Hidden Brain - Mind Reading 2.0: Why Conversations Go Wrong
Episode Date: March 1, 2022Do you ever struggle to communicate with your mom? Or feel like you and your spouse sometimes speak different languages? In the final episode of our "Mind Reading 2.0" series, we bring back one of our... favorite conversations, with linguist Deborah Tannen. She shows how our conversational styles can cause unintended conflicts, and what we can do to communicate more effectively with the people in our lives.If you like this show, please check out our new podcast, My Unsung Hero! And if you’d like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
One of the most famous comedy sketches of the 20th century
is built on a simple misunderstanding.
We just pretend that we're organizing a baseball team here
at the retired actors' home, and I am the manager.
It's the routine from Abbott and Costello, who's on first.
Well, let's see now, we have on our team, we have who's on first,
what's on second, I don't know, who's on third.
That's what I want to find out. That's what I want to find out, the guy's name. I'm telling you, whoosan First, What's on second, I don't know's on third. That's what I want to find out.
I have the guys' names.
That's what I want to find out, the guys' names.
I'm telling you, Hoosan First, What's on second, I don't know's on third.
The duo first performed the sketch in the 1930s
and continued to refine it over the next two decades.
They rarely did it the same way twice.
You learn a lot of guys' names at a baseball field.
Well, go ahead, who's on first?
Yes.
I mean, the guys' names.
Who?
They got players first.
Who?
They got players first.
Who? They got players first. Who's on first? Who's on first? Why do you mean the guys name. Who? They got play first. Who? They got play first best. Who?
They got a first best.
Who's on first?
Why do you ask me for?
I don't know.
That way, that way.
Part of what makes the skit funny is that we are in on the joke.
But what happens when the jokes on us?
When real life conversations go off the rails
because of miscommunication or a misunderstanding,
it's no laughing matter.
There are so many things that could misfire the pace at which you speak, how you get to
the point, the rhythms, the intonation patterns.
Humor!
That is a mind field.
How do you let people know that you're joking and that you're teasing?
This week on Hidden Brain,
we bring you the final installment
of our Mind Reading 2.0 series.
In earlier episodes, we've examined the ways
we read other people's intentions.
We've also looked at the social illusions
that distort relationships.
Today, in a favorite episode from 2021,
we explore how clashing conversational styles
can lead to unnecessary conflict
and how we can learn to talk and listen more effectively.
You say tomato, I say tomato.
If you travel abroad, you instinctively know that the customs in other countries are different.
People have different ways of saying hello and goodbye.
Different rules for conversations with friends.
In recent decades, the linguist Deborah Tannen has discovered that many of us don't need
to travel to exotic lands to experience the bewilderment and confusion of cross-cultural
communication.
We can experience those very same feelings when we talk to our own siblings, parents,
partners, children, friends, and colleagues.
She studies why this happens and how we can all have better conversations with the people
in our lives.
Deborah Tannen, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Such a pleasure to be here. Thank you.
You were born in Brooklyn, New York, your parents were immigrants, one from Poland,
one from Russia. They were both very alert to the ways people use language,
but also alert to subtleties in human relationships.
Can you tell me a little bit about the conversations you had at home
and also the conversations you sometimes had about those conversations?
Yes. Both told stories about people and also how people,
things people had said and how people used language.
My father, in particular, was really attuned to subtleties of language.
And I remember one time he was telling me about an aunt that he had particularly liked.
And he said, now there was this expression,
Khas Fakhalila, something like heaven forbid.
And he said, but she said Khalila Vahas.
And he said, I remember it because nobody else said it that way.
So he had that
attunement to subtleties of language. And my mother was very interested in relationships.
She was an electrologist, it's a removal of unwanted hair, and she would always be telling us about
the stories her patients had told her that day, and so that combination of a two mental language and two relationships kind of came together for me.
So yours later you grow up, you got married, your husband was Greek and you were living in Greece.
You've written that your conversation styles were very different, especially when it came to being direct with one another.
Can you give me an example or two of how this worked, Deborah?
Yes, I would ask him a question, John's having a party and you want to go.
And he would say something like, okay, now to me, okay, is not an answer. I want to go.
I don't want to go. So I would say, are you sure you want to go? And he would say,
why don't you make up your mind? No, where did that come from?
And this is one that I actually went on and tested.
And sure enough, the Greeks that I interviewed
and gave them this example were most likely to say
the wife wouldn't ask unless she wanted to go
and she wouldn't double check
unless she wasn't happy with the decision.
Debra was intrigued by the many ways people understood
and misunderstood each other.
Eventually, she returned to the United States
and began a PhD in linguistics.
One thanksgiving, she decided to do some research
by recording a conversation with friends.
I wonder how our parents felt about Thanksgiving.
Two were from California, one was from the UK.
Debra and two others were New Yorkers.
It was simply my best friend, his brother, his former wife,
and two of his friends who were in town.
Remember with WI and S2's to meet?
No.
They both had big, huge scotch burger there.
No, it was that. We're ever big, huge, Scotch, perfect that. No. Where was that?
Forever Center for Coincreacment for a place.
Did they give you a picture?
That's a lot of circle.
That's a lot of circle.
Here's a lot of circle.
It's a lot of circle.
Now it's the only one.
It's the only one.
It's the only one.
I don't know.
And what I found, first of all, was that I could not
study the conversational styles of each of the people
who was there because it was
difficult for the Californians to get the floor.
He's a sociologist who's so brilliant.
He has to read.
And it goes.
And it goes.
When you read it, you have to have a silence.
All of them.
Read a silence.
And I had to conclude that I was getting a chance to observe the conversational styles of the three New Yorkers,
but not of the others, because they were not able to exercise their natural conversational styles.
It's not that they never spoke, but they couldn't be part of the back and forth give and take,
because any time anyone talks to anyone, we need a sense of how long a pause we think is normal
between turns.
And the New Yorker's sense of how long a pause was normal was shorter.
And so while the Californians and even more the British women, while they were just waiting
for a normal pause so that they could come in, One of the New Yorkers would get the sense, uh-oh, you know, they have nothing to say, we
might as well film this pause.
What's the analyze?
There hasn't been one misunderstanding.
We've all understood each other perfectly.
What do you mean by that?
I want to pause for a moment and just look at what you actually did as you were analyzing
the conversation, because once you had this recording in hand, it took you two and a
half months to transcribe this three-hour conversation.
How much detail were you trying to capture?
I wanted to capture everything that I was aware of that I had perceived.
So I made notes in the transcription whether whether a person said, the or the,
but I had a stopwatch and measured the number of seconds
between words when it was a perceptible pause.
And I had it checked by the people
who had been part of the conversation,
they listened to it and checked it for me.
What I find really insightful and remarkable here
is that it actually took that level of care
and precision and detail for you to actually realize
that there was something happening
beneath the surface of the conversation,
the way people said certain things.
What was the insight that you took away Debra
about the ways in which conversational styles
affected how conversations unfolded
and how people perceived one another.
Well, one of the insights is that you have to look more deeply to see what the intentions were
and how the way one person speaks is actually influenced by how another person speaks.
Some people might have concluded the New Yorkers are interrupting because they're starting to talk when someone else is speaking.
Well, sometimes we talk along as a way of showing enthusiasm. We're so interested. We don't wait for you to stop. We talk along.
I should have had with you guys.
Yeah, we did together.
That's right. We did together.
I was like a person. We should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should have, we should If we do that with someone who thinks one voice goes at a time, if you begin speaking while I'm speaking, that means you're interrupting and I'll stop.
Well, who created that interruption?
It took two people, someone to start and someone to stop.
Another aspect of the style of the New Yorkers.
It isn't the job of a speaker to make sure that other people get the floor. Can you might say it's a sign of respect.
You trust other people to get the floor if they want.
And so if someone tried to bring up a topic
and others were speaking and they didn't stop for them,
they would try again.
And if it still wasn't picked up, they would try again.
Should we do that?
Should we start with the way we're about to play?
Did you get the answer?
OK.
Did he hear it? We have said board girl board.
Board girl board.
Did you hear about the lady who was asked?
And there was one example where one of the New Yorkers, it wasn't he, tried seven times
before he got his turn to say what he wanted to say.
The Californians wouldn't do that.
If they tried to say something and it wasn't
picked up, they gave up. Did you notice things about your own conversational style in that recording
because for the first time, probably you were actually slowing down and listening to yourself speak?
Yes, yes. I did. And in some cases, was kind of embarrassed when I saw the effect of my ways of speaking. An example of that is what I
ended up calling machine gun questions. So I was talking to my friend Carl, he's my best friend,
but one of the guests was a friend of his who was visiting from Los Angeles. The name was Chuck.
So I was trying to be friendly to Chuck and make him feel welcome here. So the truth is I knew the answers to these questions because Carly told me,
but I was trying to be nice to Chuck and give him the floor.
And the conversation went something like this.
I said, you're from LA?
You live in LA?
Yeah.
You're visiting here?
What do you do there?
What do you do there?
I work at Disney Museum.
You're a writer?
Artists?
Yeah, right.
I'm advertising copy.
It was one after another, and his high pitch,
Cliped syntax, and when I listened to the tape,
I realized it was having the opposite effect of what I expected.
He wasn't taking the floor and he wasn't talking,
and I talked to him about it afterwards.
I'm still in touch with all these people who were there.
He was just caught off guard by the rapidity of my questions.
So was that to a permanent full-time thing you had?
So you eat?
Yeah.
It seemed like he was being assaulted by machine gunfire.
And instead of backing off
Did you go there for that purpose and downshifting? I was putting on more and more of these questions
Did you get that job?
My dad's for Christmas 1937
So the interesting thing there is that if you share a conversational style with someone
You essentially can play this game where in in other words, you can interrupt the flow
of a conversation with sort of very quick machine gun
exchanges, and neither party thinks of it
as being obnoxious or rude.
But if you don't share the same conversational styles,
then the very same interruption can come across
as being completely different, clearly over the Thanksgiving
dinner, some of that was happening.
Absolutely.
And by the way, these mutual and negative impressions
go both ways.
It isn't only the ones who are talking
along to show enthusiasm run the risk of being seen as rude,
but people who sit there and don't do their part
in the conversation, that also comes across as rude.
And this is really a universal about human relations
and about conversational style.
If you talk to someone who shares a conversational style with you,
you just talk in a way that to you make sense, it makes sense to them.
And it isn't only that they don't think you're rude.
It's that they appreciate the way you are appreciating them.
It is like a sign of we get each other.
This is a great conversation.
A perfectly tuned conversation is a vision of sanity, a reassurance that you are a right
sort of person and all is unfolding beneath the surface.
Lots of us are not aware of these hidden conversations.
These things are so automatic that when things start to go wrong,
we don't look at that level.
You don't walk away, say,
you're not going to be able to see the difference.
You're not going to be able to see the difference. These things are so automatic that when things start to go wrong, we don't look at that
level.
You don't walk away saying, you know, that was kind of awkward because I think you expect
a millisecond short of pause than I do.
You walk away saying the kind of person you are, you know, you didn't want to give me
a chance to talk or you only want to hear yourself talk or the other side.
Why do I have, is the conversation with you like pulling teeth?
You write at one point what makes misunderstandings resulting from conversational style differences
so hard to clear up is that we don't have a way of talking about them.
We don't think of saying when my voice has that quality, it means I'm being friendly.
Such cues are sent and perceived automatically.
And I might add, they're probably sent and perceived unconsciously.
If you and I are not using the same code book about what a pause means,
what a certain tone means,
we might constantly misunderstand one another,
even though both of us have the best of intentions.
Yes, and astonishingly, I mean, this even happens among people who are married to each
other, are lived together or know each other very well.
So here's another example of lifelong friends.
I think at this point, they're in their 80s, and they've been friends since they were
teens.
They were walking along around a lake, and one was telling about something that was,
she was concerned about.
And then there's a duck coming along the lake with her little ducklings behind her.
And the one who notices it, oh, look at that duck, isn't that charming?
And her friend said, you're not listening to me.
And she said, of course I'm listening to you.
Why would you think, I'm not listening to you?
Well, why are you talking about the ducks?
When we come back, how these misunderstandings produce deep wounds in relationships and
keep people from the happiness that is actually within their reach. You're listening to
Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. Debra Tanen is a linguist at Georgetown
University. She is the author of nearly a dozen books about how people talk to one another
and the ways in which misunderstandings arise
in conversation.
Early in her career, she discovered that many of these misunderstandings were unintentional.
I think you're saying something that you're not saying because without being aware of
it, we have different styles of conversation or different psychological orientations.
Deborah, lots of academics get their work presented at conferences, some of them write books.
You've done those things, but you also had a TV show inspired by your ideas.
For our younger or overseas listeners who are not familiar with this show, can you tell us the premise of home improvement?
Yes, home improvement was a situation comedy,
a man who's kind of a handyman type,
and he's got a relationship with his wife.
And then whenever they have arguments,
which they have often, the premise of the individual segments
is some argument they have, he would go out in the backyard
and talk
over the fence to his neighbor, and the neighbor would shed light on these
arguments, and it was actually told to me by the people who produced and
created the show, the neighbor's advice came out of my books.
Damn, damn, damn, the first step for greatness is humbling yourself.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Maybe you shouldn't try to have all the answers
and instead ask more questions.
You see, Tim, a truly wise man always has more questions
than answers.
Debra, I want to play you another clip from Home Improvement.
Jill, who's the wife, has prepared a surprise romantic dinner.
She gets on the phone and asks him to come home.
He says he'll be back in 15 minutes.
But he ends up staying the whole evening at a bar with his friends.
Here's what happens when he comes home.
I'm really sorry, but the guy's not gotten some real serious discussions
about relationship things, you know.
Men, women, stuff, sharing feelings.
Pretty heavy stuff.
LAUGHTER
I spent two days planning this evening.
Do you have any idea how long it's been since we had a quiet, romantic evening together?
I was on the phone once you said, come home.
I wanted to surprise you. Good night. Come on, Jill. I don't go out with these said, come home. I want it to surprise you.
Good night.
Come on, Jill.
I don't go out with these guys every night.
What's making you so angry?
I am angry because you said you're going to be home
in 15 minutes and then you worked.
Because I'm flirting with you like crazy on the phone.
You didn't even notice.
And most of all, because I went to all this trouble for nothing.
I spent the whole evening by myself.
And now you're stuck with a plate of cold food.
I don't worry about me. I ate at the bar.
So unpack what just happened here, Deborah.
I think the trouble could be traced to the conversation
where she feels that she communicated in her way
of speaking to him that she was flirting,
that she was trying to set up a romantic atmosphere,
and then didn't tell him directly, come home, I have a surprise for you, or it's really important
you come home tonight.
He said, it'll be home in 15 minutes.
Fine.
She took a matter's word.
And this is such a common cultural difference between women and men.
If you think of women's and men's ways of speaking as cultural differences
He expected that his wife would just tell him directly and so his antenna
We're not rolled out for picking up those hints
And he feels falsely accused you didn't tell me there was this special reason for me to come home
So how could I know what do you expect me to be a mindread?
reason for me to come home. So how could I know? What do you expect me to be a mind reader? And we talked about this earlier as well, sort of the difference between people who prefer
their speech to be direct and people who prefer to use more indirect speech. You have something
called the birthday present routine that illustrates this idea. What is it? People who tend to
be direct don't understand why anyone
be indirect, but sometimes they can understand it if you think of the birthday
present it seems. You want the person you love and who loves you to give you a
birthday present that you would want because it's a sign that they care, that
they are willing to take the trouble to figure out what to get you,
that they know you well enough to pick the right thing.
Now, you could say, well, why don't you just tell them what you want?
That would guarantee that you get what you want.
You might get what you want, but you don't get all those other things that you want.
Evidence that they care, evidence that they know you well enough to know what you would want.
And so that is how indirectness works in other contexts as well.
And I think it's so important to point out,
first of all, it's not always women and men.
And in the conversations with my husband,
I was the one who was more likely to be direct.
He was the one more likely to be indirect.
So there's a lot of cultural differences,
regional differences, ethnic differences,
all kinds of other influences.
The way we say what we mean seems so obviously
the way to do it, that you really have to learn
to step back and say, could this person
that I love be using a different style?
We think that because we speak the same language and we think
because we love each other or we like each other or we're relatives, we should understand
each other. When misunderstandings arise in closed relationships as a result of these
underlying differences in communication styles, it can sometimes send a big message to both parties.
This relationship isn't working.
Deborah mentions a real life example she heard of a couple driving in a car.
And she had said to him, are you thirsty, Jero?
Would you like to stop for a drink?
And he wasn't, so he said no.
And then later it turned out that she was annoyed because she had wanted to stop.
And his feeling, kind of like the home-improving example, was, why didn't she tell me?
Why does she play games with me?
Why do I have to be a mind reader?
And I said, you know, I suspect that when your wife said, are you thirsty?
Would you like to stop for a drink?
She probably was not expecting a yes-no answer. She probably expected something like,
I don't know, how do you feel about it? And then she could say, I don't know, how do you
feel about it? She was communicating that she didn't want to make a demand, she wanted
to know how it would be with him. Now, why would she think she has to do that and why would he not think so? My guess
is that his style says you can just throw out my deal and if I don't like it, I'll tell
you. So you start specific and you work your way out. Other people, and she seems to
be one who does it this way, you start vague and work your way in.
You cite the anthropologist Gregory Bateson, who talks about something called
the message and the meta-message. Can you explain those terms to me? Yes. The message is the meaning
of the words. The meta-message is what it says about the relationship that you say these words in
this way, in this context. Often, we end up arguing about the message when it's the
meta-message that upset us. I was walking with a colleague of mine, woman on college campus,
and one of our older male colleagues, Krastra Path, and it was one of these brisk fall days in
the Northeast and she said to him, hi, where's your coat? And he said, thanks mom. And
then as she walked away, she kind of said, what was that about? What was the
meta-message of her asking, where's your coat? For her, it was a meta-message of her asking where is your code?
For her it was a meta-message of friendliness, and if you say something about a person's welfare,
you know, that shows another level of caring about them.
He responded to the meta-message that this is a way of mother talks to a child,
or a person in a position of authority, that talks just a subordinate.
It points up another dynamic that often comes up
with women and men who again can come up
between any two people.
Anytime we talk to each other,
we have to balance both who's up, who's down,
and are we closer distant?
And often women will walk away from a conversation
asking, did this bring us closer?
We'll push this farther apart, where men are more likely to respond
to the question, did this put one of us in a one-up or a one-down position?
And there's so many examples of that, a woman who was hurt that her husband called up
and said, I have a friend, my high school friend is in town. I'm gonna have dinner with him tonight.
And she said, gee, you know, maybe I had some plants
and I why don't you ask how that's gonna affect my plants.
And he said, I can't tell my friend,
I need to ask my wife for permission.
Now, it's checking with your wife, your spouse,
the person you live with, is this about permission?
Who's up who's down, or is it about connection? What we do affects
each other, and so we negotiate things like that. So you write that the seeds of women's and men's
style are sewn in the ways they learn to use language while growing up, and that we grow up in
different worlds, even when we grow up in the same household. What do you mean by that?
Boys and girls tend to play in sex-separate groups.
And the ways that they socialize, the way little girls and little boys
use language and play, tends to be different.
Now, this is researched by psychologists, anthropologists,
that have studied kids at play.
And they have observed that girls tend to play
in smaller groups, often one-on-one,
their social life often,
focused on a best friend.
They spend a lot of time sitting and talking.
Often it's telling secrets.
I collect pictures from, again, all over the world.
Two little girls, one is whispering in the other's ear.
I have encountered a few pictures of boys doing that,
but not many.
Boys tend to play in larger groups,
and it's the activity that's central.
Your best friend is the one you do everything with.
Marjorie Harnett's Goodman is an anthropologist
at UCLA who has observed this.
That boys will often tell the other boys what to do.
And that gives them status in the group,
the one who tells the others what to do,
and they listen, he's the leader.
If girls tell other girls what to do,
she's bossy and they don't want to play with her.
And all of this, of course, has great implications
for when your adults, especially in the world of work.
The larger thing that I'm taking away from this
is that all of us grow up in certain specific cultural worlds.
And we're often those worlds I like, the water we swim in,
if we're fish.
I mean, their worlds we don't even notice.
We sort of assume that the entire world
must be like the world in which we grew up.
And we sort of naively assume that others share
our cultural backgrounds and cultural worldviews.
And so much miscommunication happens because of that.
You've talked, for example, about how when people get married,
they imagine that their partners are going to be,
you know, better versions of all of the best friends
they've had throughout the rest of their lives.
And of course, that places significant burden on that new relationship.
Yes, yes, I often say that for girls and women, talk is the glue that holds their relationship
together.
And so they expect that when they, if they're heterosexual and they expect he's going
to be a new and improved version of a best friend.
He's going to tell me everything.
And then you get to the end of the day and he comes home and she tells him what happened
and what she did and who she talked to and what they said and what's that made her think
and what that made her feel and then how was your day?
Say, well, rap race.
Really didn't anything happen?
Nope.
And then they go out to dinner and they're having dinner
with a number of other couples and suddenly he's regaling the dinner party with something
that happened during the day and she feels hurt. You know, what am I, top liver? Why didn't
you tell me this? And it seems to really be a different sense of the place of talking
a relationship. So for many, and guys, and I always feel uncomfortable
saying women men, when nothing is true of all women
and men, we have so many other influences on our style.
But often men feel like just being together
is what matters.
So we can be not talking to each other
and yet we're together, and that's great.
So it's a kind of public speaking and private speaking.
From his point of view, when he's out with a group, he has to do his part, you know, make
sure he gets the attention and the respect that he deserves.
And it's a kind of display.
And here's when talk comes into its own.
For many women, you know, when you're out in public, you kind of have to be careful
what you say.
If you talk too much, people think you talk too much.
You might say the wrong thing.
You might offend somebody.
Now you're home, but someone you're close to, you feel comfortable, you're free to talk.
I'm wondering, as you go through life, I mean, obviously you notice these things happening
with other people.
Do you notice this happening in your own life, Deborah?
Do you notice moments where you basically stop and say, uh-oh, I understand I miss the
meta message of what was being communicated here?
Well, I tell you one thing that comes to mind.
This is before I was married, so it was a fellow I was dating at the time.
And we were having an argument.
The phone rang, somebody called and said, turn on the television, you're on the television
right now.
So we interrupt our argument, turn on the television, you're on the television right now. So we interrupt our argument, put on the television,
and there I was being interviewed
about conversationalist dialogue.
And what did you find out about conversation
after listening to Wolf?
And I was holding forth on something
that was quite similar to what we were arguing about.
So what's the answer in 10 seconds or less?
Understand that there are conversational style differences and sometimes the adversarial
approach is not going to be the best one.
And did he turn to you and say, Debra Tannen, could you listen to Debra Tannen?
We just both laughed, it was so funny.
Much of the time, misunderstandings don't end in laughter.
They don't even end in outbursts of anger, especially when it comes to friends or colleagues,
we are hesitant to bring up misunderstandings.
We let them go, or we say we let them go, but they fester.
Debra recalls an incident like this.
After she remarried, she and her husband had two friends over for dinner one night.
A friend had come over and another friend of my husband's was there as well.
And my friend, her name was Tamara, kept offering to help.
So when we were serving appetizers, she would help out by kind of
offering people appetizers. And when it came to cleaning up, she was helping to
clean up. And I kept telling her, no you're the guest, you know, you stay here,
but she kept doing it anyway. And at one point I was so frustrated, I actually
grabbed her by the arm and popped her down, but she was
up and trying to help watch the dishes.
And I was so put off by it that I actually found myself thinking, I'm not sure I wanted
her to invite her again in life, but wait a minute, this is a good friend, I'm very fond
of her, we can talk about it.
And so we did.
And she got this look of astonishment on her face and then,
oh my god, she said, you know,
I do that because that's how my mother doesn't,
and that's how I've learned to do it.
And she said, just happened last night.
My mother prepared dinner.
I got up and I kept helping.
And she said, don't do that.
Don't do that. don't do that.
You're the guest.
Stay seated.
And I cleared the table and I washed the dishes and I cleaned up.
And when I was done, my mother said, thank you so much for doing that.
And it was a revelation to both of us.
There are many people for whom the assumption is I'm going to offer to help. You're going to
tell me you don't want me to, but you really do want me to. And in fact, it was another friend.
We were both guests somewhere and she did that. And I said, could you do me a favor, ask the host
the next day how she felt about that and she said, the host
thanked her profusely. She said, I was so tired. There was no way I could have
watched all those dishes myself. I was so grateful. And I heard her saying, no,
no, don't do it. Yeah. And the tricky thing that Deborah is if you had asked that
host, you know, should I have helped, she may have well have told you, no, you
don't have to help because she would have well told you no, you don't
have to help, because she would have felt obliged to say that when in fact she did.
This is what makes it so tricky that sometimes even doing the transparent thing of just asking
the person, tell me what your conversational style is, even that does not elicit people's
real conversational styles.
You know, you were so right.
I was a guest at that dinner and I took the host at her word.
When she said she didn't want help, I didn't help because that's how I prefer it. When I say I
don't want help, I mean, and the term, again, this is from Gregory Bateson,
meta-communicating. You talk about the communication. Metacommunicating often will work, but often it
doesn't because people won't tell you.
Think of a classic example of that.
Someone suggests having lunch and you don't really want to.
You don't say, are you kidding? I would never have lunch with you.
You say, oh, you know, today's I have a lot of words today.
I don't think I'll do it today.
So they ask you again.
And then you say, oh, you know, I'm kind of don't feel that well today.
And so finally, they say, are these excuses real?
Or should I stop asking?
Because you really don't want to have lunch with me.
You're still not going to say, no, I never want
to have lunch with you.
You're probably going to get even more indirect.
Oh, no, no, I really mean it.
You're right.
It is extremely difficult.
Unless you have the kind of relationship where you have agreed,
we both know there is this thing called conversational style.
We both know these are things that can be tricky.
So let's agree that we're going to be as upfront about it as we can when asked.
The same as understandings in professional settings can result in managers feeling
disrespected or ignored, and employees feeling bullied or confused.
One of the managers that was studying told me, he said, you know, when I make a decision, I just announce it,
and I assume that if people aren't happy with it,
they'll tell me, well, that's going to work for some people
and not for others.
So being aware of conversational style differences
is something that applies in every conversation.
Yeah, and you can see in the workplace,
a manager who tells a subordinate, you know,
I'm wondering if you can do me a favor, can you get me an update on that report.
In one situation, the employee can sort of say, this person is not flaunting their power,
even though they could just simply tell me to go and get the update on the report.
They're actually opening a conversation that sort of makes me feel included, but somebody
else could say, you know, why is the boss talking like he's a pushover?
Why can't he just simply tell me what he wants?
And they're both perfectly legitimate ways of entering the conversation,
but the ground rules need to be shared for the conversation to actually unfold successfully.
I think power can be expressed and created either way.
I was once told by a career naval officer.
When he heard me talk about indirectness, he said, that's how
the military works. I said, what? He said, when he was a midshipman, just in training and
one of the officers teaching in class came to the class and he said, you know, it's cold
in here and everybody nodded and he said, young men was men at the time. When I say something, I expect you to do something about it.
So let's try that again. It's cold in here.
And the officer was telling me this story, he said,
and we all jumped up and went to close the windows,
and that was a lesson we had learned that
served just extremely well in the military.
It was because of the power that he had the privilege of being indirect.
What makes all of this even more difficult is that the interplay of conversational styles
changes from person to person.
Debra, as a fast-talking New Yorker, learned she had to force herself not to jump in every time there was a pause
in conversations she had with one colleague. I had to learn to count to seven before I thought
he had nothing to say. His name was Ron Scullin, he was from the Midwest. He was married to Suzie
Scullin who was Chinese from Hawaii and when he talked to Suie, he was the one who kept interrupting, and she would say,
you ask me a question, and you don't give me time to answer, you're asking another one.
He and Susie did research in Alaska among Athabaskan Indians. Susie was constantly interrupting the Athabascans, because their sense of pauses were longer than hers.
So I like that example because it really drives home. We're not talking about
absolutes. You talk fast, you talk slow, it's always relative.
When we come back, how to learn to code switch across the chasms of cross-cultural communication. You'll listen to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
We've seen how different conversational styles can produce unintended conflict and misunderstanding.
Linguist Deborah Tannen's more recent work has focused on the land mines buried in conversations
between siblings, between parents and children, and between political adversaries.
In all these realms, she finds that much animosity and conflict could be reduced if we only
stop to do what her parents did during her childhood or what she did during her PhD
dissertation.
Step back from conversations and analyze them like a scientist.
This is often very hard to do in real life because when people say things that upset us,
we rarely
stop to think. Deborah, after you started getting famous and went on TV all the time, your
mom noticed something about your TV appearances. What was it?
My mother was very upset that I was wearing the same red jacket on all the TV shows. She
just complained. Of course, my mother was the only one who watched
every show that I was on. At that time, it was every city you went to, you did a show. And so I had
the jacket I was wearing on my book tour. But then she would watch them all back to back. And
really upset her. My mother always felt that I paid insufficient attention to my clothes.
I have to mention one thing, since your mom is not here to observe the conversation,
I have to flag the fact that you are wearing a red jacket for this conversation today.
No, it's just a red-chill neck.
But I do like to wear red, it's true.
And what was your reaction when your mom basically told you after you had finished this triumph
in Book Tour, why are you wearing the same jacket all the time?
What was your reaction, Deborah?
I was, of course, heard that she was talking about what I was wearing and not what I said.
And I remember discussing this with the host on one of the National Morning
shows. She told me that her mother did that, that her mother would tell her after each morning
what was wrong with what she was wearing, or maybe what was wrong with her hair.
The kind of interaction Deborah had with her mother has long been a staple of television
comedy. In Vipe, Julia Louis Dreyfus plays a politician and a mom.
In one episode, her daughter reaches out where the heart felt plea.
I have had a hard, lonely, miserable life, and the only thing that is going to make it worthwhile
is if I become the daughter of the next president of the United States.
Okay, sweetie, thanks.
And that jacket doesn't work.
By the way, you look like a waiter.
Oh, God.
Damn it.
Deborah writes about what she calls the big three flashpoints in conflicts between mothers
and daughters.
Hair, clothes, and weight.
And the mother-daughter relationship in some ways is a perfect storm.
From the point of view of the daughter, here's the person you most want to think you're
perfect.
You think she knows you so well, and if she thinks you're wanting, then you really must be
fatally flawed.
From the point of view of the mother, here's the person you most want to help
to make sure everything goes as well as it could for her.
And women are judged by appearance,
hair and clothes and weight.
So, from the point of view of the mother, this is caring.
I just want to make sure everything goes well for you. Nobody else will tell you because they don't love you as much as I do.
They don't care as much as I do. But anytime you make a suggestion for improvement,
you are implying criticism. And that's what the daughters here. So in fact, my mother's
critical is one of the biggest complaints I heard from adult daughters
and one of the biggest complaints I heard from mothers of adult daughters was,
I can't open my mouth. She takes everything as criticism.
And it's both.
It's not who's right, who's wrong.
It's that suggestions for improvement really are implied criticism and are also a sign
of caring.
I understand that one time your mom asked you about your hair.
Yes.
Tell me about that.
I was visiting my mother and she said, do you like your hair that long?
And I burst out laughing.
And she asked why.
And I said, well, you know, I'm writing this book about
mothers and daughters.
And so many daughters tell me their mothers are critical
of their hair.
And she said, I wasn't criticizing.
So I let it drop.
And then later in the visit, I said, so mom,
what do you think of my hair?
And she said, I think it's a little too long.
Now, I was doing this one woman who said to me, she was in her 60s and so her mother would
have been in her 80s and she said, my mother's losing her eyesight. But she can still spot
a pimple across the room. Now, that was said in the spirit of my mother's going to
find my flaw, the one thing, the one flaw. Now, who, when they look at you, is going to
see the pimple yourself. Right. And mothers and daughters often look at each other as reflections
of themselves. And therefore, with the same level of scrutiny to which they subject themselves.
And we touched on this earlier in our conversation.
All of these categories are going to be influenced by class, by culture, by nationality in all
kinds of interesting ways.
They might be cultures where moms are expressing their concerns in terms of how their daughters
are not eating enough,
not that they're eating too much.
I mean, so a lot of this is culturally specific.
Not necessarily that all mothers and all daughters in all cultures behave exactly the same way.
Yeah, well, the specifics may be different.
And by the way, I have been told by some women, my mother never did that, my mother never
criticized.
So all these things are not everybody, not 100 percent, but the pattern seemed to be pretty cross-cultural. So, for example, a woman
from Oman told me that mothers there might say to their daughters, I can see hair, meaning
your hijab isn't completely covering your hair. Or a woman told me, this is from Africa, she had a wedding,
she was gonna go to, she showed her mother the dress,
she was planning to wear for the wedding.
The mother made a comment that she didn't think
it was appropriate, and so the daughter stayed up the whole night
sewing a new dress for the wedding.
Wow.
So the specifics may be different,
but the mother being the guardian
of the daughter's appearance, because women are judged by appearance.
As I read your work, Debra, I was struck by how naively many of us enter conversations.
You know, we think conversations are, you
know, like a walk in the park. When really it's often, you know, potentially a walk
across a minefield. And the fact that we're naïve about the challenges is actually
one of the dangers. We this is why we never expected when things blow up in our
faces. Yes, and this is partly why it's so satisfying when it goes well. There are so many things that could misfire the pace at which you speak,
not just how long you wait between turns, but how quickly, within turns,
how you get to the point.
Do you get right to the point or do you start kind of vague so that
if you're talking to someone who doesn't work that way,
they cut you off before you get to the point, because they think you've had a chance.
The rhythms, the music of speech, the intonation patterns, humor.
That is a mind field.
What can you tell jokes about?
How do you let people know that you're joking and that you're teasing? I'm wondering, Deborah, if one of the solutions that might be called for is in some ways for
all of us to exercise both a little more empathy, but also a little more compassion for
one another.
In other words, to start with the assumption that misunderstandings are happening because
of unintended signals.
In other words, to extend to the other people in our lives,
whether those are work colleagues
or people in our personal lives,
that if a misunderstanding has occurred, odds are,
it's probably happened because of a miscommunication,
not because someone intended to hurt us.
That's a great way to look at it. I often say mine is a rhetoric of good intentions.
And people sometimes object to my work. They say, well, what if people don't mean well? What
if they really are out to get you? What if they really are hostile? And my response is,
that's not news. People are always ready to see other people
that's having bad intentions and being up to no good,
or having bad personality characteristics.
So the news that my work can provide
is to step back and think what if they don't have that intentions but have different
conversational style, different ways of trying to accomplish the positive things
they're trying to accomplish. And what's thinking about conversational style
does is give you a way to imagine different intentions.
Yeah. We had the actor and writer Alan Alda on Hidden Brain a couple of years ago
And he said something that was very insightful. It's possible of course that if we imagine that other people are not trying to harm us
We could be wrong in fact. They might actually be out to get us and we could be naive about it
But but he said the more empathy I have for other people the less annoying I find that they are
the way I have for other people, the less annoying I find that they are. You know, it's separate from the fact that whatever people's real intentions might be,
it might actually be just be better for us to show my empathy,
because we'll end up being less triggered by other people.
I love that perspective, absolutely.
If you frame everything as a fight, it's corrosive to the human spirit.
Everyone feels less safe and more vulnerable.
If you get in the habit of seeing good intentions,
yeah, maybe you'll miss a few bad intentions
and think better of a few people that don't deserve it.
But the world will feel like a safer place,
whether you're right or not.
But I think you'll be right more often than you realize.
Deborah Tannen is a linguist at Georgetown University. Her books include
That's not what I meant. You just don't understand women and men in conversation
and you're wearing that, understanding mothers and daughters in
conversation.
Her most recent book is Finding My Father.
Deborah, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you, it's really been a pleasure.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Laura Correll, Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz,
Autumn Barnes and Andrew Chadwick. Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm
Hidden Brain's executive editor. Our unsung hero today is Ben Riscan. Ben is a
co-founder of Room Tone, a consulting firm that provides strategic and
managerial support to podcasters. Ben is someone who seems to know everyone in the audio field,
and even better, he enjoys making connections between people who have shared interest.
Since we launched our independent production company in 2020, we've greatly enjoyed chatting
with Ben and hearing his insights on where the podcasting industry is headed.
Thank you, Ben.
If you missed any of the episodes from our Mindreading 2.0 series, please be sure to go back and check them out.
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Again, that site is newsneWS-E-W-S dot hiddenbrain dot org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
See you soon.