Hidden Brain - Relationships 2.0: The Power of Tiny Interactions
Episode Date: November 8, 2022As you're going about your day, you likely interact with family, friends and coworkers. These relationships can help you feel cared for and connected. But what if there's a whole category of people in... your life whose impact is overlooked? In the second episode of our "Relationships 2.0" series, psychologist Gillian Sandstrom reveals some simple ways to make your life a little more joyful and maybe even a little less lonely. Did you catch the first episode in this series, about how to engage in conflict more productively? 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.
Ask yourself what makes you happy.
Many people would say spending time with close friends, quality moments with family, playing
with a pet.
Most of us can agree, relationships are at the heart of a life well-lived.
Social science research bears this out.
Countless studies suggest that our emotional ties to others shape our well-being.
Long-running analyses that track people over time show that social connections are not
just about our emotional well-being,
they're important determinants of our physical health.
But it's one thing to say that relationships are important. It's another to go about getting them or preserving them.
Life-long friends move away to other towns and countries.
Romantic relationships come undone.
Relatives pass away.
And especially as people get older, many find it difficult to form new relationships, even
as they yearn to feel close to others.
New psychological research suggests a solution to this problem, or at least a partial solution,
and it's one that's easily accessible to everyone.
Last week, we kicked off our Relationships 2.0 series with a look at how to make conflicts less stressful and more productive.
This week on Hidden Brain, a user's manual on how to boost your social connections
and your happiness.
Riggerist studies suggest that the problem of loneliness is growing around the world.
Many people feel they don't have others in whom they can confide.
Making friends can be hard, especially if you are someone who is naturally shy.
At the University of Sussex, psychologists' Gillian Sanström studies what we can do
to combat the growing challenge of social isolation.
Julian Sandstrom, welcome to Hidden Bre.
Hi, thanks for having me.
Julian, I understand that you were somewhat introverted and shy as a child.
Can you describe the younger version of yourself to me?
I was definitely a shy kid.
Very bookish, and so I remember, you remember any time we went to my grandma's house
for Christmas and all the cousins and aunts,
nunkles were there, I would be often
roomed somewhere with a book just finding the quietest place
in the house, just sitting there reading.
And my dream when I was a kid was that I would grow up
and I would live on an island.
I don't mean like a tropical island.
I mean, an island that was just me,
my own island, where I had a big library and that was my dream.
As a teenager, Julian's shyness intensified. It got to the point you found it difficult to even
have routine phone conversations. Oh gosh, that was the worst and I felt like every time I did it,
I would get off the phone as quickly as possible.
And then my mom would say, well, did you ask this?
Did you say that?
And of course, I never did any of those things.
And so it just felt really stressful and anxious about talking to someone on the phone.
And I understand this must have been especially hard for you because you had one member of your
family who was the polar opposite of you.
Tell me about your dad. Yeah, actually, I feel like my who was the polar opposite of you. Tell me about your dad.
Yeah, actually, I feel like my whole family was the opposite of me, but especially my dad.
So my dad is just, I think he's sort of a king of talking to people.
He had this knack for approaching people and starting, figuring out how to connect with
them and start a conversation.
And so anywhere we went would take a really long time,
you know, growing to the grocery store would take three hours
because he would stop and talk to everybody,
especially kids, he loves talking to kids,
he always teased them and get them talking.
But he would ask a kid who looked like they were about five
or six years old, he'd say, how old are you?
12, 13.
You know, just something ridiculous that
would make them feel like they had to sort of disagree with what he'd said or he'd ask
them, you know, if they had any pets at home and, and, you know, ask if they had a pet alligator
or a pet hippopotamus, you know, just ridiculous things that would, that would make them respond.
And did you really feel like you were embarrassed when he did these things? Did you
try and prevent him from doing it? I definitely would say, Dad, you know, why are you, like, I couldn't
understand the compulsion that he had, you know, like, why are you doing this, Dad? They don't want
to talk to you, you know, they're doing their grocery shopping, you know, why would someone want to
stop and talk to a complete stranger? And what would he say in response? He would just ignore me
and enjoy his conversation because he was having such a good time. He likes to say,
you know, everybody has a story. So he just loves meeting people and having a
chat.
As an adult, Gillian's desire to fade into the wallpaper began to have real consequences.
So I was, I think, about 25 and I was on the plane, on my own, on this business trip,
which seemed quite exciting.
And I just recently got married, so I'd taken on my husband's surname,
and they were making an announcement about a bunch of different people's names being called out,
something to do with baggage. I didn't know what was going on, but at some point they said,
you know, would passenger sandstorm please identify themselves? And I thought, well, they couldn't
mean me because, you know, that's not my name anymore. And I knew I should have checked, but I was
too anxious and embarrassed to push that button and call over the flight attendant. So I didn't say anything. And so of course what happened is I got to the other end,
got off the plane, went to the belt to collect my luggage, and of course it wasn't there.
And so I had to go and buy a tourist t-shirt, which is what I wore to the first day on this business trip.
I'm this business trip. Several years after the luggage incident, Jillian signed up for a graduate program in
Toronto.
She had been working as a computer programmer for a decade, but wanted to try something new.
She decided to get a master's degree in psychology.
Jillian was in her 30s.
As she looked around at her graduate school cohort,
she worried she wasn't smart enough. But on top of all that, I had the feeling, you know,
I'd given up this other career that had been going really well, you know, did I make the right
decision? Should I be here? You know, all these people are so much younger than me. So it's just
this feeling, you know, kind of imposter syndrome feeling of, you know,
did I make the right decision?
Should I be here?
Soon enough, however,
Jillian settled into a routine.
It gave her more than structure.
It gave her an insight.
I would go to the research lab to do my studies,
but then my supervisor had an office in a different
building. And so when I walked between those two buildings, I would pass on the street corner,
there was a hot dog stand because I was at a university right downtown Toronto. And I
started to develop, sort of accidentally, develop a relationship with a lady who worked
at the hot dog stand that I would pass by. And seeing her there and knowing that she recognized me, you know, we'd smile, we'd wave,
I don't even know if we talked to each other, but we just had this relationship built on
these little minimal signs.
On some days, as Julian crossed the street, she noticed something curious.
The hot dog lady was not at her usual spot.
That wasn't what was curious.
The thing that struck Jillian was her own emotional reaction.
So, on a day when I didn't see the hot dog lady,
I would feel disappointed and kind of not lonely,
but sort of unmoored, you know,
because I think it came to think that the hot dog lady
and people like her, like, we have lots of relationships
like that, these little tiny relationships
that maybe don't seem particularly important.
But I feel like you're kind of woven
into the social fabric, you know?
And so I felt a bit unmoored and uncentored
when she was missing.
I felt a bit unmoored and uncentered when she was missing.
So, Jillian, when you think about these relationships that you're talking about,
like your relationship with the hard dog lady,
they are different than the kind of relationships
you would have with a spouse or a child,
or even a colleague at work.
And sociologists have come up with names
for these kinds of relationships.
Can you talk about the different terms they names for these kinds of relationships. Can you talk about the different terms they use
for these kinds of relationships?
Yes, so a sociologist in the 70s,
named Mark Granavetter coined these kind of relationships,
weak ties, and as opposed to strong ties,
which are the ones with close friends and family.
And it's tricky to come up with a definition,
because one of the original thoughts
was there are people that we see less often, but I don't think that's necessarily true because people like the
hot dog lady I would see here on a very regular basis or you might run into someone at the
school drop off every day.
So I don't think frequency is necessarily a factor here, but definitely close friends and
family are the people that you feel the most comfortable with and you'd be most willing
to share your deepest, darkest secrets with. But, you know, weak ties are, you know, you can feel fondly
towards them positively, but you're probably less likely to feel like you'd want to confide in
them and share something that feels very personal. So a little while later you were starting a PhD,
and I believe this was in the lab of Elizabeth Don who we've previously had on
Hidden Brain as a guest and and Liz Don asked you what you wanted to study and how did you respond?
I
Said I wanted to study the hot dog lady
I said she said what makes you happy, you know
That's her lab is the happy lab what makes you happy and, well, the hot dog lady makes me happy, you know,
having these little interactions throughout my day
with people that I'm not really close to
and would never invite over for a drink or anything,
but having this familiarity and feeling of connection
with those kind of people just really feels good to me.
And I wanted to know, you know, is it just me or is this
a more general thing to do people generally feel good from having these kind of relationships?
When we return, how the people we least expect to matter in our lives can have a profound
impact on the way we experience the world. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. When you think about the most important people in your life, you probably think about a spouse,
or a best friend, your children, maybe even a beloved pet.
Chances are, you don't give much thought to the people on the periphery, the woman selling
hard dogs on your way to work, the person sitting across from you on a train.
Even when we encounter these people every day, we often ignore them.
If our lives were a movie, they wouldn't even be supporting characters.
They are the extras.
Jillian Sandstrom is a psychologist at the University of Sussex.
She studies these relationships and why they are much richer than most of us think.
Jillian some time ago you ran an interesting experiment involving a little tool called
the clicker. Tell me about that study. I wanted to know, you know, does the number of interactions
that people have with weak ties sort of relate to their happiness. So my hypothesis was, you know,
given my personal experience,
maybe on the days that you have more interactions
with weak ties, you feel a little bit happier.
So I got students at first and then later,
just members of the community,
to carry around two clickers,
sort of in their pocket, two different colors.
And every time that they talk to someone throughout the day, they were supposed to click. So one of the clickers was to count their interactions
with strong ties. That would be people like you just mentioned, you know, a close friend
or family member. And then the other clicker was to count the number of interactions they
had with weak ties. If a volunteer smiled at someone they didn't know very well on their
way to class, click
Weak Ty. If they had a conversation of a lunch with their best friend, click Strong Ty.
And as you'd expect, you know, the number of interactions you had with your close others,
your strong ties, predicted happiness and feelings of belonging, but also independently the number of interactions
that people had with weak ties also mattered.
So on average, people who tended to have more interactions
on a given day with weak ties tend to be a little happier
than people who have fewer interactions with weak ties.
But then also, regardless of what your personal average is,
on a day when you talk to a few
more weak ties than you usually do, you tend to be a little happier than you usually are.
So Julian, we talked earlier about the sociologist Mark Ranoveta and his work on weak ties.
If I recall correctly, he had a famous paper called The Strength of weak ties.
Looking at how, in some ways, are connections to people who are peripheral in
our lives, are actually very important to us.
And this has been borne out in lots of studies, looking at how, if you're searching for a new
job, for example, you're much more likely to find that job through a network of weak ties
of people whom you know slightly compared to the network of people who are very close
to you.
So, groundwater and others have looked primarily at the power of weak ties in the context
of professional relationships, but in some ways what you were realizing from the
clicker study was that the strength of weak ties might also affect our social lives and
our emotional well-being.
So, yeah, I was looking at weak ties as having other advantages that maybe hadn't been looked
at before. So, these well-being benefits and emotional benefits.
So, the biggest source of
weak ties comes from the world of strangers of people we don't know. Can we talk a moment about
whether there's a difference between strangers and weak ties? I mean what's the difference between
someone who we would call a stranger and someone we would call a weak tie? I think the difference is
actually pretty small. So I think a weak tie, my definition is just someone with whom you have sort of mutual
familiarity.
So the hot dog lady was a week tie.
The first time I talked to her, she was a stranger.
But when we saw each other again and she recognized me and I recognized her, I think at that
point, she's no longer a stranger.
She is a week tie. You started to conduct other studies besides the clicker study looking at the power of weak ties.
Can you talk about some of that work? One of your studies I understand took place in a coffee shop.
Right, so I
sort of inspired by the hot dog lady. I thought the closest thing I could think of,
you know, I really wanted to study that phenomenon and I was aware that
thing I could think of, you know, I really wanted to study that phenomenon. And I was aware that that lots of people have sort of their favorite barista at the coffee shop and people go into the
coffee shop and the person knows their name and knows what their regular order is and it makes
you feel really good. And so I really wanted to study that phenomenon. So I asked people,
I recruited people walking past a Starbucks in Vancouver, gave them a gift card, and I said
the only catch is that when you go in to buy your coffee, you have to follow some instructions.
And some people, the instructions where, you know, when you go in to buy your coffee,
just be as efficient as possible.
And I tried to tell people this would be a good thing.
The burst is busy and just wants to get through their day and you'd be helping them out. So have your money ready and avoid unnecessary conversation.
I mean, you have to talk to place your order. And then the other group of people, I said, okay,
when you go in, try to turn it into a real genuine social interaction. So smile, make eye contact,
and have a little chat. And you know, plenty of said they'd do this anyway. And I said, well, just amp it up.
It did even more than you usually do.
And so people bought their coffee, followed the instructions.
And then when they came out, I asked them
to fill out a short survey.
And what we found was that people who'd
had this just tiny little social interaction,
had treated the barista as if they
would treat one who knew their name and knew their order. If they had that social interaction, they were in a better mood
and they felt more satisfied with their Starbucks experience and they felt a greater sense
of connection to other people.
In Julian study, people had an incentive to talk to strangers. In the real world, talking
to people you don't know can be awkward. We worry
our small talk won't be well received. We fear that people will think we're obnoxious,
silly or unlikable. We've talked about this trepidation on the show before. In our episode
featuring the psychologist Erika Boothby, she called it the Liking Gap. It's the gap between
how we believe others see us and what they actually see.
Julien has found evidence of the liking gap phenomenon in her own research.
What we find is that after two people talk for the first time, they each tend to think
that the other person liked them less than they actually did.
So, you know, we have this negative voice in our head that says, oh, you know, why did
I say that?
Why did I not say that?
Did, you know, did they understand me? Did I embarrass myself? And we tend to listen to that negative
voice and think that everything went horribly wrong. But our partner doesn't have that say, you know,
they're probably doing the same thing, right? So they don't even notice the thing that you
think went horribly wrong because they're stuck in their own head thinking about what they did wrong.
And so I read the abstract that Erica was part of
where she was talking about the liking gap.
And I thought, oh, I have data, we should talk.
And so I reached out to her via email
and we've been collaborating ever since.
So it's a great example of reaching out to a stranger.
I'm wondering, Jillian, if you can talk a moment
about how our intuitions and forecasting errors are sometimes compounded by the messages we receive from society.
I want to play you an old public service announcement about how children should think
about strangers.
Most people love a little child.
Some grownups though are bad.
The bad ones look like good ones, like any mom or dad.
So that is why you must not talk to strangers that you meet.
Don't let them give you any toys or anything to eat.
If someone that you do not know should offer you a treat, remember how he looks and talks,
but run fast stop the street.
Run fast.
So it's not just our internal messaging that gets it wrong,
Julian. Sometimes the external messaging is also saying, keep to yourself.
Yes, absolutely. And I think norms and those kind of cultural messages make a huge difference
to what we do. I think it's really hard, isn't it? Because it's a very nuanced message
that we want to convey. Because we don't want to make people scared to talk to others,
but we do need to be aware of our personal safety.
And I'm not suggesting that people go down a dark alley
and start talking to people,
but in most situations, if you're in a public place
surrounded by other people,
there's so many benefits to talking to strangers.
I'd like to talk about some of those benefits that you yourself have realized in your own life.
You've actually tried to walk the talk of your research and practice what you've preached.
Tell me about a time that you had an interesting conversation on the train with a woman who
was carrying a very fancy cupcake.
Yes, this was one of the first conversations
that I can remember sort of deliberately
starting with a stranger.
And if I think about it,
I've definitely had conversations before then,
but this is one that was really memorable to me,
I think because I felt like I deliberately done it
rather than it just sort of happening accidentally.
And so I was on the train in Toronto
and it was sort of during the time when all these very fancy cupcake shops were coming out.
And this woman on the train had this beautiful, just delicious looking, decadent cupcake.
And so I couldn't help but ask her about it. Basically, I just wanted to comment on how beautiful this cupcake was.
And so we started talking,
and I think maybe it was her birthday or something,
and she was reminiscing about other birthdays,
and she told me that in the past,
she had gone on a trip to South Africa,
and when she was there, she had ridden an ostrich.
And you know, you think about it,
how did we get from cupcakes to ostriches? I don't know. And so I was really hooked. I just thought, this is amazing. Like, I would never
have known this if I hadn't talked to a complete stranger.
Gillian, being a psychologist, went a step further. She realized that weak dives are a source of
novelty in our lives. Once she had this insight, it started to pop up all the time.
Yeah, I've learned all sorts of things that, you know, I found interesting.
Like, I remember talking to someone on a plane who was from Slovenia,
who told me that Slovenia is 70% forest, and I thought, okay, someday I need to go to Slovenia
because that sounds awesome.
Forests are a great place for an introvert, right? I remember talking to someone on the bus at the university who told me that there was
a region in China where the majority of people, or there was a huge number of people who
have read hair like me, and I went home and googled it right away and found that indeed it was true. I have had free vegetables from people.
I got a ride from a couple of ones that saved me from having to, you know, the train wasn't
running and so they gave me a ride so that I didn't have to take the bus instead of the
train late at night.
I was with my husband.
I felt very safe about it.
Again, not suggesting people get in a stranger's car, but I felt comfortable having talked to them
for ages first. I joined a book club after talking to a stranger. I've talked all sorts of different
interesting kinds of people. I've talked to free masons. I talked to someone who made theatrical
wigs. I've talked to children's book authors and a poet, I don't know if just met all sorts of really interesting people
and just had some really interesting conversations and also a lot of just sort of average meh conversations.
We often fail to see the benefits of talking to strangers because of our own biases.
We worry that people won't like us.
We assume that small talk is empty talk.
In reality, these interactions have a subtle but significant effect on our happiness.
Weak dies it turns out offer tremendous value in our lives.
But during the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us have experienced a catastrophic loss of these
connections.
During the pandemic, people generally found ways to stay in touch with the people they were
closest to. But with acquaintances, sometimes we don't even know how to reach them. They're
just the people that we have been to cross paths with during the course of our day. So because
the patterns of our day change, we just didn't see them.
I had a Barry at the pet store who would remember me
and recognize me and ask about my cats.
I wouldn't reach out to Barry at the pet store, would I?
I mean, I don't even know how to do that.
So I think we've kind of, the pandemic sort of disproportionately
affected our relationships with weak ties.
And at the same time, Julian, I think a lot of people are reporting. Even people who enjoy
working from home and feel like working from home has actually allowed them to spend more time
with family and better have a better work-life balance. Many people then report,
I somehow feel cut off from the world in important ways. And perhaps part of what they're
experiencing is what they're experiencing
is what you're talking about here.
Your spouse is still your spouse.
Your child is still your child.
Your co-worker is still your co-worker.
And you have fixed ways of dealing with them.
Weak ties are what bring in surprise
and unpredictability into your life.
I think that's true.
And I think that that has a bigger or maybe different impact
than people think.
So during the pandemic, if we are talking to our close friends,
we're probably already watching the same shows on Netflix, where we,
you know, we already know all their opinions.
We sort of have nothing new to talk about because nobody was able to go out and do new things.
And so I think, you know, it's the weak ties that sort of get us access to new kinds of information
or new stories or new adventures.
And because we were cut off from them, I think we really missed out on a huge portion of
the novelty that we tend to get day to day.
As we go about our daily routines, there are countless opportunities to connect with others.
We often take these opportunities for granted, but long months of social distancing in the context
of the pandemic make it clear that our lives are made richer by the people around us, even
people we don't know very well at all.
When we come back, techniques and strategies for making the
most of our weekdice. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Across a number of research studies, psychologist Jillian Sandstrom has found that people are
happier when they have lots of casual conversations with strangers or people they know only slightly.
The cafeteria worker who makes you a sandwich, the lifeguard who watches over your kids at
the swimming pool, and usher at the theater.
Most people don't prioritize these relationships, perhaps because they are fleeting.
Jillian grew up shy, but has tried to become more outgoing in conversations with strangers.
In recent
years, she has developed something of a science on how to go about talking to strangers.
She has discovered that there are distinct psychological problems in starting conversations,
maintaining conversations and ending conversations, and each problem requires its own solution.
She explained to me the challenge involved with breaking the ice.
When I was doing my PhD, I used to talk to people on the bus all the time. And it wasn't a common
thing to do. You don't talk to people on the bus. So when I would do that, I think people's
original reaction, their initial gut reaction is, do I know you? I think that's, you know, they think,
maybe that's why you're talking to me. Maybe I've met you before.
And then they realize, oh, I don't know you.
And then they think, oh, what is happening here?
What do you want?
You know, what is going on?
And then I think you get to the third phase,
which is just, oh, you're being friendly.
Cool.
And then you have a nice chat.
So I think sometimes people, you know,
it's, you have to be aware that there is going to be that awkward moment
because unfortunately it is just not the norm
and so people have to sort of make sense of what's going on.
But I think if you can be a little bit patient,
you almost always get to that stage
where people can accept that you're just being friendly.
Breaking the ice involves, well, breaking the ice.
You have to accept there are going to be a few moments
where the other person might be wary.
There may also be situations where someone clearly
does not want to be engaged in a chat.
As they say, read the room.
I can think of a time not too long ago
when I was on the tube in London,
and the unwritten rule is that you do not talk to people
on the tube, so it's just breaking all of the norms
to do it, but I've had some really great chats
on the tube, so I just keep doing it.
But I remember once being on the tube
and turning to the person sitting on my right
and trying to start a conversation.
And she was polite, I think I started to say,
you know, how are you if you had a busy day? And, you know, she responded, but it was very clear
from her body language that she just did not want to talk. She was getting out of book and sort of
getting herself set up and plugged in whatever. And so I thought, okay, that's fine. You know, I,
I don't think we should push ourselves on people. And so I literally turned my head to the person sitting on my left and I started talking to them
and we had a really nice chat.
People worry too much about rejection because first of all, I don't know why that woman didn't
want to talk to me, but you know, there's 100 reasons and I could choose to believe that she didn't
like me or something about me, but I could also choose to believe that, you know,
like I said, maybe she's shy, maybe she's anxious,
maybe she just really is reading an amazing book
and you know, I get it.
So, you know, I can choose to believe something
that isn't so personally negative
and just, you know, most people do wanna talk
and you know, it didn't surprise me
that the person on my left was a bit more willing.
The second problem people face
in talking to strangers is in maintaining the conversation.
If breaking the ice feels scary for many people,
awkward silences can be terrifying.
I think it helps to sort of pre-think, you know, what might I do if that happened?
And it could be things like, well, I'll share something about myself
or I'll comment on something that was in the news today
or I'll ask them a question or, or I'll take a breath
and just wait a moment, it'll be fine, but I have to make sure I don't panic.
That would be a good thing to think about.
Sometimes Gillian says, the problem is not an awkward silence, but a perfectly interesting
conversation that suddenly goes sideways.
I saw this man with a net and he was scooping up fish.
And I thought, what in the heck is he doing?
And so I went up and I asked him, I said, what are you doing?
And he said, he lived nearby.
And he said, this happens sometimes,
we get a heavy rain and the fish sort of washed downstream
and they get stuck somewhere.
And then the water goes down and they're in big trouble.
So I'm just catching the fish and moving them
to somewhere where they're safe.
And I thought, oh, this is amazing.
This guy's a fish hero. And what a cool story. And so we continued talking and the conversation shifted
away from the fish. And, you know, it was early days in the pandemic. So inevitably, we
ended up talking about that. And I discovered that he thought that the pandemic was a hoax and that the government was
making up stories.
And that's not my view.
I couldn't understand why someone would think that way.
Why would the government do that?
And so I started to think, who is this person and what's going on here?
Here they are, a fish hero.
How is a fish hero also having these,
you know, you just never know someone, do you?
And did you sort of sidele away
from the conversation at that point, Jillian,
what did you do?
You know, I just think that we can serve a benefit
to other people by talking to them and by
listening to them. So I think it's pretty rare at least in my own experience. I
don't tend to get into any kind of heated topics when I'm talking to a
complete stranger. It's usually fairly innocuous and fun. It doesn't get into
politics and religion and all the heavy stuff that we avoid at the Thanksgiving dinner
table. I'm just seeking out a fun interaction. I just let him talk a little bit, but yeah,
it just sort of drew to a natural close and I moved on.
Can you talk a little bit about how when we have conversations that are awkward or conversations
that start off being interesting but end up in an odd place.
Many of us draw the wrong conclusion from this, which is that the next conversation is also likely to be difficult,
or the next conversation is likely to be unpleasant. In some ways, we overcount the likelihood of negative interactions.
So yeah, I've run a bunch of studies in the lab where I've asked people to predict how a conversation will go, then they actually have a conversation with a stranger and then
they tell me how it went.
And the people's worries before the conversation are quite high, but after having the conversation,
they say, you know, none of those things actually happened.
But if you asked them to predict what would happen if they had another conversation right
now,
those fears sort of creep back up, not all the way to the level that they were at before the study, but definitely higher than they should be based on having just had a pleasant conversation.
So it seems that people have trouble generalizing, and you know, it makes some sense because every
human is unique, right? So it would be easy to think, well, just because I had a nice conversation with this person, why would I expect to have a nice
conversation with the next person? Julian wanted to figure out if she could override people's
tendency to undercount the likelihood of good conversations and overcount the risk of bad conversations.
The only way I can think of to fix this would be to get people to have a lot of conversations
so they can start to see a pattern, start to see that most of these conversations are pleasant.
But how am I going to do that when people don't even want to have one conversation with
a stranger, let alone lots?
And so I kind of stole an idea.
I was thinking, you know, I need people to, I need to turn it into a game.
I need to make it fun somehow.
And so I was thinking, maybe I could turn it into a bingo game or something.
But a researcher in my department had placed posters around the building.
They were recruiting people for a study involving a scavenger hunt.
And it was a study about memory.
But I thought, oh, scavenger hunt, I could get people to do a scavenger hunt game that involves finding and talking to strangers.
What was the scavenger hunt game that involves talking to strangers?
I thought scavenger hunts are about finding treasure.
Well, people and conversations with strangers are treasure.
Come on.
So yeah, I came up with a list of missions that were things like, you know, find someone
who's wearing a hat or find someone who's drinking a coffee.
I came up with a whole list of missions, about 30 of them, and, you know, I wanted them
to be easy.
I didn't, you know, most Cavendor hunts, you're trying to make it a little tricky, so people
can't find everything, right?
But I wanted people to be able to accomplish every single mission.
Some volunteers were asked to merely observe the strangers they found.
Others had to engage the strangers in conversation.
We found that over the course of the study,
every day, people reported being less and less worried about being rejected by the people they approached and more and more confident in their ability to start
and maintain and end the conversation.
And so it really did seem that there was this gradual
improvement and that repeated practice was important.
Just having one conversation was not enough,
it was this gradual improvement over time
that stuck even a week after the scavenger hunt had ended,
people still had more positive feelings towards talking to strangers.
Julian McAnne to see how important it was to not just have the insight
that talking to strangers could be fun, but to actually practice doing it.
She has developed a workshop to get people to practice these skills.
It's called, how Talk to Strangers.
The workshops sort of became research and then the research fed back into the workshops.
But really, it's just a big practice session.
You know, you're bringing in a bunch of people who think they'd like to learn more
how to talk to strangers.
And so before the workshop starts, it's very quiet in the room.
There's crickets,
because everyone feels a bit awkward
and they don't know what to do,
what's gonna happen.
And so I always start the workshop
by just saying, okay,
you have to turn to someone sitting next to you
and just have a conversation right now.
And then it's just this beautiful moment
because there's this buzz in the room
and it's just like, oh my God, people are talking.
And then it's really like, oh my God, people are talking.
And then it's really hard to shut people up.
Do you have icebreakers yourself that you've used,
Jillian, in terms as you've become a better conversationalist
and better at talking to strangers?
What do you go up and talk to strangers about?
How do you start a conversation?
What do you do?
Yeah, I have a few different go-to methods now.
So maybe it's especially an
English thing. They joke about it all the time, but it's talk about the weather, right? And I think
the reason we do that is because it's a shared circumstance, right? It's something we're both
experiencing at the same time. So I think that principle can be used more broadly. So if you're in
the same place as this person at the same time, then you have
various things in common with them already. So you can comment on the shared situation
that you happen to be in. If you're on a bus or something and something unusual happens,
then all of a sudden you're all on the same team, aren't you? Everybody talks when they
never would have talked before because you've experienced this situation together. But
sometimes I do it in a different way, which is by
pointing out something that I'm seeing in the environment. So sometimes I'll point out
happy, playful dogs to someone else that's walking past me in the park and just draw their attention to it,
or I've pointed out the spring flowers that are popping up. But that's also linked to sort of
the last sort of main technique I use, which
is just to tap into your curiosity.
So I can't tell you how many conversations I've started just by going up to someone and
saying, what you doing?
Like I did with the fish hero, you know, I saw him scooping up fish in a net and I thought,
what is he doing?
And so I've gone up to lots of different people.
I think you have to be a little careful
because you don't want it to come across as accusatory.
It has to come across as curious.
So you have to do it with the sort of, you know,
lightness in your voice that it's, you know,
just out of curiosity and fun
rather than being an accusation.
So there are been studies that found that
conversations don't end when, you know,
one party wants them to end. And they don't even end when one party wants them to end.
They don't even end when both parties want them to end, partly because people are so uncomfortable
with terminating conversations.
Conversations can go well past the point.
They're enjoyable for either party.
How do you get out of conversations with strangers, Julia?
Yeah, I really am still trying to work that out.
I mean, most of the time that I talk to strangers
out walking around the park or something,
and it's really easy to just sort of
walk away when you're finished.
As opposed to being on a bus or sitting next
to someone on the plane,
people don't talk until it's 15 minutes before the landing
because otherwise they're stuck there for the whole flight.
But I've definitely gotten stuck in conversations and I feel like I'm
still not very good at figuring out how to get out of them. And, you know, I've run these how to talk
to strangers workshops. And I, like I said earlier, people can come up with a hundred ways to start a
conversation. Nobody really knows how to end them. Most of the time when people are brainstorming,
it's just a list of lies. It's just, you know, I need to go to
the bathroom. I need to make a phone call or texting a friend and asking a friend to call you
in the middle of a conversation so that you can be pulled away. Right. Yes, we've all seen
those episodes on TV. If you haven't heard from me, call me in seven minutes and help me get out of this.
It depends on the situation, if it's a mixer
and networking event where it's intended for people
to have talk to multiple partners,
then there are some clever things you can do,
like introduce the person to someone else and then move on.
But when I've taught these workshops, it's always one person, and I think it's
literally one person who says, you know, that they just thank the person for the conversation
and sort of signal that it's over and it's time to move on and maybe even explicitly
say that, you know. It's been nice talking to you, but I think it's time for us to go now. And everyone looks at this person and kind of says,
you can do that.
So, you know, that tells me how uncommitted it is, but, you know, why not?
So, I've definitely been trying to do that more often, is to just, you know,
thank the person, acknowledge, you know, I think that's what we want, right?
We don't, it's very unpleasant when you're talking to someone and instead of saying that, they just start looking around
and you can see them kind of fidget, like that's the worst, right? It'll be much better
if someone just said, thank you and, you know, I'm going to move on now.
I'm wondering if at these workshops, Jillian, anyone ever brings up the question of gender.
And I asked this question because some time ago we came by an interesting post on Reddit,
a trans man named Lysander Baker wrote that he had transitioned from female to male over
the course of the pandemic and he'd noticed that his social interactions had changed.
I want to play your clip of what he told us.
It made me realize how difficult it was to try to socialize this casually as male because clip of what he told us.
So Lysa did told us, Julien, that he felt that his
license to talk to strangers had suddenly expired.
My interactions with strangers changed mainly because the rules changed completely.
Before I could get by with lighthearted jokes, you know, you know, one-off like
zingers, but after that started to become much more poorly received.
So what do you make of this, Julian, this this mandate to talk to strangers? Is it some ways harder if you're a man compared to a woman?
So at the how to talk to strangers workshops that I've run, I've heard those kind of comments from both genders actually.
So women are nervous about talking to a man because they don't want to send the wrong
signals. And men are worried about talking to women because they don't want to have their
behavior interpreted in the wrong way. So yeah, I think everybody's sort of nervous about
talking to each other.
And it's really a shame, isn't it?
Because we don't want to not talk to half of the human population.
But I don't think we have to get stuck there.
Like I think there's probably things we can do in our body language to signal that,
you know, by keeping some distance, maybe, you know, less intense eye contact.
I think there's some probably some things we can do to signal that we're just
being friendly and not, or we can explicitly say it, like, look, I'm not
hitting on you. I'm just being friendly.
We started this conversation, Julian, by talking about how you thought of
yourself and perhaps still think of yourself as being introverted.
But I understand that partly partly maybe learning from your own
experience as an adolescent or as a young person at parties,
you now make it a habit to go up to the person
who is standing by themselves in a corner at the party,
the person who is clearly the introvert
and actually strike up a conversation with them.
Yeah, and there's a few reasons for that.
One is completely selfish because I'm very much an introvert and so
that's still an environment that I don't feel comfortable in when there's a lot of people,
especially when there's lots of people I don't know or it's a really kind of noisy environment.
That's when I feel the most uncomfortable. And I know that the way to fix that, to make
myself feel better, is to get into a one-to-one conversation with someone. But then in addition to that,
I'd like to think that there's a pro-social motive as well.
You look around the room and you see someone else
who doesn't have anyone to talk to.
I know now that so many of us feel anxious,
socially anxious or socially awkward.
So there's guaranteed to be somebody else
who doesn't really know anybody
and doesn't have someone to talk to.
And so I'll look around for that person and go and start a conversation with them.
And so I'd like to think that it's helping both of us.
So in many ways, Jillian, you grew up thinking of yourself as being shy and introverted.
And in some ways it's kind of remarkable how far you've come.
You've really practiced changing your own behavior.
Do you ever think to yourself, it's remarkable how far I've come and you've really practiced changing your own behavior. Do you ever think to yourself, it's remarkable
how far I've come and how much I've changed?
Just recently, actually, a couple of weeks ago,
I had a moment where it really struck me how far I've come.
So I was at the opera and I had come back from the intermission
and I started chatting with the people
who were sitting next to me sort of farther in from the aisle than I was.
And I said, how are you doing?
And they said, fine, ish.
And I thought, oh, something is really wrong.
If a complete stranger admits that they're not just fine, right?
And I said, you know, what's going on?
And it turned out that the woman had Parkinson's
and she was feeling very uncomfortable sitting where she was.
And she was worried that she might need to leave
partway through the second act.
But she was so far in from the aisle
that it would mean disrupting everybody.
She had thought that she would be sitting on the aisle.
And so she was very upset to find out that she wasn't.
And so I said, would you like me to ask
if people would be willing to move over
so you could sit on the aisle?
And I offered this thinking,
probably she's gonna say no
because it will feel like a big deal.
But surprisingly, she said, yes, that would be wonderful.
I would feel so much more comfortable.
And so I said, no problem.
And so I talked to two couples, and I asked them
if they'd be willing to move over.
And of course, they were happy to do it.
Most people are kind.
And if you ask them, they'll do something like that.
I'm sure they felt good to be able to do that.
So we all moved over, and the couple moved over to the aisle.
And as her husband passed me, he said,
you know, thank you so much. I couldn't have done that.
It really just struck me in that moment. Like, past Jillian couldn't have done that either.
And so it was really a moment where I realized, wow, somehow everything has changed in these baby
steps. You know, I'm a complete introvert. I never would have thought of talking to strangers
years ago and here I am and asking people to move over
and their seat was just not a problem at all.
I didn't even think twice about it.
You know, like it just has no fear for me anymore
because I've had so many pleasant conversations
with people over the years that, you know,
I knew it would go well. Your dad would have been proud of you, Jillian.
Maybe he had what had been proud.
Yeah, I did tell him this story.
I think he was quite proud.
Jillian's hands trim is a psychologist at the University of Sussex.
Jillian, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you for having me.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Brigitte McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Christian Wong,
Laura Quarelle, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our unsanquilo today is Matt Schwartz.
A few years ago, Matt helped us produce a wonderful episode of Hidden Brain titled Romeo
and Juliet in Kigali.
We've stayed in touch ever since, and he alerted us to the story that Lysander Baker posted
on Reddit.
Thanks for thinking of us, Matt.
If you liked this episode and would like us to produce more shows like this, please consider supporting our work.
Go to support.hiddenbrain.org. Again, if you would like to help support the show you love, go to support.hiddenbrain.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon. you