Hidden Brain - Reframing Your Reality: Part 1
Episode Date: July 18, 2022We often assume that we see ourselves and the world around us accurately. But psychologist Alia Crum says that our perceptions are always filtered through our mindsets — and these mindsets shape our... lives in subtle but profound ways. In the first of two episodes, Alia explains how mindsets affect our response to stress.If you like this show, be sure to check out our other work, including our recent episode about how group identities can affect our behavior. And if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In the annals of TV comedy, there have been many figures with a dour, cynical outlook.
But there's one that stands out for her relentlessly pessimistic mindset.
Hi, I'm Debbie.
Rachel Dratch is unforgettable character from Saturday Night Live.
You're enjoying your day, everything's going your way, then alone come stay the downer.
You guys, I love wedding come stand, you downer.
You guys, I love wedding.
This one the best ever.
Wish I'm luck.
The only thing higher than gas prices in this country
are divorce rates.
Debbie Downer shows up at parties, weddings,
and holiday gatherings, always ready to remind people
that life is terrible.
All right, it wants cake!
I want some.
Go, alright, you get to pay.
Can you wait?
Then for me, with all the refined sugars we're eating,
America is experiencing a virtual epidemic of juvenile diabetes.
It's a fun, a fun.
We all know Debbie Downer's in real life.
People who can't help but accentuate the negative,
who focus on the faults and flaws of others,
who always, always see the glass as half empty.
A lot of people, that's the one people come up to me and they're like,
oh my gosh, that is my sister, that's my mother, like everyone has with Debbie down
and they're like, so I think that's why it hit so hard, but um...
This week on Hidden Brain, the surprising psychology of mindsets, I think that's why it hit so hard, but um... Can you do that?
This week on Hidden Brain, the surprising psychology of mindsets, why they matter and how
to master them.
What we can do with our minds, what we can do with our intention and our energy is incredible
and it's a power that we often fail to realize is even there.
A quick note that we're doing something a little unusual today,
this episode is part one of our story.
There's going to be a second part, we'll feature that story in our next episode.
It's best to listen to these episodes in order.
in order.
When most of us think about our problems and challenges, we locate them in barriers and conflicts we experience in the outside world. Your job application gets turned down, your
partner breaks up with you, you fall sick and find it hard to get out of bed.
At Stanford University, psychologist Aliyah Kram has spent a long time thinking about how we perceive the obstacles we confront
and how we respond to them. Aliyah Kram, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thank you, it's great to be here.
Aliyah, understand that you were a very serious amateur athlete as a child and as a young
person from age 4 to 14.
You were a competitive gymnast in college.
You played division one ice hockey.
You later became an internationally ranked triathlete.
I want to take you back to your time in college when you were contending with the exertions
of your sport.
Can you give me a sense of your hockey training regimen?
Yeah, being a division one athlete is no joke.
It's a full-time job in the midst of already a full-time job
of going to college.
We trained five days a week.
We had two games on the weekend.
Practices were two hours followed by strength training
after that.
It was quite a grind.
And did you feel as a result of doing all this exercise
that you were doing all that you could do to get in shape?
Not at all.
Well, the interesting thing is we'd have a two-hour practice,
then go to the gym.
And then just because I didn't feel like it was
quite enough, I would get on the treadmill or the elliptical and get a little extra cardio.
One day, as she was taking a run along the Charles River, a set of intrusive thoughts entered
her mind.
She was letting people down.
She was letting herself down.
And all my teammates can attest to this.
They're like, you know, there was a few of us who had this sort of like feeling of scarcity.
Like we just weren't doing quite enough and we needed to do more.
And you know, it was just this persistent feeling of, this is not enough.
I'm not doing enough. And I remember, I'll never forget it running on the Charles that day when I had this
Moment of feeling like is it ever enough? Will I ever do enough?
Hmm
And what about when it came to diet part of what you have to do when you're an athlete?
Of course is all the physical conditioning, but presumably you were also paying a great deal of attention to what and how much you ate
Yeah, diet is a huge deal for athletes and it's tricky.
Different sports have different issues.
You're wanting to, as an ice hockey player, you want to gain muscle, but still stay lean
so that you're fast and quick on the ice.
These are in some ways competing demands. And same with the exercise, just constantly feeling like I wasn't eating
right. I was eating too much or eating not the right foods. I was too heavy or not strong
enough. Mostly for me, I'm a naturally muscular person, but I always had this feeling like I was gaining weight that I
shouldn't have. So there was this constant conflict, constant tension, feeling like
I should be eating less.
Alia was surrounded by smart, driven people. I asked her if the voices of criticism
she constantly heard were coming from the outside or the inside.
This was all self-generated. I
Kind of had this uncertainty or feeling like I wanted to be in the best shape possible
But really not feeling like I was ever there every day was a struggle
And did you worry about what others were thinking about you your advisors your coaches your fellow players?
Oh constantly, you know as an athlete you're worried that the
professors Don't think you're as constantly. You know, as an athlete, you're worried that the professors
don't think you're as smart or, you know, and as an athlete, you worry that, you know, are you going to live up to playing at the same level as the other teammates that you have played
with a number of Olympians? And there was a constant feeling of a vinaticacy, you know, compared to them.
and there was a constant feeling of a vinaticity compared to them. Alia was interested in psychology, but didn't have a good way of understanding her own feeling of scarcity,
that nothing she did felt like enough.
A few years later, now in graduate school, Alia was driving herself as hard as ever.
She wasn't just stressed, the fact that she was stressed had itself become a form of stress.
She asked herself,
what does it mean that I find this so hard?
It was grad school for me when the real kind of self-doubt started seeping in as an academic.
I think as an undergrad at Harvard, I was mostly just excited to be there,
to learn and to grow and to take interesting classes.
And I was fortunate enough to get into Yale as a PhD student.
And that's when I really started to get stressed.
I wanted to have a successful dissertation.
I wanted to do research that made a difference.
And I wasn't sure if I was doing that.
You know, I wasn't sure if I was learning the right things
if I had the right ideas, if I was working hard enough,
if I knew enough statistics, if I was reading the right papers,
there was sort of this constant feeling of self-doubt.
And that carried with it a lot of stress, a lot of feeling like I was in
this constant state of threat or challenge and wanting to succeed, caring about it so much,
but not really feeling like I was in flow, if you will. I wasn't in that state of just, you know,
feeling confident in myself.
But then one night as she was working late, the world presented a
Leah with a little gift, a brief moment of insight.
And I'll never forget it.
I was, this was about my third year in graduate school and I had my meetings
with my advisor, Peter Salovey at 8 a.m. on Friday mornings.
And 8 a.m. is still early when you're a grad student.
But I always remember sort of frantically Thursdays trying to finish the things that I said I was
going to do, come to him with a new idea, a new breakthrough, some new analyses.
And this one particular night I was working on coming up
with the idea that I was going to pursue for my dissertation.
So there was a lot of stress about that.
Do I have a worthy idea?
And I was in the lab late at night.
Now they put the grad students at Yale,
at least at that time, in the basement
of the psychology department.
That's where they kept the computers
with the statistical software.
And I was in there late at night,
stressed, anxious, feeling self-doubt,
frantically trying to run some analyses,
come up with some ideas, coming up with something
that I could present to my advisor the next morning.
Outside the closed doors of the lab, Alia heard footsteps.
Yeah, it was late at night, so I didn't think anyone would really be there, but I heard footsteps
coming down the door, and you can hear anything in that basement because it's concrete and you know even the slightest
move you feel like crack or a creek and you know I perk up I'm like who's here who am I gonna have
to talk to I don't have any time to talk you know I'm busy and the door creaked open and in looked
Brett Logan. Now Brett was the IT person at Yale. Still is, he's a great guy.
And, you know, we were friends,
but I didn't have any time to talk to Brett
at this particular point in time.
So I looked up at him,
kind of with this frazzled stress state.
And he must have picked up on it
because all he said in response to me was,
it's just a cold, dark night on the side of Everest.
And then shut the door.
A cold, dark night on the side of Everest,
what do you think he was trying to say, Alia?
You know, at the time, I didn't think twice about it.
I was just like, okay, Brett went
back to my stressing and struggling. But it occurred to me about two weeks later. I remember
waking up in the middle of night and thinking and realizing what he meant.
So if you were climbing Everest, you could imagine that there'd be some nights that were
cold, that were dark, perhaps you'd be tired or strained.
But what did you expect?
Did you really expect that climbing Everest would be a walk in the park?
Would climbing Everest be such a great feat if it was just a walk in the park?
No, so what did I expect?
Did I expect that getting a PhD making a contribution to the field of psychology was gonna be easy?
No, would it be that great of a feat if it were just a walk in the park? No.
So I think what Brett meant there or what it meant to me was
it really gave me a profound shift in perspective,
a profound shift in mindset going from this place of like,
this stress and struggle is a sign that I'm not worthy,
that something's wrong, to, oh, this stress, this struggle, this cold, dark night, this
is part of the process.
This is it.
Like, this is what makes you great.
What makes you succeed.
So in some ways, what you were hearing was that that yes, it's difficult, but it's difficult
for a reason. And once you focus on the reason, then in some ways it puts the difficulty
into some perspective. 100%. You know, we get messages from everywhere, from public
health, from culture, from books, telling us that stress is a bad thing, that it's going to make
a sick, it's going to hurt our productivity, and therefore we should avoid it or kind of
counteract it.
But if you think about the times in your life that you grew the most as a person, or you performed as exceptionally high level as an athlete,
or as a professional, or as an individual.
And you look back to those times and you ask yourself, did those times involve any stress?
The answer invariably is yes, part and parcel of the things that matter to us is stress.
Stress is defined as the experience or anticipation of adversity in one's goal-related efforts.
That last part is critical, those goal-related efforts.
What that means is we don't get stressed about things we don't care about.
So if I told you that Johnny was failing school or, you know, Johnny wasn't
going to pass his PhD qualification exams, that wouldn't stress you out unless you were
Johnny. Or you cared about Johnny or you cared about the Johnny's of the world passing school,
right? So you start to realize that stress and our values, our cares, our goals, are two sides of the same coin,
you start to get a new approach, you know,
a new mindset about the nature of stress.
What's interesting, of course,
is that when you had this insight about the comment
and what the comment might mean, you know,
cold, dark night on the side of Everest,
it didn't change your circumstances.
You were still in grad school.
You were still trying to find a dissertation topic.
You were still juggling all the things that you were juggling.
And yet, it did make a difference.
It made a profound difference.
It was game-changing.
And you're exactly right.
Nothing else changed.
It's not like I had a eureka moment in some analyses
or that I just advanced a year in my PhD.
I was the same person in the same circumstance,
doing the same thing with the same meetings
and tasks ahead of me.
The only thing that changed was my mindset,
was my view of stress, of struggle,
in this process of getting a PhD.
Philosophers, novelists and spiritual counselors
have wrestled with the question for centuries.
The problems we face in our lives
are obviously shaped by our experiences in the world,
but our perceptions of those problems are also our perceptions,
they are shaped by what happens inside our own minds.
When we come back, what modern psychological science is finding
about the role that our own minds play in our construction of problems
and their solutions?
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. How much to our minds shape the way we experience the world?
And how much does the way we think shape our ability
to respond to challenges and setbacks? Alia Crum is a psychologist at Stanford University. She
studies how we interpret and respond to everyday challenges. Her research
suggests that while we naturally focus on what appear to be the objective
facts of our day-to-day dilemmas and setbacks, these challenges are often shaped in consequential
ways by our own minds.
Alia, I want to take you back one more time to a defining moment in your athletic career
where now going back even earlier into your childhood, you were 10 years old and getting
ready for an important gymnastics meet that was going to happen in three days.
Can you tell me what your preparations involved
and what happened at the gym?
Yeah, so I was a very serious gymnast
growing up, we trained four hours a day,
four days a week with meets on the weekend.
And I loved it.
I was all in gymnastics.
I cared about it so much.
We had a great group of us doing it.
You know, I would come home and
get on the beam to do more practices. I just loved it and wanted to excel at the highest level.
And I had a chance to do this. I had a chance gym training before the meat and I did a vault.
And on the vault, I hit my ankles together so hard, landed wrong and I was limping and
I was hurt. And I thought, okay, it must not have been that big of a deal. I'm probably
fine. I tried to walk around. I tried to walk it off.
But I couldn't walk it off.
I had to stop.
Ice.
And the pain was shocking.
It was both physical and also emotional,
because I had this immediate sinking feeling
of I'm not going to be able to compete.
How bad was it? It sounds like you hit your ankles together,
sort of the bony part of the foot that must have been quite painful.
Yeah, that bone, little bone in the middle of your ankle that sticks out,
those two things hit together. I had to stop that day, I went home, I was distraught,
but I was determined.
So I had that moment of, oh God, what happened,
and then the next feeling was, I must do this,
I must compete.
So we did everything we could to get it ready.
I was icing and wrapping it and elevating it
and took care of it as much as I could the next few days.
Alia's father told her that healing had to do with her mind, not just her body. My father was a martial artist.
He was a master of the art of Ikeido and had done a lot of visualization and energy work.
And so I worked with him on my mind at the time.
I worked with sending energy to my ankle
and I worked with visualizing my routine.
I knew I couldn't train physically,
but I could train in my mind.
And the wonderful thing about gymnastics
is your routines are preset.
So you know exactly what you're going to do
and what you should do.
And that makes it very easy to visualize. So I spent those few days just visualizing my routine,
doing nothing physically, but doing everything mentally.
Did you get to the regional competition that weekend?
I did. We went there, and not only did I get there,
I competed on that foot, and I qualified for the National Championship. Wow. So a couple of days later,
Lea, you received some news about your ankle. Tell me the news that you received. A few days later,
it was still bothering me. You know, the visualization had helped my performance, but it didn't
had helped my performance, but it didn't heal the pain completely. I felt no pain during my performances on floor vault being and bars, but after, you know, it wasn't like the ankle, magically,
was better. So we went to the hospital and got an x-ray, and I found out that the ankle was very
clearly broken. You had competed on a broken ankle and you qualified?
That's correct.
I mean, that almost seems impossible.
It does, right?
We think that the world is physical.
We think that our bodies are physical and solely physical.
And if you have a broken ankle, that should be, you know, career ending or at least competition
ending.
And what you start, what I learned then very clearly was that the physical is only a portion.
It's a very real portion and it shouldn't be totally overridden or discarded.
But it still is only a portion. And what we can do with our
minds, what we can do with our intention and our energy is incredible. And it's a
power that we often fail to realize is even there. And certainly are not fully
tapping into it in the ways that I think we can and the ways that I
was able to do that day. After you became a psychologist, you became a researcher
into the psychology of mindsets and you've used that term a couple of times in
our conversation already. Can you explain to us what mindsets are? Yeah, we view mindsets as core assumptions that we make about the nature of
ourselves or things in the world. They're beliefs, really. They're a type of
belief, but it's a very powerful type of belief, right? So we have mindsets
about our own abilities or our intelligence, but we also have mindsets about
other things. Mindsets about the But we also have mindsets about other things.
Mindsets about the nature of stress, mindsets about the capabilities or
limitations of our own bodies. Mindsets about the enoughness of the foods that
we're eating or the exercise we're doing. Their perspectives, their lenses,
their frameworks, their just assumptions about the meaning
or the nature of those things.
So one of the things that you discovered as you started
engaging in this research is that it's not just the case
that many of us don't understand the power of mindsets.
Many of us don't even realize that we have mindsets.
I think that is perhaps the most profound realization of all, right?
It's exciting and we can talk about all the ramifications of mindsets,
how they change our attention, our affect, our physiology, and our behavior.
But to go back a step before that is to realize that we have mindsets.
You know, so often we think that our beliefs, our experiences,
are a direct reflection of the world as it objectively is.
And what you come to realize is that is just not the case.
Our perceptions, our beliefs, our experiences are always an interpretation.
They're always filtered through the lenses, the mindsets that we have.
I'd like to talk about some of the research and the ways in which mindset seem to influence
us.
One of the things they seem to do is they seem to shape our expectations,
our predictions about what will happen. And to some extent, I think that's true of what
happened with you on that gymnastics floor that day at the regional competition. Your
expectations, your predictions about what you were going to do ended up shaping what you
actually did. Can you talk about this idea that one powerful effect that mindsets have is that they shape our expectations of the world?
Yeah, so you can imagine if, you know, I had gone to the doctors that day and they said,
your ankle is broken, you can't compete, right? That would be one mindset. That feeling
of this ankle is broken, you will not be able to compete, you will feel pain, you will
be not functioning, right? That's the expectation. I was somehow able to shift into a mindset
or a belief that I was okay, that I could still perform in the midst of this issue, whatever
it was going on in my foot. And that led to the expectation that I was
going to be just fine, that I was going to get up there and perform to my highest
ability.
Can you explain this idea that's increasingly common among neuroscientists and cognitive
scientists that the brain operates as a sort of prediction
machine, what does that mean, Alia?
Yeah, the whole goal of the brain is to try to figure out what's going to happen next
so that it can prepare and prioritize what the body is doing now in preparation for that
moment.
So, again, we're not just responding
in a passive or reactive way,
we're proactively thinking about,
okay, are you going to be able to do this?
How is this milkshake or meal going to make you feel?
Are you getting enough exercise?
The brain is calculating and making estimates
on those predictions, and that's sending signals back to the body to say,
oh, well, if I'm not getting enough food,
I need to maybe slow my metabolism down,
maybe boost up the hunger signals so I seek out food.
If it's, oh, I think I'm hurt.
I need to send inflammation signals throughout my body.
I need to send pain signals throughout my body. I need to send pain signals throughout the body.
So I sit and I avoid activity.
So our brain is constantly trying to predict what's going to happen
so that it can regulate our bodies and prepare it for what it thinks is going to occur.
And of course, that's going to shape what the brain pays attention to.
If you think I'm definitely going to compete in the regionals and here's what I need to
do.
Your attention is going to be, how do I execute my gymnastic routine properly as opposed
to how much pain is my ankle experiencing?
Right.
So the sheer mechanism of prediction processing
is very logical, it seems very sound,
and it seems very objective.
It's like, okay, if I think this is going to happen,
I'll regulate my body.
But the assumption that you made from the beginning
was in some ways subjective, right?
I objectively had a broken ankle,
but there was a variety of ways to interpret that, right?
And so that's important.
And then you start to also see this cascade of effects.
So because our brains can't process everything at one time,
it goes on these simplifying systems.
So it has heuristics, it makes assumptions.
So if it thinks, okay, you're going to be able to perform
then your attention systems start noticing the ways in which you are going to be able to perform.
So my attention shifted to, oh, you know, I feel pretty good. Right. Oh, I can actually walk on this foot.
Right. You start noticing the things that confirm the prediction
that you had in the first place.
It's called confirmation bias.
And it tends to create the self-fulfilling loop
because then you're getting data
that feeds back to that belief or prediction.
So in some ways, I think what you're saying is
that there might be an objective reality out in the world,
but as it comes through our minds, we have different choices in some ways, I think what you're saying is that there might be an objective reality out in the world, but as it comes through our minds, we have different choices in some ways of how we process that objective reality.
So we can perceive the ankle is broken, we can perceive the ankle is not broken.
And perhaps the better question to ask is not so much which version of our mindset best reflects reality
as much as to ask which version of our mindset is going
to help us most to the long run.
That's exactly right.
And you realize, you know, if you think about it and you actually go one step further,
it was like, it was amazing that I could do that.
Should I have continued doing that?
Should I have continued believing that I was fine?
That might have led to some long-term
consequences. And so, you know, it's not that one mindset is right or wrong, true or false,
right? It really is inherently subjective. But the key is that the mindsets that you have
have an effect. They influence what you expect, they influence what you pay attention to,
they influence our physiology,
and they influence what we actually do,
and therefore they create the reality that's implied.
Now that process could be useful or not useful,
it could be adaptive or it could be maladaptive,
depending on the situation and the circumstance
that you're in.
It may be helpful to think of mindsets as a frame that we put around reality.
Different frames highlight different aspects of the picture.
If Alia had taken an extra before the competition, it may have prompted her to think of her ankle injury differently. The broken ankle may have brought to mind all the ways in which she was in pain or had
limited motion.
Instead, the frame she did put around her injury caused her to focus on what she could
do, rather than on what she couldn't.
It's important to underline that Alia is not saying that her frame was the right one.
Ignoring a broken ankle could
have led to long-term damage. Her point isn't that what she did in the competition was correct.
It's a much larger psychological point. What we call reality is usually a mix of what
is objectively happening in the world and how we think about it.
When we come back, the surprising power of changing the frame.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. It's called Hell Week.
It's one of the most physically demanding selection programs in the world.
It's what you have to go through if you are going to become a US Navy SEAL.
It's an endless dream of push-ups, pull-ups, people screaming at you.
Psychologist Aliyah Krum decided that this was the perfect setting
to better understand the science of mindsets.
We wanted to look at perhaps one of the most highly performing
groups of people in the world, and that is US Navy
Seals. So these are people who go into the Navy to become the best of the best, and they're
put through a grueling training, right, in order to become a seal. So the first phase of the underwater demolition seals training or buds, candidates undergo seven weeks of intense physical and mental training.
And a lot of people are familiar with the most grueling part of this training, which is known as Hell Week.
And this is when candidates complete tasks and drills, almost non-stop, you know,
not sleeping for five and a half days of training. So what we were interested in is looking
at how these candidates' mindsets might influence whether or not they make it through that demolition training.
And we had been studying stress mindset early on.
We had developed a measure to characterize
people's mindset about stress.
Essentially, do you believe that stress is debilitating,
that it's going to harm your performance
and productivity and well-being?
Or do you believe that stress can be enhancing,
can improve your performance and boost your health
and well-being?
And we show that this mindset rests on a continuum.
And what was interesting with these seals,
so we measured them, these were all candidates.
They hadn't gone through training yet.
First of all, what we found was that these candidates had a
stress-enhancing mindset. On average, they were over the midpoint of the scale. And that
was the only group that we had ever measured that had that. Every other sample or population
that we had looked at, employees in large finance firms or tech firms or undergraduates in America
at least all tended to have the mindset that stress was debilitating and these
were a different type of people these were a different beasts right they and it
makes sense these were people who chose to go into Navy seal training right they
must have some sort of inclination I just just think that if you're going to quit on this little obstacle, how are you going to
do another obstacle in life?
But what we found in this study, and this was a study I did with former grad student,
Eric Smith, we found that their mindsets at the beginning predicted whether or not they would make it through.
So it's notoriously hard, 7 to 20% of candidates who start the training completed,
only 7 to 20% completed.
And what we found was that this one measure, this measure of their mindsets about stress,
predicted whether or not they would succeed. So those who had
and even more stress is enhancing mindset were more likely to succeed. They also showed
better performance, objective performance measures on things like the obstacle course test
and also higher ratings from their peers.
I feel like this is connected with some of the work you've done looking at students in
high school and finding the same connection that the people who think that stress is debilitating
sometimes do worse than people who have a more positive attitude about stress.
Yeah, what we see typically in students and adolescents is that the experience of stress
leads to a loss of self-control.
So it makes people feel like they're not in control
and that kind of spirals down and has all sort of negative effects on people's lives.
And what we've found is that stress mindset severs this link.
So, adolescents who believe that stress can be enhancing
actually don't have that negative impact on self-control.
And if anything, it might go the opposite direction. So you experience stress and you think,
okay, this is a cold, dark night. This is part of what it's like to grow up. I can engage more.
I can become empowered. I can work through this. I can be resilient. So that's what we've seen there.
I understand that you've even tested the effect of explicitly teaching people that stress
can enhance performance.
What was the outcome of this instruction for people who were negotiating for a salary
increase?
Yeah, not study.
It was actually appraisals of arousal.
So they were experiencing arousal or kind of nervous energy before the salary negotiation.
And what we did was give them a simple message that said, hey, you know, this experience of
nervousness of nervous arousal before a negotiation is actually a good sign that can help you perform well.
And that simple message led to improved outcomes on the negotiation. This is taken also from
work by Jeremy Jamison and Wendy Mendez and others who have looked at this appraisal of arousal
manipulation. And you've looked at other kinds of workplaces as well, right?
Where you look at what's the effect of teaching people
that stress can be enhancing the effects of this mindset
on their performance.
Yeah, we've created very seemingly simple videos, films
that showcase anecdotes and research and examples,
all true, presenting this case, you know, that
stress can have enhancing effects on our lives and our well-being.
And what we've shown is just watching these short videos, there, three minutes in some
cases.
Not only leads to a change in mindset about stress, but confers benefits in terms of greater work performance,
fewer negative health symptoms, and other positive outcomes.
Contrast this research with the way we usually talk about stress.
For decades now, we have been talking about stress as a poison to be avoided.
In workplaces, busy people walk around saying,
I'm so stressed, I need a vacation.
Few of us stop to ask, what effect
these worries about stress might have on our well-being?
All of these warnings and messages are well-intentioned.
It makes sense, right?
It's like, oh, we find out that stress could have a negative impact.
We should tell everybody about that, right? It's like, oh, we find out that stress could have a negative impact. We should tell everybody about that, right?
Like, let's warn them.
But when you start to become aware of the role of mindsets,
you realize that what we're unintentionally doing
and sending those messages out is creating mindsets
that might be unhelpful and perhaps even counterproductive in our goals.
So when you learn that stress is going to kill you, what does that do when you're stressed?
It makes you more stressed, right?
Now not only do you have to deal with the stress of this pandemic and your daycare closing
for the fourth time, but now you have to stress about the stress. And so when you recognize that that mindset matters, you can kind of reverse engineer and think
back to, well, what would be a useful mindset here?
What mindset about stress would be helpful?
Now if we could easily reduce stressors in our life, it might be the warning, right?
But that's just not the case.
We do not often have the ability and or luxury to reduce this amount of stress we're experiencing.
And as we've discussed, if you do remove all stress, you also remove all cares.
You remove those values, you remove the things that matter to you. Being a parent is stressful.
Succeeding in a career is stressful. Being an athlete of any kind is stressful, right? Life is
stressful and that's okay, right? So when we start to realize that, then you say, what mindset would be
useful here? And that's how we've kind of landed on this mindset that stress can be enhancing,
along with Brett Logan's sage advice.
I want to take a few beats here and underline some important caveats.
It's one thing to say, mindsets are powerful.
It's smart to pay attention to our mindsets and to ask if they are helping us or hurting us.
But it's not smart to believe our mindsets can be the solution to every problem.
Surely, I asked Alia, if we need to guard against well-intentioned people who tell us that stress
is always bad, we also need to be cautious if people tell us that stress is always good.
Yeah, when we do this research,
often the first goal is to just point out
that your mindset is playing a role.
But what often happens is people take that
and then they run with it, right?
And then they assume it's sort of all or nothing.
Well, if stress is enhancing,
we should just lay it on our employees, right?
And that is the last thing that I would want people to take away from this.
What I want people to realize is that the total effect of anything is a combined product
of what you're actually doing and what you think about what you do.
So mindset's influence our lives, but they are just a piece of the puzzle.
And it's just a piece of the puzzle that I think we haven't played enough attention to.
And then the other thing I would say is that don't jump to conclusions about what the right mindset is.
What is right or what is adaptive depends on the circumstance.
So there might be a breaking point in which having a stress is enhancing mindset is helpful,
but that doesn't mean you shouldn't reduce unnecessary stressors.
It also, I think this is really important, the work on mindsets, it's really empowering
to the individual. And that's great. But we also
want to make sure that people don't feel like it's all up to them to change their realities because
you just change your mindset and everything will be fine. Your mindset will help. But you know,
the reality matters too. And also, you have mindsets because of the reality that we live in.
Why do we have the mindset that stresses debilitating?
Because we live in a culture where these messages are everywhere, right?
So, being empowered by this, but also, you know,
recognize that it's not all you that there are forces shaping your mindsets. So we need to be
aware of those two. And then we need to change systems and structures in our society to hopefully
generate better cultural mindsets. I've often found that it's one thing to have insights about how
our minds work. And another thing to put those insights into practice
in our own lives.
And that's true not just for ordinary mortals like me,
but even researchers like you
who have made the discoveries about these insights.
Some time ago, Alia, you were giving an important speech
and you were a little nervous.
I want to play you a little clip
of you yourself talking
at the TED conference.
The placebo effect is not about the faux pill,
or the sugar pill, or the fake procedure.
What the placebo effect really is,
is a powerful, robust, and consistent demonstration
of the ability of our mindsets.
In this case, the expectation to heal, to recruit healing properties in the body.
So, Alia, I can hear your voice shaking in that clip, and the reason I played it is not to show that you were nervous during the talk,
but because during the talk, you realized that you were stressed, you realized that you were nervous, and you employed some of the
techniques and insight that you had learned about mindsets to change what you did, the rest of the
talk. Tell me what you did. Yeah, I mean, this was a big talk. This was an opportunity to get out,
some of the research I had done and share it with the whole world on the internet. And as I started speaking, my nerves were conveyed in, as you
show there, the quivering of my voice. And I could notice myself doing that. And you know,
it would have been real easy to just say, oh my god, this is a disaster. I need to run off the stage.
But what I did mentally was just remind myself that I was here for a reason that I had an important message to say,
and that, of course, I was nervous. This mattered. It mattered to me, and I felt like it could matter to others.
And so that feeling of, this is worth it, this matters, kept me going to the end.
In some ways I think what I hear you saying is that when you reinterpret stress not as
evidence of your inadequacy, but as evidence of how much you care about something, it can
transform the way you think about it.
That's exactly right.
It was so important.
And you know, if I'm being honest, I got off the stage. I knew I did,
got the message out, you know, but I was totally distraught because I felt like I was not at my peak,
you know, I was, I did it. I said what I wanted to say, but it was obviously nervous. Everybody's
going to know, nobody's going to watch this, and I was so mad
at myself for that.
And that anger also came from a place of like, I cared, I wanted this to be great.
And fortunately I gave myself some slack.
And who knows, who knows what would have happened with that TEDx talk where I had been perfect
throughout all.
But I do think there's something powerful in people seeing the human behind the work.
That was me, right? This is me now. This is the work we've done. This is what we've learned
so far. It's been useful,
but it's just the beginning. I'm learning. We're all learning. And that's what I'm really looking
forward to doing in the next 20, 30, 40 years of my career is just keep learning on an academic
level, but also learning and growing on a personal level.
on a personal level.
Mindsets can change the way we approach a difficult conversation at work or a physically demanding assignment. Changing your mindset can change the way we think about stress and setbacks.
But all of the ideas we have discussed today,
explore the effects of mindsets on our attitudes, motivation,
and perception.
They look at how mindsets affect the mind.
In part two of our story, we will look at something even stranger.
Is it possible that our mindsets don't just change our minds, but that they can change
our physical bodies?
What we found was that simply informing them that their work was good exercise led to
changes in their health.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura Quarelle, Ryan Katz, Autumn
Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick. Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's
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I'm Shankar Vidantam.
See you soon.