Hidden Brain - Relationships 2.0: What Makes Relationships Thrive
Episode Date: November 29, 2022Everyone wants to be loved and appreciated. In the final episode of our Relationships 2.0 series, we revisit a conversation with psychologist Harry Reis, who says there’s another ingredient to succe...ssful relationships that’s every bit as important as love. If you missed any of the episodes in our Relationships 2.0 series, you can find them all in this podcast feed, or on our website. And if you enjoyed this series, please consider supporting our work.Â
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This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. When Harry Reeves was in middle school,
he cared what his classmate started. Now all middle schoolers want to fit in with their peers,
but Harry, he was next level. I was somewhat insecure as an adolescent, very unsure of my
standing within the social group that I lived in and I would keep daily charts
of how I was doing and who I connected with and who I did not connect with.
Harry's charts did more than track who sat next to him at lunch or who joked around with
him in the hallway.
No this is actually more embarrassing than that.
These were actually graphs where I would rate on a 10-point scale
how I had done with various people on that day.
So if I thought that a certain person had really liked me on that day,
you know, they would get a nine.
And if I thought I'd really come across as an idiot with another person,
that might be a two or a three. and I would have these charts over time where the
lines would go up and down. It was a painful way to go through middle school
but it did come with an upside. Years later Harry learned there were people who
kept such charts professionally. I discovered oh oh my god, there are people who actually make a life
of studying this stuff. And it just instantly grabbed me because it was something that I'd
always been doing. Harry went on to become a social psychologist, and he discovered that if you
keep meticulous charts, if you track the ups and downs of relationships like an insecure middle schooler, you can actually discover really interesting things about the air-bend flow of human relationships.
This week on Hidden Brain, we conclude our relationships 2.0 series with a look at the
secret ingredient that makes some relationships thrive and others falter.
Many of us know what it's like to meet a soulmate or kindred spirit at work.
We know what it feels like to be inspired by a politician or a business leader.
But what exactly prompts us to feel this deep connection with some people, but not with
others?
Is it having a shared goal, the intangibles of chemistry?
Or does it have to do with temperament and personality?
It turns out that beneath the feeling of being close to someone is a powerful psychological
mechanism.
At the University of Rochester, psychologist Harry Reese has studied this core ingredient
of successful relationships.
Harry Reese, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Glad to be here.
I want to start by spending some time talking about a relationship in your own life, Harry.
I think it speaks to some of the research insights you've developed over the years.
I understand you grew up in a very tight-knit community.
You got married very young to a woman who was also from that same community.
What was that relationship like when you first got married?
We grew up in a German Jewish community in the upper parts of Manhattan.
And the community was very insular, it was very warm and connected.
But there was also a sense that you would stay in that community
when you got older, when you got married, and began to raise children on your own.
And so I had the expectation that I would find a partner in that group, and in fact I did.
I met my first wife when I was 19.
She came from the same social community
that I came from and we started dating largely
because it was expected that you would start dating
at that age, all of my friends were doing it,
all of my cousins were doing it and so I did it.
And at the age of 21, we decided to get married.
It was literally the exact day I graduated from college.
Wow.
That was the age in which all of our parents
had gotten married in the old country.
So that was what was expected.
At a certain point in your early adulthood,
I think this was around the time you were in graduate school,
you got involved in what were known at the time as encounter groups or encounter
sessions.
For people who aren't familiar with that term today, can you describe what they were, Harry?
Yes.
Encounter groups were very popular in the late 1960s and 1970s.
They were laboratories in which people could be completely open and honest, talk about what they authentically
felt, what their goals and needs were, and get honest feedback from other people about
how they were coming across to them, because there's so much of our natural social interaction
that involves being polite, not really talking about what you're thinking and feeling,
and the ground rules of these encounter groups were to be open and honest in everything
that you said and did.
And did you say things in this group that you hadn't said before?
Did you reveal parts of yourself that you hadn't revealed to other people in your family growing
up, what your wife?
Yes, I began to talk about how I saw my life,
how I saw the community I came from,
but also where I wanted to go with my life,
what I wanted to accomplish professionally,
but also personally, and because I was in graduate school
at NYU at the time, which was in Greenwich Village,
which of course was a very lively, contemporary culture at the time, which was in Greenwich Village, which of course was a very lively, contemporary
culture at the time, and was beginning to experience the idea that the world I grew up in was
not the world that I wanted to live my life in, but this was not something that I felt that
I could talk about with my family or for that matter with my wife. And I began to talk about it in the context of the group and literally was blown away
by the feedback that I got from other people.
So you were having these sessions in these encounter groups and learning perhaps parts
of yourself, learning things about yourself that you hadn't known before.
Were you able to bring this back to your marriage?
Were you able to talk with your wife about what was going on? Did you have conversations
about it? And I'm wondering if so, what they were like?
Well, that was the problem. When I would begin to talk about these things, there was no
recognition by my wife at all about what I was talking about. This was very contrary to what she knew about, what she had experienced, and there was just
no connection there at all.
And so our relationship really became a very distant relationship.
It was not hostile.
She was not mean about it in any way.
She simply couldn't connect with it.
And in a very real sense I was moving
in a different direction and that was a direction that she couldn't come along.
So there's obviously some tension here between the kind of person you were, the encounter
groups, you felt like in some ways this was the authentic Harry, in some ways you couldn't
be that authentic person in your marriage.
What effect did this have on your marriage, Harry?
Well, it basically ended it.
Of course, it took a year or a year and a half for that to actually happen.
But essentially, I began to experience my outside life as far more rewarding and far more meaningful than the life that I had with my wife.
And so we began to spend less time together,
our time together would be more structure on formalities rather than the kind of intimacies that
should go on in a marriage. The story that you're telling about your marriage is I think really
revealing because it also matches what your research has been finding over the last several years.
What is the relationship between the experience of being understood in an intimate relationship?
And likelihood of success or failure of that relationship?
Understanding is one of the most important things that we want in our close relationships.
This is actually true beyond the realm of close relationships,
but especially in our most intimate relationships,
marriages, our friendships, our connections with our siblings,
and the rest of our family.
One of the most powerful things that we want
is for there to be real understanding in those relationships,
that the people on the other side
know who we are and are caring and validating and accepting of that person.
It's interesting I think when most people think of intimate relationships, they think about things
like love or you know appreciation or stability, but of course the moment you say this, it makes
intuitive sense to me that one thing to be understood is absolutely core to intimate relationships.
Well, I think the important point is that things like love and trust and caring simply don't work
if there isn't understanding. If your understanding of me is different than how I understand myself,
then when you tell me how much you love me,
you're telling me that you love somebody different than me. And if I tell you how much I appreciate
you, but in fact, I'm appreciating you for the things that you're not, you don't think are
the most important things about yourself. Some of my feedback will now start to sound
inauthentic to you. And in fact, we have done research where we did exactly that.
And a very interesting thing happens.
People smile, they say they're happy to get the feedback,
and then they want to get out of there as fast as possible
in case the other person finds out how false the impression was.
So it feels inauthentic and very unrewarding. It'll
suppose you got a nice big raise at work from your boss and they said they're
giving you the raise because of something that isn't true about you. You know
think about how uncomfortable that would feel. Yeah, it makes you feel like an
imposter almost. Exactly.
The moment I heard about Harry's work, I started to see its applications Exactly.
The moment I heard about Harry's work, I started to see its applications everywhere.
Think about the perennial conflict between parents and children.
So much of it can be traced to the feeling many kids have
that their parents just don't get them.
Take the opening scene of the movie, Lady Bird,
a teenager and her mom are driving back from a college tour and they start to squabble.
I wish I could live through something.
Aren't you?
Nope.
The only exciting thing about 2002 is that it's a palindrome.
Okay fine, well yours is the worst life of all so you win.
Oh so now you're mad.
No, it's just you I wanted to listen to you
Have a great. I'm sorry. I'm not perfect. No one's asking you to be perfect. Just consider it would do
I don't even want to go to school in this state anyway. I hate California
Obviously, this is a comedy but the teenagers fury at being misunderstood is palpable
I want to go where culture is like you are
I recently not Connecticut or new hamster where I'm in the world. I research here.
Or at least Connecticut or New Hampshire where writers live in the woods.
Get into those schools anyway.
Mom, can't even pass your driver's test.
It's a very common feeling for adolescents and for that matter, adults, to feel like their
parents don't understand them.
And sometimes that comes from the fact that, you know that we grow, we change.
Often we move away from our families and become things that our families don't necessarily
have an appreciation of.
I want to talk a little bit about the implications of your work, not in the context of intimate relationships,
but in the context of professional relationships.
You said a second ago that wanting to be understood is core to intimate relationships,
but I have the sense that it also plays a role
in professional relationships.
Can you talk about that?
Can you talk about the importance, for example,
as an academic for your fellow peers,
not just to think that you're a good research
or a smart person, but to truly understand
the insights that you have developed over the years?
Well, sure, in the academy, it's very important
that our colleagues, the people who are working with
toward the common goal of doing research
and educating students and each other.
It's very important that they understand
what we're trying to do in our work,
that they get the message, not only the superficial content
of it, but also the meta message that
is underneath that.
It's true in medicine, when there's much research that shows that medical care works better
when patients feel like their doctors are listening and really understand what their symptoms
are, what their needs are, what they want done.
It's common in the classroom also. Students do better when they feel like their teachers understand who they are and what their priorities are.
It may be helpful to think about what happens when we don't receive that kind of understanding
in professional settings.
Students who think that professors don't understand them are more likely to end up feeling
lackadaisical about their studies.
A patient who thinks her doctor can't be bothered to listen to her might disregard otherwise
excellent medical guidance.
Over time, if we feel our colleagues and clients and customers don't understand what we go
through every day, we become much more likely to snap.
That's what happened to JetBlue Flight Attendant, Steven Slater.
Like many flight attendants, he had trouble getting passengers to sit down while the plane
was still taxing.
As he argued with one woman, a piece of luggage got loose and hit him in the head.
Here's what happened next, according to a Boston TV station.
That's when witnesses say Slater lost it, telling off the entire plane cursing at passengers
from the intercom.
His profanity lace tirade ended with a quote,
I've been in this business for 28 years. I've had it. That's it. Slater swung
open the plane's side door and rode the evacuation shoot down to the tarmac.
I asked Harry to talk about how a lack of understanding from colleagues and
customers can produce burnout.
People feeling misunderstood is something that is growing by leaps and bounds
in the world we live in now. With all the stresses and tensions that we have,
there's more and more of a need to get connected with other people and part of
that connection involves the sense of really
understanding where people are coming from.
In the old world, most of the people that you dealt with were people from your community,
people who had lives that were relatively similar to yours who lived with the same context
as you lived with.
And it was easy enough to understand
them because everything that they were facing was the same as what you were facing. But
now we're so much more mobile and we're so much more connected, we're coming across people
who have different backgrounds, different goals, different priorities, indeed they may be living on
opposite sides of the planet.
So the context is so so much different and it's so much harder to
establish that core base of understanding.
Why do you think it is that being understood is so important to human beings Harry?
What is happening at a psychological level that makes this so important?
Well, I think that's a very interesting question, Shankar.
I think one of the reasons for that is that when you feel understood it's much easier
to connect with another person, it means you don't need to explain yourself repeatedly. It gives you a greater sense of coherence that the world is predictable
and sensible and that you can move in it freely without having to worry about how you're
coming across. Am I being likable? Am I being smart? Am I being effective in that situation?
I'm wondering if part of this also is that,
if I feel like you like me for who I am,
I feel a greater liberty to actually be myself,
to be authentic.
Well, I feel a greater liberty to be authentic,
but I also don't need to worry about rejection.
We're primed by evolution to be very concerned
about being accepted by our group.
And we all have a very strong need to belong.
And if I'm understood, then I don't have to worry about my true self coming out and getting kicked out by the group.
Whereas if I feel like the group really doesn't know me, then I'm constantly having to monitor and protect my status.
Harry Rees and a number of researchers have tried to understand a paradox.
If wanting to be understood is so important to our relationships and our well-being,
why do so many of us regularly keep our true selves hidden?
That's when we come back. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. A desire to be understood, to be seen for who
we are, is a powerful driver of successful relationships between parents and children,
between romantic partners and between colleagues. Knowing that is the easy part. Unfortunately,
there are barriers that get in the way of actually reaching
such understanding. Paradoxically, one major barrier can be our own desire to be understood.
After Harry's first marriage ended, he remarried. He and his wife, Eleanor, both psychologists
and they've been married for more than 30 years. Despite the longevity of their relationship,
there are still moments when things can suddenly unravel
over a trivial issue, like buying a new couch for that TV room.
We have a relatively small TV room,
and we had a couch in there that was comfortable for two people to sit on,
but not comfortable for two people to recline on.
And my wife wanted us to get a new couch
that would allow us both to recline comfortably on it,
whereas I wanted to keep this couch
because it was perfectly comfortable for me.
I'm a large person.
And this is one of the few couches that I've sat on that worked perfectly for me. I'm a large person. And this is one of the few couches that I've sat on
that worked perfectly for me.
And so this seems like a very, you know,
we both have reasonable positions, of course.
And so of course, what you did was you sat down reasonably
and discussed the pros and cons of getting a new couch, right?
Well, no, not exactly.
You know, there's a truism that psychologists
like to talk about is, who are the worst patients
for psychotherapy? And the answer is a couple of psychologists. And the reason for that
is that each knows exactly what's wrong with the other person, and if the other person
would only fix it, everything would be fine. And in a sense, that's how our initial conversations about the couch began.
We would discuss what we liked or didn't like about the couch, and each of us would complete
the other person's sentences, because we were absolutely certain that we understood what was
going on in the other ones' mind. The key part of that that was so unhelpful is the not allowing the perspectives to be talked about, to allow
them to come out in a marriage and for that matter in any kind of relationship, to resolve
a conflict involves putting aside one's presumptions about what the other person is thinking and
feeling, even if those presumptions might be right, and instead really listening to what the other person is saying,
and then making it clear that one really is listening,
and that became the solution to the couch problem.
When we stopped interrupting each other
and stopped talking over each other,
and very clearly stated what each of us wanted to happen. We actually came to a very
good agreement about it, which was that we searched for a couch that had the length that my wife wanted
and that had the support features that I wanted. And it took a little bit of doing, but we found one,
and it's coming next week. And of course, this is a trivial example.
It obviously resolved in a perfectly happy manner,
but you can see how the same dynamics play out
in all kinds of other situations with far less,
you know, agreeable outcomes, where two parties
are in conflict with one another.
Each of them feels like the other is not,
not only not understanding them,
but not making any attempt to understand them.
Each of them is trying to get that position out, unable to hear what the other person is saying.
And this combination of wanting to be understood and not being able to offer understanding to the other person
ends up being really toxic.
Yes, that's absolutely correct.
We are not perfectly articulate human beings.
When we communicate, we don't necessarily measure every word perfectly.
We use linguistic styles that may not be 100% compatible
with the other person.
We make assumptions in our heads about, you know,
what we're thinking and feeling that don't always come across.
And so the process of communication is a very imperfect one.
And the more imperfect it is, the more difficult it is to develop a true sense of understanding.
So, besides some of the conflicts that we've been talking about
in the course of interpersonal relationships,
you and others have also identified a host of psychological barriers
that cause people in some ways to hide themselves from others
but also cause them not to see others clearly.
And I want to look at some of these in detail.
The research at Tom Gillovich once ran a study where volunteers were videotaped sampling
a variety of beverages and one of these contained a disgusting vinegar, brine solution.
The volunteers were told to conceal their feelings of disgust and then ask to guess whether
others would notice that
they were disgusted.
Can you tell me what happened and what bearing this has to our conversation about being understood?
Well, we often assume that other people can see what we're feeling even when we don't actually
express those feelings.
So often I might be angry but not do a terribly good job of explaining
that, and I would assume that everyone knows that I'm angry without necessarily that coming
across.
And of course, that's exactly what happened in the study. The volunteers, in fact, thought
that their feelings of disgust would be obvious to other people, but they were not. And
Tom Gillovich and his colleagues talked about the illusion of transparency that we believe that
What we feel on the inside is transparent to those on the outside?
Right, you know some of us are better at being transparent than others
but one of the biggest misconceptions
People have about marriage
especially before they go into marriage, is that their partner will always know what they're thinking and feeling.
And this is a very, very destructive expectation.
So, sometimes, of course, the problem is not that we believe that we are transparent,
sometimes we're actively trying to hide elements of ourselves from others.
When you're just getting to know someone, for example, it doesn't seem like a good time to show all of your cards.
Yes, and of course there are many situations in which it's appropriate not to show all of your cards,
but more importantly, I think there are many situations in which people try not to show all their cards
when that is actually problematic. In dating situations, for example,
we're clearly putting our best foot forward
in the early stages and even much later in the relationship.
People often have what we call hidden selves.
We have aspects of ourselves
that we're really quite afraid
that other people will find out
because it's embarrassing,
because it will embarrassing, because it
will make us vulnerable, because we fear that it might make our partners second guess
their interest in us.
So you and others have found that when people experience a sense of being understood, they
are drawn closer to those people.
So in other words, being understood prompts people to feel closer to the people who understand
them. But in tenuous relationships, there's something of a vicious cycle. The more insecure we feel,
the more hesitant we become about sharing elements of ourselves that might be judged harshly by others.
And of course, the less we share, the less close we feel to others. So it seems to me that some of
these dynamics can produce a vicious cycle. Yes, you're talking about the idea of self-fulfilling prophecy and the irony there is that
in the very situation you described, people will often be right there partner for not understanding
them and yet they've been deliberately hiding aspects of themselves.
So we've looked at several ways in which we might hide important parts of ourselves from
others, but let's flip the script for a second.
It turns out that we also regularly fail to take the time to extend understanding to others.
And to go back to your story about the couch, part of the problem was that you were not
slowing down enough to hear your wife's perspective because you were so anxious to get out your own.
Yes. Well, many times we are much more interested in expressing our point of view than in listening
to the other person's point of view. This is one of the great conversation skills that
people sometimes need to learn. Instead of
listening, people will be thinking about what's the next thing I'm going to say. And when
you do that, it's that much harder to understand what the other person is actually talking
about. We really have to learn how to focus our attention on the other person rather than
ourselves.
I'm wondering if gender dynamics play a role here as well. It seems to me at least, you know,
from anecdotal experience that women are more forthcoming than men are in sort of revealing
elements of themselves and wanting to be understood and seeking to understand. Is that a stereotype
or do you think there's some truth in it?
Well, what there is truth in, I think, is the idea that women are better at doing the
understanding.
Women are better at paying attention to what other other person is saying and expressing
that in a way that comes across to the other person.
Women also do tend to be somewhat more emotionally open.
We've done a lot of research on that gender difference
and what's interesting about it is that women tend to be relatively more open,
regardless of the gender of the person that they're talking to.
But men tend to be open primarily with women.
In other words, men when they're interacting with other men
are less likely to be emotionally open.
And that often interferes with men's developing close
friendships, particularly later in life.
You have an interesting story about something
you overheard at the gym where a couple of
men were having a heart to heart, or at least one of them was having a heart to heart.
Yes, I was at my gym and there were two young men standing there and one of them said,
you know, how are you doing to the other?
And the other said, oh, it's just terrible.
My wife left me, I lost my job, and I had an auto accident.
And the other man said, wow, you know,
it's really important to get your feelings out.
Why don't you tell me about it?
And my ears perked up.
I thought, wow, this is exactly what we're talking about.
And then he said, and I've got a minute, so go ahead.
I feel there are also times, Harry, when we may actively not want to understand someone else. If you sense that a friend or a colleague or a romantic partner thinks poorly of you, it almost
might be less painful if you engaged in some willful blindness.
Can you talk about this as being one of the barriers to actually understanding other
people?
Yes, we talk about this as when the head protects the heart.
And the simple idea here is that there are many things that other people might be thinking
about us that we don't want to know about. For example, early
in a dating relationship, we may not want to really know what the other person thinks of
ourselves. It might be unpleasant. It might not be what we want to hear. In a conversation
with a teacher or a work supervisor, we may not want to really know what the other person thinks of what we're doing
because it may not be entirely complimentary to ourselves.
And so often we have blinders.
Now of course, when you take this to an extreme,
it's quite dysfunctional, but at relatively low levels,
this may be highly functional.
at relatively low levels, this may be highly functional. We often do a getting acquainted exercise with students where we ask students what superpower
they would like.
And as soon as a student always says the ability to read other people's minds, and I think
it's safe to say that the ability to read other people's mind is the worst thing that could happen to us.
Research has once asked a couple of hundred couples to write down every evening for a couple of weeks how considered or selfish that partner had been or how supportive that had been, and then I've had them predict how that partners
would behave the next day.
And the researchers generally found that people believed that the way that partners had
behaved on day one was a good predictor of how they would behave on day two.
So in other words, we assume that the people who we are engaging with today, their behaviors
are not going to change in the future.
And of course, one of the reasons in some ways we fail to understand other people is that
our impressions of who they are are rooted in the past.
Well we have a strong belief that character is a major determinant of behavior.
And so we assume that people are going to be consistent
from one situation to another, from one day to another,
indeed, even from one period of life to another period of life.
And what we under consider is the idea that people grow,
people change, that people's situations change,
and that that leads them to behave in different
ways as well.
So often when we're dealing with partners, when we're dealing with students, when we're
dealing with co-workers, we don't account for the fact that people develop, people change
in priorities, people mature, and that they behave differently over time.
This is especially, I think, acute when you're talking about parents and children, so the
mom who thinks the adolescent son always needs help has trouble adapting to the fact that
maybe the adolescent son now is 25 years old and perhaps doesn't need her help as much.
One of the hardest things about parenting is that children develop and they often develop
rather quickly and recognizing the skill changes or the need changes that a child goes through
is often difficult for parents to keep up with.
Tell me about the time your mom came to visit you when you were first in Rochester.
You were 25 years old, I believe.
Tell me that story, Harry.
Yes, I was 25 years old.
This was the first time I lived in a house of my own.
My mother walked in the door and without taking her jacket off, started to clean the sink.
And it was not that dirty. Did you have a conversation with her about this?
I mean, you say, you know, I'm the psychologist.
I know exactly what you're doing.
No, I was happy to have my sink clean.
One of the things I'm taking away from all this work, Harry, is that, you know, being understood
requires significant effort from two parties.
So understanding tends to happen when you have an excellent communicator paired with an
excellent empath.
And of course, when you put it that way, it becomes much less surprising that so many of us
go through life without getting the understanding that we want or without extending understanding
to others.
Yes, that's correct.
A failure on either end of that transaction
can make it go bad.
Can you talk for a moment about the experience of getting this understanding given that
it's rare, given that it doesn't happen always, I think many of us have a feeling of almost
transcendence when we feel like we're paired with someone who truly gets us.
Well, I would not quite want to go as far as you're going and saying that we don't have
this kind of understanding.
We certainly don't have this kind of complete understanding, but if we didn't have some
level of understanding, we would all be deflecting and bouncing off each other in many ways.
So there's some level of basic understanding that is quite common in our lives. And for that to happen, we have to be
reasonably open in expressing what's important to us and reasonably good listeners in paying attention to what's
being said to us.
When we come back, it curious twists. It turns out there is a big difference between being understood and feeling understood.
Also, given the barriers we face to understanding, what skills can help us become more connected
to others and allow us to understand them a little better.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
The desire to feel understood appears to be a core psychological need.
When we have it, we are happier colleagues, warmer partners and more loyal friends.
When we don't feel understood, it can corrode even our best relationships.
Psychologist Harry Rves studies intermittal relationships.
He's found that being understood is a pillar of successful relationships, but there are
all kinds of cognitive biases that keep us from being understood and keep us from understanding
others.
Harry, one of the most interesting aspects of your research is that you found a difference
between being understood and feeling understood.
Can you explain this difference to me?
Yes.
Being understood refers to whether you really understand what another person is like, what their preferences
are, what their character traits are, what their needs are, what their desires are, feeling understood,
it's entirely within the mind of the perceiver and it's the belief that another person really
understands who you are and what's important to you.
And you're saying that there are sometimes cases where people may feel understood without
actually being understood?
Yes, there are.
One of the things we've found in our work is that when people have successful relationships,
they often imagine that other people understand them better than they actually do.
And this is one thing that actually helps them maintain a sense of security and safety in that relationship.
And you've done studies to this effect, I understand, where you show that in some ways the
belief that you are understood, the feeling that you have of being understood, in fact,
is a strong predictor of the success of that relationship, not necessarily the fact that
people actually are understood.
Yes, that's correct. Well, what we did in this work was look at the extent to which people felt understood
by their close relationship partners in two different areas.
One is in the area of sexual preferences and the other was in the area of humor preferences.
And what we found was quite interesting and that's that when people feel very satisfied
with their relationships and when they feel very similar to the people that they're relating
to, they actually imagine that there's a greater level of understanding than there actually
is. Now this is a good thing because that greater level of feeling
understood allows them to feel more confident, more safe, more happy in the relationship. So
we talk about this as a maintenance mechanism and by that we mean a way of thinking about
your relationship that actually boosts the
integrity and the coherence and the safety of the relationship.
I'm thinking about this also in the context of politics.
Politicians like Bill Clinton or Donald Trump, they're loved by their supporters in
part because people feel like they understand them.
Is that stretching your research too far to extend it to the realm of politics?
No, I think that implication follows quite naturally.
Both Bill Clinton and Donald Trump were able to communicate to other people
something that made it sound like he really understood what was important to those people.
And that is a major determinant of people's identification with candidates.
Their willingness to go out and vote for those candidates are perhaps to even donate
to them.
In my state, when people lose their jobs, it's a good chance I'll know them by their names.
When the factory closes, I know the people who ran it.
When the businesses go bankrupt, I know them.
People that have lost their jobs, lost their livelihood, lost their health insurance.
What I want you to understand is, on the campaign, I called it,
the forgotten man and the forgotten woman.
Well, you're not forgotten anymore, that I can tell you.
Not forgotten anymore that I can tell you. Not forgotten anymore.
And I think it might also be a measure of how much we are willing to forgive candidates,
even if they fail to deliver on promises that they have made to us,
when we feel like the candidates understand us, that this leader truly gets us,
this leader is perhaps even one of us.
You're willing to forgive all kinds of things, even if the candidate doesn't actually deliver
once he or she is in office. Yes, I think that's exactly right.
I want to turn to some of the techniques that we can use to better understand other people and to
be better understood by others. Psychotherapists sometimes use a technique called speaker
listener technique to help couples overcome misunderstandings. Can you describe this technique to me Harry?
Sure. The speaker listener technique is a very straightforward way of trying to both
enforce the idea of needing to listen but also to create the sense of being listened to.
So, in the speaker-listener technique, there will be a box on the table with two red lights, one in front of each partner.
And the way the process works is only the partner who has the light is allowed to speak.
So, the lights on, you're allowed to speak, and you can say whatever your concerns or issues are, then the light is allowed to speak. So the lights on, you're allowed to speak and you can say whatever
your concerns or issues are, then the light switches and the partner's job is to repeat what you just
said as they heard it. Then the first person's light comes back on and that person then has to
comment on whether you got it right or how you got it wrong.
And then the other person's light comes back on and they have to amend what they said
to reflect the feedback that you just gave them.
So in some ways you're slowing people down to the point where each side says, not only
have I had my say, I am now sure the other person has heard me in exactly the way that I want to be heard.
Right, but it's more than just slowing down because lots of times people know that they have to shut up
while the other person is saying the point of view, but their mind will be closed.
This technique forces them to open their minds and really listen to what's being said.
Uh-huh.
What are the salutary effects that greater understanding might bring, both in terms of our
personal psychology, but also in the way we treat other people?
Yes, we've done a number of studies of this where we use an experimental manipulation that
will temporarily allow people to feel more understood or alternatively to feel more misunderstood.
And what we find is that once we give people a sense that they've been
understood, that they've been validated and responded to, they become more
open-minded, they become more willing to consider opposite points of view.
This is work that I did with an Israeli colleague
named Guy Itchakoff, and we gave people a sense
of being understood, and then measured their prejudice
toward some out group that they might have known.
Perhaps it was an ethnic group, perhaps it was people
with a different sexuality.
Some group that prior to the study,
they had expressed some
negativity toward and we found that after feeling understood they become
less concerned with
inflating their view of themselves of thinking of themselves in a more ego-enhancing way and
Most importantly and most interestingly they become less prejudiced towards out groups.
I'm wondering if you can tell me a little bit about some of the techniques that you employ yourself
having done this work for many years after seeing the importance of actual understanding as well
as communicating understanding to other people. How has this changed the way you interact with
others in terms of your students, your colleagues, your partners, your friends, your family?
Do you do things differently today than you did in the past?
Oh, absolutely.
One of the things I do, particularly with students, is that, you know, students will often come to you with a request for this, that, or the other thing.
And often it's not a request that we can grant. And rather than
just, you know, say, no, sorry, I will sort of go out of my way to make it clear that
I understood what they said. I think it's a perfectly reasonable thing for them to ask
for, but I just can't do it. They may feel turned down, but at least they know that I paid attention
and respected where they were coming from.
I want to stay with that insight for a moment,
because in some ways, I think what you're hinting at, at least,
is that sometimes the pain we feel in disagreements
might be less about the disagreement,
and it might be more about how we feel
the other person has heard us or listened to us or taken us seriously.
Absolutely.
There is research by one of my colleagues, Amy Gordon, where she has shown that conflicts,
even when they don't get resolved, are less harmful to relationships when people feel
like they've been heard and understood.
One of the misconceptions that people have is that if you express understanding for what
the other person is saying that you're somehow agreeing with their point of view, and that
needn't be the case.
Understanding simply means making it clear that you get the message that they communicated and that you respect it as a reasonable point of view.
That doesn't mean that you have to agree with it.
But it's what flagging. The reason that I think many of us fail to do this, fail to understand others or fail to have ourselves be understood. Is it actually, is it's hard? It does involve time, it involves effort,
and it involves emotional effort.
And it also involves vulnerability.
It involves being open to hearing something
that you might not like.
So in some ways, the act of doing this
involves, you know, an element of courage, I suppose.
It definitely involves courage. The courage to tell you who I really am,
and the courage to listen to who you really are.
Harry Rees is a psychologist at the University of Rochester.
Harry, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
My pleasure.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura
Correll, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our unsung hero this week is the psychologist Sonia Lubamerski.
She was featured in our episode Where Happiness Hides.
After we talked, Sonia told us about Harry Reese's research on the importance of feeling
understood.
Thank you Sonia for introducing us to Harry's work.
If you enjoyed this episode, make sure you go back and check out our entire Relationships
2.0 series.
And if you'd like us to produce more series like this one, please consider supporting
our work.
Go to support.hiddenbrain.org. Again, if you
would like to help us build more shows like this, go to support.hiddenbrain.org. I'm Shankar
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