Hidden Brain - Relationships 2.0: How To Keep Conflict From Spiraling
Episode Date: October 31, 2022When it comes to conflict, most of us just want to shut it down. But psychological research is increasingly taking a different approach to discord, with profound implications for disputes big and smal...l. This week, we kick off our Relationships 2.0 series by asking: what if we stop trying to eliminate conflict and instead ask, how can we do conflict better?Did you catch our recent episode about how to make anxiety work for you? You can find it  here.  And if you like our work, please consider a financial contribution to help us make many more episodes like this one.Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
No matter how hard we try to avoid them, conflicts are everywhere.
Kids cobble over breakfast at the kitchen table.
Colleagues bigger in a team meeting.
Nations clash across the globe.
For many of us, our first impulse when it comes to conflict is to ask,
how can I shut it down? How can I resolve it?
This impulse makes sense. Conflict is uncomfortable and unpleasant.
It produces hurt and animosity. It can destroy relationships.
But sometimes, the roots of antagonism and anger are so deeply entrenched that avoiding
conflict isn't possible and trying to reach a happy place of agreement and love isn't realistic.
holistic. Increasingly, psychological research is taking a different approach to discord, with profound
implications for disputes big and small.
This week on Hidden Brain, we kick off a series that we are calling relationships 2.0. Today, what if we set aside the goal of eliminating conflict and instead ask, how can we do conflict
better? Think back to the last time you found yourself in an argument with someone.
It might have been over something trivial, like a parking spot on a crowded street.
Or it might have been serious, like the best path forward for a company or a marriage.
Unless you are a very special human being, you likely found yourself getting
hot under the collar. You may have felt the other side was being unreasonable, perhaps deliberately
so. At Harvard University, psychologists Julia
Minson studies the psychology of disagreement. In recent years, she has developed some surprisingly
simple but powerful techniques to help people trapped in conflict get unstuck.
Julia Minson, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks so much for having me.
Julia, I want to take you back to some of your earliest observations about conflict and
they took place while you were ballroom dancing, especially when you observed what happened
between dancers off stage.
When and where was this and what did you observe?
So I spent most of my teens and early 20s
ballroom dancing, and you just see
what happens behind the scenes.
And what does happen behind the scenes?
Well, what happens behind the scenes
is people are practicing and looking
like they're fabulously in love.
And then the you know, the music stops and they break into an argument about, well, you know,
you were too fast or you were too slow or you were leaning or you were not leaning enough.
You know, and of course, the other person then doesn't agree with the first person's
characterization of what really happened and off they go.
So I understand you had a recurrent conflict with your own dance partner, Ryan.
At the time he was your boyfriend, he's now your husband.
What was that conflict about Julia?
You know, so the conflict was something doesn't work, doesn't feel right in the dancing.
And you're looking to diagnose the cause and the cause is always the other person.
And I started dancing much younger than he did,
but he is just a more talented dancer.
So between the two of us, I was more knowledgeable,
and he was just better.
And we are not dig screamers.
We are more the silent brooders.
But we've certainly had times where we stop speaking
while we're dancing, but we're preparing
for an important competition, so you still have to practice.
So you're glaring at each other, not talking to each other,
but you're still dancing together.
So when you go to graduate school at Stanford University you started working with the great psychologist Lee Roths and and one topic he studied was something called
naive realism. We've talked about naive realism on the show before but can you
explain what it is and what it predicts happens to people who find themselves in conflict?
I think of naive realism as one of the most important ideas on social psychology, and it's basically the idea that people
of reality and how things are and how things ought to be are realistic, right?
So what I perceive is what's sort of really out there.
And it's an idea that works just fine
when we talk about our physical perceptions, right?
So if I think something is a solid object,
then I should treat it as such and not walk into it.
But then people apply the same conviction to social reality, which is generally really,
really messy and often, hotly contested.
So you take topics where, you know, where reasonable people disagree and see things very,
very differently.
And yet, both sides still think that they have an accurate conceptualization
of how reality really is, right?
Like I basically get it, I see how things really are.
And what people sort of forget is that what I see isn't exactly what's out there, it's what my brain allows me to see.
So apply for me, if you will.
The idea of naive realism to the disagreement
that you would have with Ryan offstage
before you would go onstage for your ballroom dancing sessions.
What would go through your mind
and what would go through his mind
that made each of you think the way
that I'm seeing the situation is the correct way to see the situation.
One thing that's really strange about ballroom dancing is that when you're dancing, you are
in fact physically facing each other, which means you are literally looking at the world
from opposite directions.
Right?
So as you're sort of going around the room and there might be a mirror on the wall, when
you see that mirror, by definition, it means that your partner's back is to the mirror
and your partner cannot see it.
So 100% of the time you're actually making decisions about what looks right and what doesn't
look right based on different information.
But I think, you know, the problem sort of goes deeper than that, which is that whenever
you disagree, and this was very much part of Lyros' theory, you have to make what he called
attributions for disagreement.
You have to explain to yourself why is it that we disagree.
And it's basically a story you make up in your own mind
about, you know, what is the cause of this disagreement. And the simplest version is we disagree because
the other person is wrong. So in mine and Ryan's case, I had a lot more knowledge about the theory.
I mean, you don't think of dancing as having theory, but it does because it's a lot of physics.
And he was just better without necessarily being able to explain how he's doing what he is doing.
And so when we disagreed, both of us had good reason to believe that we were right, because I knew more,
and he would say, well, look, this looks better, and this this feels better and therefore it's right.
So you and a grad school classmate, Francis Chen came up with a way to get around the problem
of naïve realism or at least you thought it would get around the problem of naïve realism
and you based an experiment that you conducted on what scientists know about the bond between
parents and children.
Describe for me the study Julia. Yeah, so Francis came into the program very interested
in developmental psychology and mothers and babies.
And we were both sort of really fascinated
with this problem of naivrillism and conflict
and disagreement.
And she said, you know, eye contact
is this really powerful mechanism that people have
that increases bonding.
Right?
So, you know, mothers and babies gaze into each other's eyes and it releases the hormone
oxytocin, which is sort of the bonding hormone, when people are attracted to each other, they
gaze into each
other's eyes.
So what if we got people to gaze into each other's eyes while they're discussing something
that they disagree on, and would that trigger kind of this biological liking that would
then translate into kind of a more sensible conversation.
It made sense.
So Julia and Francis ran some experiments to test if maintaining eye contact might reduce
disagreement.
Well, we found that we were wrong.
So that was weird, and it was exactly the opposite of what we had predicted. And people who were asked to make direct eye contact
with somebody that they disagreed with
actually ended up disagreeing even more
than the people who were asked to look at the mouth
or sort of let their gaze wander.
So I understand that you and France has got together
to talk about the results.
And this was at your home at the time in Philadelphia,
paint me a scene of that conversation, Julia.
Yeah, so we were in our home.
We had just had dinner and my husband was doing the dishes
and we were still sitting there talking about the paper.
And I thought we had a really counter intuitive finding,
it was exactly the opposite of what we had predicted.
And I said, great, we get to write this paper
that's going to be really attention grabbing
about how eye contact is bad.
And Frances really didn't like that framing
because she had done a lot of work that showed the opposite and we, you know, we started arguing about it.
And Frances is a very, very sort of reasonable, soft, spoken, mild, manner sort of woman.
And she wouldn't budge and I wouldn't budge and I was getting frustrated because, you know, we had this like great result and it was so obvious that my framing was better.
And eventually, my husband literally interjected physically
between us at the kitchen table with two bowls of ice cream.
And he said, come on, settle down, take it easy.
I love the fact that unlike most people who get in fights, you looked at what happened
with curiosity and you asked if there were clues in the conversation to help you better
understand the nature of discord.
I'm wondering if you can tell me what you observed about the difference between disagreements
and conflict.
I think the question you're asking about disagreement versus conflict is really important.
And it's, you know, I think it's really important for organizations in particular because
on one hand, we often tell people that like disagreement is good, right?
You know, we want to have a team of rivals and we want opposing perspectives and everybody should have different ideas
about things. On the other hand, conflict feels bad. And so, you know, disagreement as I believe
X and you believe why? So in other words, I like vanilla, you like chocolate. Yes, absolutely.
Or I think this candidate will win and you think
that candidate will win. And most of the time presumably, I'm okay with you believing X and
me believing Y doesn't threaten me for you to be believing one thing while I believe the other.
Right. So you can think of lots of disagreements that are actually very enjoyable, right? So people love debating, you know,
what the end of a particular TV show really meant, right? Or which sports team should win
the Super Bowl, right? So there are some disagreements that aren't just okay, they're actually
fun.
So what happens when disagreement spiral into conflict? What changes?
Really, when we're talking about regular people in their regular lives,
it's conflict about beliefs or conflict about attitudes.
And the difference between disagreement and attitude conflict
is that I believe X, you believe Y,
and I'm not okay with you believing Y.
I need to change your Y to be closer to my X.
What do you think drives that? Why is it in some cases we are okay with you believing that
Team 1 is going to win the Super Bowl. I'm okay with Team 2 winning the Super Bowl,
but on other issues I desperately need you to believe what I believe.
but on other issues I desperately need you to believe what I believe.
So I think there's three things that play into it. The first factor that, of course, matters is,
is this an important issue? Is this something that I believe has important consequences? So for example, if you and I disagree about the importance of
flossing your teeth, it's not as important as if we disagree
about the importance of getting vaccinated against COVID-19.
Right?
So one, we'll give you cavities.
The other might kill you.
There is a big difference in importance.
The second one is what we call interdependence.
So does your attitude actually affect my outcomes?
If we're a couple going out to dinner,
and I want Chinese and you want pizza,
we're completely interdependent because we
have to agree on where we're going.
And so now, if you add that up with importance, your preference is on it directly impact
me, right?
So think about, you know, buying a home in this neighborhood or that neighborhood.
It's an important thing and we are stuck together in this house.
Right.
And what's the third factor?
The third factor is what we call
evadeshary skew. And basically what that means is, do I believe that the
evidence is overwhelmingly on my side? And so once you end up in a situation
where the issue is important, we are interdependent in terms of our actions
and beliefs, and both of us believe that there's more evidence on our side than the other side.
Then it's very hard to just let the other person keep believing whatever it is they want to.
And I'm thinking about you and your colleague Francis as you were sitting
at your kitchen table arguing about the results of the paper. Uh-huh. You know, in some
ways it meets all three criteria. It does. It's, you know, years of work and we're stuck together
because we're co-authors and we both think we have the right answer.
Much as two parties might disagree with each other but still need to coexist, people on different sides of a disagreement often still need to work together.
A fighting couple might be raising children together.
Israelis and Palestinians might share common ground when it comes to combating climate change.
Republicans and Democrats who are at log-aheads on social spending
might agree on the importance of imposing sanctions on a rogue nation.
When we come back, techniques to keep conflict in one area
from spiraling into places where we share common ground.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Julia Minson is a psychologist at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.
She studies the psychology of disagreement.
Many experts in Julia's field of conflict resolution research ways to get people to come to agreement
on contentious issues.
Julia's research has taken a different tack.
She has observed that in many cases, people on different
sides of a contentious issue might never change their minds, but they still need to work together
on matters of shared importance. Julia, as we've seen, conflicts have a way of spiraling.
Once we jump to the conclusion that people who disagree with us on something are our enemies,
it poisons the water on every issue, including areas where agreement is possible.
Now you've had a recurring argument with your husband, Ryan is a data analytics expert
and he periodically wonders whether he should find a new job. Tell me how these conversations
unfold and how they became a source of conflict? Well, so we have been together for a very long time.
We have been married for 22 years now.
So every few years, we go through sort of a period
where he says something like, well, you know,
it's been three years since the last time
I've gotten promoted.
And so for the next few months, just FYI,
I'm going to be working really long hours
because at my next annual review,
I want to jump to the next level.
And that all sounds very sensible,
but what that really means is that he's going to work
really, really hard.
They're not going to recognize it because corporate America is rarely fair.
And then he will be frustrated.
And then we'll go through another sort of like long drawn out period of him deciding what
to do and whether to move somewhere else.
And you're describing this in a very calm, level-headed, analytical way.
I'm assuming that's the way these conversations actually unfold it.
Well, these conversations unfold like this in my head, whereas, you know, in reality,
what happens, right, is that he tells me that he's unhappy in his job, and I tell him what
to do. And he says, and I tell him what to do.
And he says, don't tell me what to do.
And ironically, the longer you're married, the less you feel heard, because nobody's
actually listening anymore, because we both think we know what the other person is about
to say.
He is about to complain about his job.
I'm about to tell him to go get another job offer so that he gets promoted at the
current job because he has an alternative offer.
And then he will tell me to stop meddling in his career.
And then I will walk off in a cuff because it's not just his career.
It's our whole, it affects the whole family.
And you know, I mean, it's tremendously important.
You know, my husband's income is the lion's share of the income in our household.
And we are completely interdependent because when he says,
I'm going to work much longer hours to get this next promotion.
It means that I am now taking care of three kids with less help.
And, of course, I teach negotiations.
So I think I know how to do this.
So I am 100% confident that I'm right.
And he says, no, it's my career in my organization.
And I know the rules.
And I'm 100% confident that I'm right.
Now, you decided to try something with Ryan
that you were learning from your research,
but in order to get to that, after you're somewhat fall start with that eye contact study,
you started working on a technique that you call conversational receptiveness.
What is conversational receptiveness?
So, conversational receptiveness is the use of words and phrases to demonstrate to your
counterpart that you're engaged with their point of view.
Quite often when we give people advice about conflict
and how they should handle conflict,
we tell them try to be more empathetic,
try to take the other person's perspective,
try to exercise the other person's perspective, right? Try to exercise intellectual humility.
And what we found was that their counterpart has no idea
that they're doing any of that.
It's not transparent,
and because it's not transparent,
it has no effect on the conflict.
And so conversational receptiveness is basically predicated
on the idea that we need to demonstrate to people
that were engaged with their point of view
in a way that's visible and very easily recognizable
to counterparts because you can't get credit for things in your head.
Julia discovered through her research
that there are four specific techniques
that communicate conversational receptiveness.
And they make a nice acronym.
The acronym is here,
lesson I hear you,
the age stands for hedging. So it's saying things like perhaps
or some times or maybe. The e stands for emphasizing agreement. So I might say, I agree that the
last couple years have been really hard on people. Or we both think that it's really important to make schools say for our kids.
The A stands for acknowledgement. So it's essentially using some of your own air time to
restate your counterparts position. And then the R stands for reframing to the positive. So you can
basically say the exact same idea using positive words instead
of negative terms, right? You might say, you know, instead of saying, I hated when people
interrupt me, you might say, I really love it when people let me finish.
Julia has used this four-step process, hedging, emphasizing areas of agreement, acknowledging
the other person's perspective, and reframing to the positive to train groups of people
in the practice of conversational receptiveness.
I asked her to describe what happens when people employ these techniques. So it's really interesting. There is work going back to the 1960s
that basically says people love feeling heard.
And that's essentially what conversational receptiveness does.
Is it makes people feel like their counterpart
is really engaging with them?
And so as a consequence,
they think of those counterparts as more trustworthy.
They think of them as being more objective.
They think they have better professional judgment.
If this is a professional situation,
they're more willing to talk to this person
about other issues.
So basically you get a lot of positive interpersonal benefits from essentially saying the same thing,
but saying it in a way that acknowledges your partner's point of view.
And I understand that there are elements of conversation receptiveness that in some ways are contagious,
that in some ways you're demonstrating it from to your partner as well to demonstrate some of it?
Yes, and the thing that's very interesting
about conversational receptiveness
is that we've done studies where
we train one person
to be conversational or receptive, right?
Let's say person A,
and then person B responds to person A,
and not only is it the case that the
more receptive A is, the more receptive B is, but it also seems that B is using other
aspects of conversational receptiveness.
So they're picking up kind of like the whole style. They're not just directly copying the words
that were said to them.
A lot of the work on conversation receptiveness
is focused on the value of asking questions.
And I think most people don't think
about the difference between asking questions
versus making statements.
People don't actually are not conscious
when they're having conversations
about how many statements they're making versus how many questions they're asking. But you found
that the act of asking questions itself can have a transformative effect on a conversation.
Describe that for me, Julia. What it does is it demonstrates curiosity and interest in the other person and the desire to learn about them and the desire to sort of show
that you're putting in the cognitive effort. And what I mean by that is the very first paper I
wrote with Francis when we were at Stanford and I was still working with Leross, was a paper about asking questions.
And Lee said to us at the time, you know,
you are not going to get good results
from telling people to ask questions and conflict
because people are going to ask nasty questions.
They're going to say things like, what kind of idiot believes that?
So, like in most things,
having anything to do with psychology, Lee was right.
We only started getting positive sort of effects
from question asking when we specified
what kinds of questions people were allowed to ask.
So, we were like, only started getting positive sort of effects from question asking when we specified
what kinds of questions people were allowed to ask.
So we called them elaboration questions, which are basically, you know, would you please
elaborate?
So you could say something like, I'm curious why you believe that, right?
It's a statement, but it's doing the work of a question because what it's, you know,
it's expressing curiosity.
And that's similar to another paper where we got people together who are not in conflict,
people who are simply trying to get to know each other and have sort of a pleasant conversation,
right?
So imagine, you know, being at a party with colleagues or imagine you're dating, right?
What makes for a pleasant conversation?
And what we found was that being asked questions, may you like your counterpart more, but it
was specific questions.
It was what we called follow-up questions. So if I said,
where did you grow up and you say Chicago, I can't then say, where did you go on vacation?
Because it's a question, but it's ignoring what you just told me. I would be much better off saying, oh, do you like the
cubs? So you need a question that follows up because it demonstrates listening
and interest.
Some of these ideas might seem obvious. If you want to have a good conversation,
listen, show interest in what the other person has to say.
Demonstrate curiosity.
Avoid making statements that suggest your opinion is the only opinion worth hearing.
But knowing the right thing to do and actually doing it, are not the same thing.
One day after work, Julia had the opportunity to practice conversational receptiveness with her husband.
It was in a Friday evening, and Julia had spent the entire week at a mediation seminar
where she got to practice the art of conversational receptiveness.
This was five days, eight hours a day of nothing but mediation. And an important technique that
mediators use is something they call the listening triangle, which is very
conceptually related to conversational receptiveness. You ask a party in
conflict a question, you listen to the answer, and then you say, well, I just heard you say, X, Y, Z, is that right? And then
that starts the next round because you just asked a question. And so now you have to listen
to the answer. And then they finish talking and you say, aha, so it seems like you're
saying, blah, blah, blah, is that right? And then you're just supposed to do this endlessly
until the person you're listening to says,
yeah, yeah, yeah, you got it.
Like I'm done.
And I was impressed with this technique
and I thought that this was really related
to conversational receptiveness
because it's all based on acknowledgement.
And then, you know, the week runs out
and it's Friday night.
And I remember having Martini that are a kitchen bar.
And my husband says the thing that he, you know, sometimes says that,
you know, I'm going to be working really hard because they're these projects I want to finish
and I want to get promoted.
And without giving it another thought, I said, you always say this.
And then you never do anything about it,
and then you never get credit for it.
And here's what you should do instead.
And he was so, so upset with me.
And I was sort of surprised by how upset he was.
And as I said when we're talking in the beginning
of this conversation, we're not yellowers.
We're slow brooders. So now, you know, he is silently washing the
dishes and I'm sitting there at the kitchen bar with this martini that, you
know, the nice evening just kind of, you know, got destroyed. And I'm trying to
understand what just happened and how we got here. And then I remember this damn class, I've been at all week.
And the irony just blew my mind that I knew exactly what I should have done. And I knew it from
my research and I had just spent a week practicing it on strangers. And then I was in this moment when it was perfectly applicable,
and I didn't even think of doing it. And so I was surprised at how hard it was to one
even bring that knowledge online in the moment. And then once it was kind of top of mind for me to really execute
on it. What did you do, Julia? I sat there for probably, I don't know, 15, 20 minutes
wrestling with myself. And then I literally just said, you know what, let's try this again. Tell me why you think you need to work harder and
longer. And then I just like shut my mouth and I listened and I asked follow up questions and I was
very much not like genuinely interested, right? I was just trying to defuse a fight. And he wasn't like happy with me, but it did do the job.
And he was actually not looking for my input in his career.
He was looking for my support while he did what he thought needed to be done.
And the entire time I'm sitting there thinking in my head,
when is he going to ask me for my opinion?
You know, but I'm like, nope, I said to myself, I'm not doing that anymore. And
so I would just ask questions and clarify, you know, and he would talk. And then over time,
he started saying, well, what do you think I should do? And I started very carefully
saying, well, I might consider possibly doing XYZ, right, which is sort of hedging my claims and just
sort of offering it as a suggestion not saying you need to go do X. And that's sort of been
the dynamic as recognizing that it is his career. And I think me giving him that respect has led him to give me the respect of saying,
hey, negotiation professor, what should I do?
I mean, it's a real irony here, isn't it?
Which is the harder you push, the more he digs in his heels and stops listening,
but when you stop pushing and start listening, it not only makes you less angry,
but he suddenly finds it easier to seek you out
and ask you for your advice.
Right, and that's their findings in our research as well.
So one of the studies we did with conversational receptiveness
was actually to see whether being receptive
might make you less persuasive, right?
So you could imagine if you're hedging your claims and showing agreement and letting the other person talk,
it might be seen as like you're uncertain.
And so your message actually has less impact.
But instead we found the opposite.
We found that when you have people who disagree
on hot button issues, right?
So like Black Lives Matter or what universities should do
when there's an accusation of sexual assault on campus.
When you train one side to use conversational receptiveness,
the other side is a little more likely
to actually move towards their perspective.
is a little more likely to actually move towards their perspective.
When we come back, barriers to conversational receptiveness and how to overcome them. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. Psychologist Julia Minson studies how conversational receptiveness can diffuse conflicts and allow
people to work together, even in the face of intractable disagreements.
Julia, the behavior is associated with conversational receptiveness seemed relatively straightforward
and yet they can be difficult to implement as you yourself have discovered
You recently had a conflict with a colleague as you were working around the clock to organize a huge academic conference. Tell me what happened
We had we had a miscommunication with one of the researchers who had organized a panel for the conference.
And the panel did not appear on the schedule
and the researcher was upset.
And we got an email back that said,
let me tell you how sick and tired I am
as a woman of color not being taken seriously in my role.
And there were a couple things that made me particularly upset about this email.
One was that organizing this conference is sort of nowhere in my job description.
I was doing the field a favor during kind of this big time of crisis where, you know,
everybody was running around trying to keep work afloat on Zoom.
And so I had taken on this big task and we were rapidly approaching the conference
and everybody was working really, really hard.
And the other piece, of course, is the accusation that we, you know,
mistreated this person because she is a woman of color
felt particularly unfounded because them being left off the program was a complete misunderstanding
and innocent one of that.
And so I was really upset.
I'm at the grocery store, like literally in the produce
style, and I get this email that's accusing me of being a racist and a sexist
in one breath. And I've sort of at this point learned my lessons about
conversational receptiveness, and I thought, okay, here's what I need to do. I need to
get home, and I need to write this email, and I'm going to use conversational
receptiveness, and I'm going to acknowledge, and I'm going to use conversational receptiveness and I'm going to acknowledge
and I'm going to hedge my claims
and I'm going to find areas of agreement and all the things.
And the entire time I'm driving home
and I'm writing these different drafts
of the email in my head.
And none of them sound receptive.
All of them are focused on me wanting to express how incredibly upset I am that this happened
to me and how right I am and how wrong she is and how under-precied and frustrated I am.
And I mean, honestly, by the time I was coming home, I was trying to think, well, maybe
conversational
receptiveness isn't that useful, because I can't think of any way to apply it to the
situation.
You know.
And then I walk in the house, and my husband starts helping me unload the groceries.
And so, and I'm telling him about this whole thing, and I'm, you know, fuming and saying
how I need to write back, because I can't him about this whole thing. And I'm, you know, fuming and saying how I need to write back
because I can't just ignore this.
But also I can't think of anything particularly civil to say.
And he basically just started dictating the email to me.
Because, you know, of course, he listens to me talk
about conversational receptiveness all day long.
So he knows the entire toolkit.
And he was just fabulous at it.
And I mean, I literally typed out what he said and I sent it off. And within hours, I got a lovely
email back that said, thank you so much for understanding. And you can relate to how hard it is to be a
woman in academia. And you know, one day know, one day when the pandemic is over,
we will get together and we'll get to know each other.
And it was just a very nice email from a person
who felt hurt.
And I mean, my husband gets the credit for hearing her
because in that moment, I certainly could.
for hearing her because in that moment I certainly could.
So I want to talk about the role of emotions as we're having these conflicts and disagreements. It's hard in the middle of a heated argument to put on your thinking cap and remember what the smart thing is to do.
Can you just talk about how our emotions can sidetrack us from what is self-evidently the right thing to do?
It's interesting emotion of course plays a huge role in conflict and
in some of my work what we see is that you know the primary emotion in attitude conflict is anger
It's anger and frustration sort of why don't these people get it?
Why don't they see it the way I see it?
So I think anger and frustration play a huge role
in our inability to sort of do the right thing
even when you know what the right thing is.
You know, it's like there's like,
I almost think of like there's a bug flying
and I just have to like, smush it.
You know, I can't let it keep flying around my head.
And it's that impulse to put an end to the speech that you strongly disagree with.
I think often gets us in trouble.
One thing that you have found that poisons the water and in some ways, the letter that
you received from your fellow academic, I think, speaks to this is that when we are upset in conflicts,
many of us resort to using moral language. So I don't just simply say, you know, I'm upset
that I've been left off the conference schedule. What explains the oversight? The person went
to the additional length of basically saying, I've been left
off the conference schedule because of racism and sexism. What is the effect of using moralizing
language as we are debating and disagreeing with each other Julia?
Yeah, so moralizing language tends to pour oil on the fire in the sense that it's very, very hard to stand in the face of that kind of
accusation and not react emotionally, right? Yeah, and of course, in the course of arguments,
we often think that using more language is sort of a sledgehammer, right? It's sort of where we
use it almost as a tactical weapon on the battlefield to basically disarm and disable our opponents, but of course our opponents are doing exactly the same to us.
Right, right. And this is sort of, you know, back to naivrillism, right? We believe that we have
the ultimate kind of form of evidence on our side, which is that our argument is morally superior. And so once I bring that moral perspective into this,
there's no longer going to be any debate.
One of the things about this four stage process
that you articulated, one of the more surprising things,
I think is that you find that when people spend time
articulating their opponent's point of view,
actually giving their own air time to artic articulating their opponent's point of view, actually giving
their own air time to articulating what their opponent's thing, it actually makes it more
likely that they are going to be heard in turn.
Why do you think that it's effective to spend your own air time articulating what the other
person is thinking?
I think there's probably two reasons why it works. I spend a lot of time thinking about why is it
wearing such a rush in conflict.
I think there's two reasons why we're in a rush.
One is how it just feels terrible to have bad ideas out
in the world and how we just want to back them down.
The other is that most of these conversations
are very unpleasant. You want to get back them down. The other is that most of these conversations are very unpleasant.
And so you want to get out of there and you expect that your partner wants to get out of there.
And so there's this feeling of like, if I don't say it, then I'm never going to have a chance to say
it because this is going to be, you know, a short and furious conversation.
I think acknowledging your counterparts counterparts point of view and really
listening to them and asking them lots of questions, triggers two things. One, it
triggers reciprocity, right? So reciprocity is one of the most powerful social
forces we've ever studied. And if I listen to you patiently and at length,
and then I start talking,
you're gonna feel like a real jerk interrupting me.
And now that I have given you my time
and let you, my ear, you now have to do the same.
And I think the second thing it triggers is,
it makes the conversation much less unpleasant and therefore
that feeling of urgency disappears.
We go from this, like how fast can I say my piece because this is all about to explode,
to let's have a long, thoughtful, drawn-out conversation about this that just has a very
different pace to it.
In studying conversational receptiveness, you drew a distinction between actually displaying
conversational receptiveness as in actually feeling it, you know, what's going on inside your head,
and actually demonstrating it on the outside, regardless of whether you actually feel that we are not.
So in the email that you composed to your fellow academic, presumably at the point at which you
hit send, given that your husband composed the email for you, you didn't actually feel everything
that you said in the email. And yet it had the effect of having the other person say, okay,
this person is really listening to me. What are you recommending here? Are you recommending that
we actually try to be more empathetic and open to other people or that we simply just demonstrate that we're doing those things?
You know, I wish the world was a place where people in conflict could feel empathetic and open and then act on that empathy in a way that sort of transparent and recognizable to their counterparts.
But I don't think that's how humans work.
I think conversation or receptiveness is a lot like the other types of aspirations we have
that sometimes we live up to and sometimes we fail to live up to. Right. So we have lots of
Right, so we have lots of goals. I want to exercise more often.
I want to spend less time on Twitter.
You know, I want to, you know, call my mom like all the things that you know you want
to do, but for various reasons, you fail to live up to.
And I think conversational receptiveness is like that.
It's that you aren't as receptive as you aspire to be.
And so in that moment, I think faking it is perfectly fine.
Right? You get there, however you get there,
because it leads to a better outcome.
You know, if you think back to my example, right?
I didn't write the email that the screaming voice in my head was writing.
I knew that that was not the kind of person I wanted to be in the situation.
And so I think conversational receptiveness is a toolkit to kind of help people live
up to their best selves even when in the emotional moment, they can't quite do it like they can't improvise
their way there. Or they can't do it authentically if you will. Right right right but the diffused
fight is better than the undiffused fight. Conversational receptiveness is not a magic bullet.
Not everyone you listen to carefully is going to come around to your point of view.
In her own life, Julia has realized that what conversational receptiveness really allows
her to do is to keep an intractable conflict in one domain from derailing an entire relationship. Yeah, I think part of what happens is people are so focused on persuading the other side
that they don't think about laying the groundwork for the next conversation.
Right? Every conversation is just the lead up to the future conversation. And so what can you do now to make the next one better,
kinder, more informative, more harmonious,
you know, all of those things.
And then, you know, persuasion may or may not happen
somewhere along the way, but can we focus on the next conversation?
focus on the next conversation. Julia Minson is a psychologist at Harvard University.
Julia, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
My pleasure.
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Our story comes from Rich Addison.
So when I was young, I was very shy.
I was an only child who was pretty comfortable talking to adults, but I never had any brothers
and sisters to practice on.
So I wasn't very good at kind of mixing it up with the other kids.
And I remember being very anxious about going to school.
And on Sunday nights, I would not be able to sleep
just worrying about what would happen with the other kids.
So now, flash forward a few years, and I'm in high school.
And I realized that I had to be different,
that I couldn't keep being so shy.
So I went about developing a quick wit and a sense of humor that would keep other kids
off balance.
So I wouldn't have to feel powerless.
You know how sometimes people say the best defense is a good offense.
Well, that was what I was doing. But the sense of humor
I developed was kind of biting and kind of critical. So now my hero is about to come into
the story. And this was my friend Holly. One day Holly and I were talking and she said to me,
you know, rich, sometimes you really hurt people's feelings.
And at first, I was just shocked.
I said to myself, that can't be true.
I was entertaining, I made people laugh,
I liked people, these were my friends,
I didn't wanna to hurt them.
I couldn't be hurting them.
But I kept thinking about what Holly said and I kept turning it over in my
mind. And eventually I realized that she was absolutely right.
And I started paying attention to how my humor was affecting other people. And I
changed it. It didn't happen immediately, it didn't happen overnight, but I changed
and I wanted to be more compassionate towards people. And I wanted to have a different kind of relationship
with them than always keeping them off balance.
So after I went on to become a clinical psychologist
and in my role, I try to help other people
have generous interpretations about themselves and others.
And I've also made a career out of training physicians to do that.
And I really am so grateful that I made that shift in my life.
And I really owe it to Holly.
And I think back to that time, so many years ago,
and when she cared enough to say something to me,
something that probably wasn't easy to say,
but it was something that changed the direction of my life
in a very significant and very gratifying way.
So, thank you, Holly. You're my unsung hero.
Rich Addison lives in Santa Rosa, California. Recently, he was able to reconnect with Holly
and tell her how much her comment has meant to him some 50 years later.
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