Hidden Brain - Loss and Renewal
Episode Date: May 25, 2021No matter how hard we work, we won’t always achieve the goals we set for ourselves. When cognitive scientist Maya Shankar was a girl, she wanted to be a concert violinist. Then an injury forced her ...to imagine her life anew. This week, we revisit a favorite episode from 2015 with Maya. She’s now the host of a new podcast, A Slight Change of Plans. If you like our work, please consider supporting it! See how you can help at support.hiddenbrain.org. And to learn more about human behavior and ideas that can improve your life, subscribe to our newsletter at news.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. The turn of the year is a time when we set
the old aside and welcome the new into our lives. And so today we bring you a tale of
loss and renewal from December 2015. It appeals to me for two reasons. The first is it's a universal story.
I was really devastated to lose something that I was completely in love with and so passionate
about and that had really constituted such a large part of my life and my identity. You know,
I was first and foremost a violinist. The second reason is that this is also about social science research and its applications
in the real world.
What we found was a 9% increase in college enrollment rates.
As a result of 8 text messages.
I mean that is really profound.
8 text messages is what I send my best friend on any given day.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan. Today we're telling you a story
that begins in the attic of a home in Connecticut
and ends at the White House.
And on our theme of loss and reinvention,
we'll bring you a poem I came across
from Elizabeth Bishop, read by musician Amy Mann.
Then practice losing farther, losing faster,
places and names and where it was you meant to travel.
None of these will bring disaster.
My grandmother was an Indian classical violinist and so my mom had her old violin and our attic for many years.
This is Maya Shankar, no relation.
Each of my three older siblings had rejected the violin saying that it wasn't cool enough
and my mom finally gave me the instrument and I was immediately taken kind of by the tactile sensation of the instrument.
I mean the wood and the bow. I just loved the feeling of playing the violin.
Even as a child, Maya immediately loved everything about the violin. The way it looked, the way it felt, the way it sounded.
Maya's mother didn't know much about western classical music, but she signed up her daughter for lessons using the Suzuki
method. The focus was on playing by ear and making beautiful sound. Maya
practiced constantly. I had a special scheduled school to lump all my classes
together so that I come a little bit early and get a little bit more practice
in, and especially with all the traveling, most days were devoted exclusively to music.
She got good, very good.
Now the part of her musical education that was missing was the formal part.
She didn't know how to read music very well, but she had a fine ear, and she had ambition.
In the pursuit to find a teacher who would take her to the next level, Maya's mother did
something quite daring.
Yeah, so my mom, she was really a go-getter when it came to my violin life because, like I said,
she didn't really have a lot of experience or exposure to the music community and kind of had to
innovate in order to find opportunities.
There were a New York one day close to the Juilliard school, one of the world's most famous and
exclusive music institutions, when her mother came up with an idea, she said,
Why don't we just go to Juilliard? I mean, why not? What can we lose?
Just walk in the door.
We just walked in. So we walked into the building and just by happenstance, we happened to run
into a student in the elevator who studied with a music teacher and my mom talked to that family and the elevator and said,
would you mind if we just had about five or ten minutes at the end of your lesson
where Maya could play for your teacher?
And they were really gracious and they said, sure, no problem.
Of course, you know what happened next.
Maya played for the other students' music teacher,
wilded the teacher, and got accepted into a summer program.
Soon she was taking classes at Juilliard.
She was playing with other talented musicians.
She was even being featured on NPR.
Joining us now is the Juilliard Pre-College violin quartet.
They are 17-year-old Emily Jen Run from Glassden-Bray, Connecticut.
15-year-old Maya Shankar from Cheshire, Connecticut.
Maya, by the way, is a from-the-top veteran. She's been with us since the early 50s.
That was Maya on NPR's from-the-top. She had found her classical music home.
She was talented, hard-working, and the path before her seemed clear.
I really wanted to be a violinist. I was so passionate about it. I never felt
more comfortable than when I was performing.
For some reason, that's where I experienced flow.
And the ability to spend a lot of time practicing
and trying to perfect the art, and then you go on stage,
and you kind of just surrender.
And you play to the best of your abilities.
There was just something beautiful and elegant
about that process and I just really, really loved it.
She was so good and so enthusiastic
that opportunities kept presenting themselves.
One day her teacher at Juliet arranged for her to play
for a famous violinist, a very famous violinist.
I nearly fell over in my seat because no reasonable musician thinks they're
gonna get the opportunity to meet its octoproleman, let alone play for its
octoproleman. Do you remember what you played? I played the barber violin The The The
The
The
The
The
The
The
The The
The
The
The
The The
The The
The The The The The The The as a student. In addition to Saturdays, I was also going to New York multiple times during the week,
either for studio classes at his home in Manhattan or for private lessons or chamber music lessons,
and at that point it was very clear to me that I wanted to become a concert violinist.
Well, I remember that she sounded, she had a very lovely, we're making music, and that's
for me, a resource, the most important thing.
To concert violinist Itzak Pearlman, it was okay that Maya had learned to play music by
ear rather than by reading music. The technical stuff was important, but it could be learned.
You know, it's more important for me to have somebody musical. And let's say that the
technique wise has, you know, you have to work on the technique, but the important thing
is the music.
And I felt that you had a very lovely way of phrasing and so on and so forth.
And so we worked on that, but then we also worked on, you know, how do you accomplish technically certain things.
For example, in the barbure concert, the last movement is a little bit tricky. So how do you practice that? But Perlman didn't just teach Maya how to play the violin. He taught her something much
more important. How to teach herself to play the violin.
I remember lots of lessons were, instead of telling me,
Maya, okay, clearly you're unsatisfied with that phrase. Here's what you should do to make
it better. He would instead say, Maya, clearly you're unsatisfied with that phrase, what do
you think you should do in order to make that phrase better? Let's talk about it. Let me hear
what your aspirations are for the arc of this musical phrase. What tools do you have at
your disposal, either with your bow arm or your vibrato or your tone, in order to make it
beautiful? And it's really frustrating. I mean, in the moment, you're thinking, okay,
man, like, you're the expert here, you know? Just tell me what to do. Please just tell me
what to do and make this easier for both of us.
So the more you learn, the more to think for yourself and to try and solve problems on your own,
the better it is for you for the future.
It was all going so well. When Maya was 15, she was practicing at a program run by its sock parliament. And I was playing a passage from a very challenging
Paganini Caprice.
And I simply overstretched my finger on one note,
and I felt kind of a popping.
And so I overstretched the tendon,
and it didn't really heal as expected.
And so how did you spend the next months?
What did you do?
Well, Mr. Prolement was such a gem because I injured my left hand. He continued to teach me violin
just with my bow arm. So for over a year I went to him and we just worked on
perfecting my bow arm and I would just play open strings in every lesson.
And he would teach me about how to produce pretty beautiful sound. You know, you always feel that, you know, it will resolve itself.
So usually what happens if one hand doesn't particularly, you know, respond or anything
like this, you work on the other hand just, you know, not to waste time just to do so
if you've got your left hand that has a problem that you work on the right hand, just, you know, not to waste time just to do so if you've got your left hand,
that's a problem that you work on the right hand and vice versa.
It's good, you know, her attitude was, you know, I mean, obviously she wasn't, I mean,
I'm sure that she was feeling good about it, but it was never like what's to use.
Maya's hand didn't heal.
Doctors finally told her she had to stop playing completely.
I was really devastated to lose something
that I was completely in love with and so passionate about
and that had really constituted such a large part of my life
and my identity, you know.
I was first and foremost a violinist.
And so I was anxious because I was worried
that I would never find
something that I felt as passionately about as I did with music.
Just like that, Maya's dream to become a concert violinist was over.
Back home for the summer in Connecticut, she started to ask herself how she could pick up the pieces,
would she ever find anything that could make her as happy as the violin?
Our next guest appeared as a violinist on a pilot episode when she was just 12 years old.
She's now 23 and during those intervening years,
well, brace yourself because what she's accomplished
is a little humbling to us mere mortals.
Please welcome Maya Shankar.
Applause
To find out what Maya did, stay with us.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
On our last podcast of the year, we're exploring the idea of closing the book on one chapter
of your life and opening another.
We're doing it through the story of Maya Shankar.
After learning she could no longer play the violin due to an injury to her left hand,
Maya retreated to her parents' home in Connecticut.
Her life felt indiscery.
The summer before, doctors basically told me I had to stop playing completely. And just
by luck, I was helping my parents clean their basement in Cheshire, Connecticut, and I stumbled
upon an old coursebook of my sister's, it was called The Language Instinct by Stephen
Pinker. Maya started reading, and the more she read, the more excited she became.
It was remarkable for me to learn about just how complex our minds were and just what was
required in order for us to have our day-to-day experiences.
And so it really wet my appetite for learning more about the mind and for exploring and
more depth, kind of the brilliance of the brain.
She started to study cognitive science.
She went on to get her PhD at Oxford on a Rhodes scholarship.
She got a postdoctoral fellowship,
a promising career in academia lay ahead of her.
But here again, came another unexpected turn.
So over Thanksgiving break of the final year of my postdoc,
I was at home and I was visiting my undergraduate advisor
from college,
named Laurie Santos, and she was telling me about the U.S. Department of Agriculture's efforts to get free
and reduced price lunches, school lunches, into the hands of more eligible students.
Students were going hungry because the process of getting certified for the lunch program was cumbersome.
The Department of Agriculture came up with a simple idea.
Instead of having a multi-step sign-up system, states could use information they already
had about poor families to help enroll children in the lunch program.
And it's just a matter of data matching and cross-enrolling these students.
But as a result of this common sense reform, you know, 12.4 million students as of 2015 were automatically enrolled
into the school lunch program and had access to lunches
and were able to thrive at school.
And I remember being so moved by this example.
Dumaia, it was magical.
It was just like a light bulb went off in my head
and I thought, okay, this is what I need to be doing with my life.
I want to be taking research insights from the behavioral sciences
and allowing them to find their way into public policy
so that they can be in the service of Americans and people
around the world.
So how do you break into the world of policy
when you're just a lowly post-doc?
Maya knew nothing of politics.
She didn't have connections in the world of government.
But she did remember a lesson her mother had taught her standing outside the Juilliard
school years earlier.
She tracked down an email address for Thomas Kalea who was helping the Obama administration
with its science policy.
I sent Tom again a cold email.
This is the Juilliard method again.
This is my mom's dulyard.
I get to give her full credit for this.
She is totally fearless and kind of inspired this trait.
And I went over to his home and he asked me to pitch to him ideas that I had around interventions
where behavioral science could improve public policy outcomes.
What did you tell him? I talked to him about a number of things like the
importance of using social norms to motivate behavior. So we know from research
that if you tell people that their neighbors use less energy than they do, right?
They're more likely to use less energy. And there's a lot of domains in which
just telling people what the data shows about people's
actions and decisions can actually drive actions that are more in alignment with people's
long-term goals or with policy objectives.
And something that struck me about that conversation is I had been talking for years with my academic colleagues
about the potential applications of using behavioral insights
to improve people's lives.
And this was the first time that when I told him an idea that I had,
his response was, oh, we can find a way to do that.
Maya joined the White House. She was asked to put together a team
that could marshal ideas from social science research
and apply them to public policy challenges. You've had a chance in your current role to actually
work on this project that started you on this mission, the school lunch program. Can you tell me
a little bit about that? So we have been working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and also
local school districts to redesign communications that they're sending to families
to help promote the verification process so that their kids can stay on the benefit.
So we've done a few things. So there's a few behavioral insights that we've used.
One is we've taken a very long list of action steps required for verification
and condense them into three easy to understand steps that you can take.
Two, we've worked with school districts to translate the communications into multiple languages
in order to support comprehension among the diverse population that this program serves.
One issue is that at present families might only think the way to recertify or to verify their information
is to send snail mail or to verify their information is to send
snail mail back to the school district.
And instead, there's the opportunity for them to take a picture of their information
using their mobile phones and actually email it back.
And we simply notified people of the opportunity to go through that process.
And then in other instances, we included prepaid envelopes to help ease the process
of verifying eligibility.
So I'm trying to think about why it is we often have trouble sort of thinking about programs
like this because as someone who has been interested in human behavior for a while, it
seems to me that programs like these really are, you know, no pun intended, a no brainer,
that this is really something that we should be doing. It seems obvious that we should
be doing it. But I think part of the issue is that I think many people might say, if you want to stay
in a program that's giving you benefits, and these are the steps you need to do in order
to get the benefits, and you deserve those benefits, rationally speaking, you should be willing
to do those steps in order to get the benefits.
And I think it fails to take into account the difference between how human beings are
supposed to behave as rational creatures and how they actually behave.
And I feel like that's the central divide that your work is trying to bridge.
And I think additionally, you know, the onus is on the government to present information clearly, to present choices clearly, so that people understand what program exists and what
their options are and can make the best decisions for themselves and their families.
But there's one example that I wanted to point to, which is a phenomenon known as summer melt.
This is the phenomenon where talented high school students who are on track to go to college at the
start of the summer somehow lose their way and don't show up at college in the fall.
Maya and her team have worked on simple, low-cost interventions that can help these students
get to college.
Their idea, send the students eight text messages over the summer, reminding them of impending
deadlines.
What we found was a 9% increase in college enrollment rates.
As a result of eight text messages.
I mean, that is really profound. 9% increase in college enrollment rates. As a result of eight text messages,
I mean, that is really profound.
Eight text messages is what I send my best friend
on any given day.
It seems to me that what you did and what happened to you
is actually happens to lots of people all the time
where doors close and they feel like it's unbearable
that this door is closed because this is where I thought
I lived and then another door opens and you realize
there are actually many, many houses in which we can live.
I think that's exactly right.
And I think one thing that violin,
one of the great blessings of playing the violin
is that it allowed me to see what it really felt
like to be in love with something and to be really passionate about something.
And so if anything, you see sort of features or traits that are extracted in you from
engaging with that pursuit.
And then your hope is that in the new explorations, those disciplines
or those areas can extract those same qualities from you.
I'm wondering as you think about your own life, do you feel that your career now has been
set? This is the house you're going to live in forever. Do you actually believe, on the
other hand, that there might be many other houses you will one day come to live in?
Well, I've certainly never been happier than I am right now working in public service and using
my background to help improve people's lives.
So I think that that will continue to be a common theme of whatever it is that I end up
doing and working in.
That said, I think there are so many ways in which that passion can manifest, right?
And I think that one thing the past has taught me is that the world has endless opportunities
to positively impact people's lives.
And along the way, I might explore various different paths in order to get there.
But as long as I stick to that core value of trying to help people and improve people's
lives, I think that there are many ways to do that.
And of course, you have the cold-called
Julia Admeta to aid you.
Yeah.
So I think that, yeah, again, thanks to my mom,
I think that there is always that full-proof method
of the standard cold-call.
That was Maya Shankar.
She served as senior advisor for the social and behavioral
sciences at the White House Office of Science and Technology
Policy on the President Obama. Since then, Maya has left the White House
and become Google's first head of behavioral insights.
I told you at the start of this episode that Maya's story is a universal story. Now, not
all of us are going to be concert violinists or road scholars or
presidential advisers, but I don't think any of those things are the real
point of Maya's story. The reason I wanted to tell you the story at the turn of
a new year is because all of us have chapters in our lives that close and when
they do, especially if it's a chapter we have known and loved for a long time,
it can feel like the whole book is over that there's nothing left to do, maybe even nothing left to live for. But I think
each of us has stories in our lives that reflect the fact that the people we are
today are not the same people we were a few years ago. We often underestimate our
capacity to reinvent ourselves.
I was talking some years ago with Rick Potts, he's a paleoanthropologist and the head of the Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins program.
And something he said stuck in my head, he told me that the thing that distinguished
early humans from other species was our remarkable capacity to adapt to different
conditions, different situations. Uniquely, humans live in very cold places and very hot places,
at altitude and sea level, some of us live long periods underwater or even in outer space.
Most of that isn't about our physical abilities, it's really about the mind. And each year, around
this time, we need
to remind ourselves that as one door closes, we have the ability to find other doors to open.
I want to leave you with a lovely poem by Elizabeth Bishop.
Singer Amy Mann happened to be at NPR and we asked her to read the poem for us.
One art by Elizabeth Bishop.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.
So many things seem filled with the intent to be lost, that their loss is no disaster.
Lose something every day, except the fluster of lost door keys, the hour badly spent,
the art of losing isn't hard to master.
Then practice losing farther, losing faster, places and names and where it was you meant
to travel.
None of these will bring disaster.
I lost my mother's watch.
And look, my last or next to last of three loved houses went.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.
I lost two cities' lovely ones, and Vastor, some realms I owned, two rivers a continent.
I missed them, but it wasn't a disaster.
Even losing you, the joking voice suggests your I love.
I shant have lied.
It's evident the art of losing is not too hard to master, though it may look like, write it, like disaster.
That was Amy Mann, reading one art by Elizabeth Bishop. Amy was at NPR with Ted Leo to perform
for the All Songs Considered Podcast.
This episode was produced by Maggie Penman and Karamagurk Allison.
Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Parth Shah, Raina Cohen, Laura Correll, Tara Boyle, Thomas
Liu and Kemela Vargas-Drestrepo.
Our unsung hero this week is someone who helped me reinvent my own life.
Paul Ginsburg is a longtime NPR supporter and donor. In December 2013, Paul came to me
and told me I should be doing more than just weekly stories for radio. What about a podcast he asked?
Paul did more than just simply toss out an idea. He helped to make it a reality. He raised funds to
launch Hidden Brain and he's been a trusted friend and advisor ever since.
More than time and money, Paul gave me what might be the most valuable gift one person can give
another. He helped me see something in myself that I had not seen on my own. Thanks Paul.
From everyone at Hidden Brain, we wish you new paths, new dreams, and much reinvention
this coming year.
I'm Shankar Vedantam, and this is NPR.