ind i'n mynd i'n mynd i'n mynd i'n mynd i of that day and with a lifetime of loss. The government is ultimately responsible for the
conduct of the armed forces and for that, on behalf of the government, indeed on behalf of our
country, I am deeply sorry. So Tyler you've cited the speech as a powerful example of a great
apology. What do you think makes it effective? The sincerity that you can hear in David Cameron's voice, the words in fully accepting responsibility,
it was particularly powerful, I think, because he was speaking out in a way against the opinions
and views of past political leaders to say that, no, no, we've actually looked at it.
And we are coming to terms with the fact
that there is a responsibility here
that needs to be accounted for.
Yeah, I'm sort of, I'm not hearing minimization.
I'm not hearing dodging.
I'm not hearing hedging.
I'm not hearing, well, I'm sorry if you felt bad about this,
even though, I don't think there was anything wrong
that was done, I'm not hearing any of those things in this apology.
The people that analyze these sorts of statements from a discourse perspective,
really talk about the bluestunday apology of David Cameron's as really of top 10 apology ever given in
history. So in that sense, the words themselves are really on point.
Yeah. I want to play another clip of another famous apology.
This one was from Ronald Reagan in 1988.
Members of Congress and distinguished guests, we gather here today to write a grave wrong.
More than 40 years ago, shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
120,000 persons of Japanese ancestry,
living in the United States, were forcibly removed from their homes and placed in
makeshift internment camps. This action was taken without trial, without jury.
It was based solely on race, for these 120,000 were Americans of Japanese descent.
Yes, the nation was then at war, struggling for its survival.
And it's not for us today to pass judgment upon those
who may have made mistakes while engaged in that great struggle.
Yet we must recognize that the internment of Japanese Americans
was just that, a mistake.
For throughout the war, Japanese Americans in the tens of thousands
remained utterly loyal to the United States.
So Tyler talk about this apology in the context of the one we heard from David Cameron.
As I'm listening to it, I realize that it surely must help that the person making the apology
is not the one who was responsible for the wrongdoing.
David Cameron didn't order Bloody Sunday, Ronald Reagan didn't order the interment of Japanese
Americans during World War II.
It certainly seems easier to apologize when you are not the person who is actually responsible
for the harm.
Yes, and a lot of these historical transgressions aren't spoken about until generations later
in the majority of cases.
This particular example that you're raising is somewhat personal to myself and that my
lost name's Okomoto and I'm fourth generation American.
And so I had relatives that not were interned but were told to leave California on threat
of internment. And the same thing is true, I guess, on the victim side in that
as a descendant of somebody that would have been affected by this decision,
it's also easier for me as an individual to get to that point of forgiveness because there is
some distance. And a really abstraction of the problem. It's a lot easier to see other perspectives
when you have some distance,
either for you, temporarily or in this case, generationally.
Yeah.
And so it's really not surprising that it, you know,
sometimes takes decades for states, governments,
to understand what is needed in that situation.
And in fact, I, fact, it really takes time.
We look at slavery as another example.
Certain parts of the government have apologized for that, but not all parts of the government.
In Australia, Tyler says the government has denoted a national day of repentance. It's called,
sorry day. The idea is to apologize to Aboriginal people who had that children stolen from them over
multiple decades in the 20th century. The abductions were carried out to assimilate children into
mainstream white culture. The hurt, the humiliation, the degradation, and the sheer brutality of the act of physically
separating a mother from her children is a deeper salt on our senses and on our most
elemental humanity.
Tyler has studied the effects of public demonstrations of remorse by ordinary Australians.
The research that we've done on this is actually pointed to the fact that that sorry demonstration
is really important, while government apologies are great from the victim's group perspective,
what people want from the apology from these collective problems is really a belief that
the offending group as a whole is remorseful.
And so when you get, you know, thousands of people marching in the streets,
saying how sorry they are for what happened, that's actually quite impactful,
relative to just some politician who's getting up there and saying something for possibly political reasons.
It's an acknowledgement of the wrongdoing that was committed to the stolen generations.
It's something that needs to be remembered by everyone. It's an atrocity that happened in Australia's
history. And for a non-indigenous person to learn a little bit, you know, a history about that,
non-indigenous persons, to learn a little bit, you know, history about that. It will show you, or mean a lot to an Aboriginal person.
It can help our people heal.
You know, you hinted at something earlier in our conversation, Taita, that I want to
come back to, which is one reason to pursue apologies might not be necessarily because
they have this instrumental effect on generating forgiveness. Because as we've seen, sometimes
apologies are not crafted correctly. Sometimes the victims might not be in a
position to hear the apology. Sometimes the apology might be insufficient to the
harm that was done. There are all kinds of ways these misunderstandings could occur.
But one idea that you hinted at that's really important is that
our reluctance to offer apologies often comes down to protecting the self, whereas our willingness
to offer apologies often comes down to our interest in protecting relationships. Can you talk
about this distinction that in some ways the reason to offer apologies might not necessarily be
because they're going to generate a forgiveness or get the answer that we want,
but in some ways because you're trying to repair a bond that is afraid or broken.
There's really two sides, two big elements, to what is lost in a transgression.
So, on the one hand, a transgression threatens the relationship that threatens your shared identity, you know, who you are,
you know, for talking about post-relationships. Who are you? Who you are as a couple, the values
that you shared. On the other side, it also does threaten that status and power kind of hierarchy.
So, you know, a transgression demeans the other party. It undermines them. It removes control.
the other party. It undermines them, it removes control. And so from an apology standpoint, apologies is a kind of a response to that loss, are an attempt to recover either one of those
pillars. So apologies can help to rebuild the relationship, reestablish the agreement,
what the relationship is based on, or they can transmit power and control to the other party.
They give the other party the option to forgive. They communicate that degrading you was the wrong
thing to do. The apology is often the starting point to the conversation. Now that you've actually
admitted that something is wrong, now we can talk about the right way to move forward.
And so it's perhaps not surprising that victim groups are not immediately forgiving
in the face of an apology because the apology is an opening.
And it's the first step in moving forward towards real reconciliation.
You know, one of the things that I think I'm really struck by is an echo I'm hearing
in what you're saying and what we heard from the psychologist
Charlotte Whitfleet. We talk with her about the challenges of forgiveness and how it's often
difficult to forgive and sometimes we look for forgiveness in our hearts and don't find it or we wait until we receive the right apology
and often that apology is not forthcoming. And I think what you're saying, Tyler, is the mirror image of that,
which is that you might come up with a beautiful apology,
the right apology, but maybe the victim
is not ready to hear it.
And maybe it's actually going to fall on deaf ears,
and maybe you're not gonna get the reconciliation
that you seek.
And I think a common thread that connects these two veins
of research is perhaps the idea of both forgiveness
and apologies
as gifts, gifts that we give one another without an automatic expectation of reciprocation.
What do you make of that idea, Tyler? A number of psychologists have really conceptualized
apologies as a gift that comes without expectation. And I think that there's something really important in that.
Thinking about apologies, not as a linear progression,
but really as a offering, as a gesture
that is unconditional, is probably good
for getting them to have positive effects
both on the victim as well as on your relationship.
I asked Tyler whether he had ever failed to apologize to someone he cared about. He mentioned his daughter Abigail and how he sometimes loses his temper with her and then fails to apologize.
I asked him what he would tell Abigail if she were listening right now.
Well, this actually sounds like one of our experiments where we get people to
reflect on a time they didn't apologize and so I suppose it's a fair question
because I subject other people to go through this process which is actually
quite difficult. So if I was to offer an apology to my daughter, I'll probably go something like this.
Abigail, you know, I realized that what I said and how really how I said it was a bit over the top,
I was really frustrated and angry at the time, which was probably not the right state of mind to be in
when parenting. And you know, I recognize that the choice that I made to respond in that way is really hurtful to you.
It probably doesn't do great things for our relationship and I promise to do my best to be better.
Even in the future I do fly off the handle. Feel free to give me the signal that I have done such.
I'm sure your mother will help as well. And it's something that I'm committed to improving,
because I know that it's what's best for our relationship.
Tyler Okimodo is a psychologist at the University of Queensland in Australia.
Tyler, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me.
If you have follow-up questions about apologies that you'd be willing to share with the Hidden
Brain audience, please record a voicemail on your phone and send it to ideas at hiddenbrain.org.
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That email address is ideas at hiddenbrain.org
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