Hidden Brain - When to Eat the Marshmallow
Episode Date: June 19, 2023Think about the last time you resisted watching yet another episode of your favorite TV show, or decided not to have a second piece of cake at a friend's birthday party. In many societies, self-discip...line is seen as an invaluable trait. But we often overlook what makes it possible to hold back in those moments of temptation. This week, psychologist Celeste Kidd offers a new way to think about self-control. Then, we talk with researcher Jacqueline Rifkin about how to find the right balance between indulgence and restraint.Have you ever been torn about whether to pursue a passion project? In the latest episode of Hidden Brain+, novelist and physician Abraham Verghese tells us about the person who helped him navigate this dilemma in his own life. You can hear the episode and become a subscriber to Hidden Brain+ at Apple Podcasts.Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In the classic children's film, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,
a group of children win a private tour of a whimsical candy-making plant.
There are massive gummy bears hanging from the branches of trees
and larger than life mushrooms stuffed with whipped cream.
The centerpiece is a decadent river of chocolate.
A chocolate river.
That's the most fantastic thing I've ever seen.
10,000 gallons an hour.
The children's eyes grow wide,
but their appetites are even bigger.
So many temptations are within easy reach.
The kids become greedy and self-indulgent.
Hey, she's got two! I want another one! Stop squawking me!
Everybody has had one and one is enough for anybody.
Now come along.
Yelling to temptation comes at a cost.
One of the children falls down a trash shoot.
One turns into a blueberry, another
has carried away in the chocolate river.
He can't swim.
There's no better time to learn.
This is cult going up the pipe.
Call a plumber!
Stook in the pine trees, they won't cook.
From Hansel and Gretel to the story of Euliceus tying himself to the mast of a ship,
countless fables and stories have told us about the importance of self-control
and the dangers of giving into temptation.
These ideas have entered the world of science too.
Psychologists have explored how temptations shape our minds and how self-control can mold
our lives.
This week on Hidden Brain, we explore a crucial and often overlooked ingredient of self-discipline.
We'll also consider when it makes sense to exercise self-discipline and when it might
be better to set it aside. In the early 1970s, a Stanford psychologist named Walter Michelle conducted a series of very simple experiments that would become famous around the world.
The subjects in the experiments were children from a nursery school in Palo Alto.
Walter Michelle wanted to know, how can children develop the ability to exercise self-discipline?
He called the experiment the marshmallow test.
This is how the typical Marshmallow test works. This is psychologist Celeste Kid, who works at the University of California Berkeley, 50 miles
up the road from Walter Michelle's old lab.
You bring a child into a room, the child is between the ages of three and five years old,
and you offer them a choice.
They can have one marshmallow right now,
or if they can wait until the researcher leaves the room
and then comes back, they're told if they have not touched
or tasted the marshmallow,
then they're going to be given two marshmallows instead.
The researcher leaves the room,
they leave the child alone with the one marshmallow on the table,
the child is instructed to stay in the room, they leave the child alone with the one marshmallow on the table. The child is instructed to stay in the chair.
Then the researcher is waiting to see how long before the child eats the marshmallow.
And the thinking here is that there is a treat right in front of the child, presumably the treat is delicious,
and the child has to make a choice between eating the delicious treat right now, or waiting to
eat the delicious treat, and then potentially getting a larger treat in 15 minutes.
That is correct.
And when you do this, there are a lot of spontaneous strategies that emerge while the child is
waiting there.
It's common for kids to do things like to physically
cover the marshmallow with their hands so that they don't see it to try to avoid the temptation
of grabbing it and eating it. Children will sometimes try to look away from the marshmallow so
they'll look up at the sky or something like this. They're in a room so it's not, I guess it's
the ceiling, it's not a sky. Other strategies include trying to distract themselves by doing things like singing or making
up a little story.
Kids are very creative in coming up with ways to try to distract themselves.
Aha.
So, the kids pretty quickly, even though these are small kids, it sounds like the kids pretty
quickly understood what was being asked of them, understood why it was difficult to do, and
almost instantly came up with strategies to help them do this difficult thing.
They did.
I will also say though that the strategies that kids between the ages of three and five
spontaneously come up with don't end up being very effective.
So most of the kids end up eating the marshmallow very quickly.
Kids wait about five or six minutes, something like that.
So they're not lasting very long.
Walter Michelle, who died in 2018,
said that children who were able to hold off eating the marshmallow
demonstrated a capacity for something
he called delayed gratification.
He sensed it was an important skill in all sorts of domains
and he wanted to see if he could teach kids strategies to exercise better self-control.
He started to look for mental hacks that could help everyone, children and adults,
stave off temptation.
A lot of these strategies that were introduced were attentional manipulations, so teaching
kids to imagine something
like the later reward.
So imagine what you're going to get later.
He found that there were longer wait times
when you introduced visualizations that didn't highlight
the deliciousness of the marshmallow.
So picturing the marshmallow as a picture, for example, a picturing a frame
around it was something that caused kids to be able to wait for longer. Whereas emphasizing
the deliciousness, the chewiness of the marshmallow, imagining that was not helpful in helping kids
wait, I was like, that tended to result in less long wait times.
Do you have a sense on Walter Michelle's thinking
on why he thought this trait would be useful,
not just in the trivial game of waiting for five minutes
to get the second marshmallow, but more generally in life?
I think that Walter Michelle's reasoning was largely intuitive. I think part of why people were very captivated by the marshmallow
test and the videos is because they can relate to that. Everybody has been in a circumstance where
they have something that would be better later if they could just resist some temptation. Now
everybody can relate to that.
just resist some temptation now, everybody can relate to that.
What transformed the Marshmallow test from a fun experiment with cute preschoolers to a cultural phenomenon with enormous implications for social and public policy
is what came next.
In the decades that followed, Walter Michelle checked in on the kids from the original experiments.
He measured everything from their health outcomes to their academic performance.
The point of all this tracking was to explore where the kids who were better able to resist
temptation at the age of three had different life outcomes than the kids who ate the first marshmallow right away.
There were a lot of findings suggesting that a child's ability to wait early in life,
their ability to delight gratification, went on to predict the whole host of positive
life outcomes.
Ability to delight gratification was associated with lower body fat. So if you're the kind of kid who cannot eat this first marshmallow
in the interest of getting to, maybe you grow up to be the kind
of adult that cannot eat the piece of chocolate cake at a dinner
party in the interest of achieving the physique that you want
down the road, the ability to delay gratification
in the marshmallow test specifically was predictive of social
things and also bigger higher stakes outcomes. So not abusing drugs was associated with ability to
wait for a second marshmallow. In another follow up, Walter Michelle found that kids who waited for
the second marshmallow had higher SAT scores.
Celeste, what was Walter Michelle's hypothesis about why delaying gratification at the age
of three or the age of five could have effects on someone's body mass index or their SAT
scores or their career outcomes 15, 20, 25 years down the road. The conceptual hypothesis was that self-control is causally responsible for the child's performance
on the marshmallow test.
And self-control is causally responsible for how well you do on all of these other factors
in life.
You need self-control to make friends.
You need self-control to do well in school, to do well on your SAT,
to avoid jail time and to stay thin.
And I think that's the best way to do it.
Give me some sense of the impact of this test,
not so much specifically on,
it led to this policy or it led to that policy,
but how people came to understand the test
at a very broad level, not just researchers, not just scientists, looking at peer-reviewed journals, but ordinary people came to understand the test at a very broad level, not just researchers, not just scientists looking at peer-reviewed journals, but ordinary people.
This test is commonly referenced in all sorts of pop culture formats.
It's on sketch comedy shows and sitcoms and things like this.
It's also commonly cited in unexpected places like books on
business management and how you should run a
Company and then from a policy perspective. I think it also was attractive because it offered
sort of magic
Bullet for how you could combat
Poverty as a how you could combat all of the challenges that face kids that are at the highest risk for the negative life outcomes. If it's self-control that
is costly responsible for these negative life outcomes, all we have to do is
train up their self-control and things will work out for them.
I want to play you a little clip here, Celeste. This is Walter Michelle on the Colbert Report.
You think that one who doesn't eat the marshmallow first, you found were more successful in life?
The longer kids waited to get the two, generally, the more successful their lives turned out to
be if they were consistent in how they continued in self-control over
the life course.
So we even need the SATs anymore if we've got the Marshmallows asked.
Just get all the kids in the room, the kid who waits for the two Marshmallows right to
the Ivy League.
There are.
So you can see how this really captured the popular imagination here is Celeste.
Oh wow. I somehow hadn't heard that before, but that's bringing back what I remember feeling
the first time I heard about the marshmallow test. Those claims are big. The claim that it predicts your future,
your ability to achieve the dreams that you want in life, those are big claims,
those are big claims from, you know, a 20 minute experiment.
All of us have grown up hearing stories about the importance of self-control, and most of
us have seen the effects of self-control and a lack of self-control in our own lives.
As I write these words, I'm regretting I had an extra large lunch two hours ago.
It was delicious at the time, but now I feel uncomfortably full and sluggish.
Walter Michele's Marshmallow experiments brought these lessons to life.
They produced data that demonstrated a truism. Patients is a virtue,
and those who practice patience will be rewarded. Not only with more marshmallows, but with better
health, better careers, better lives. As we have seen so often on the show, however, human nature
is exceedingly complex.
Sweeping claims about human beings can fail to capture the nuances, the context, the
situations where rules break down.
That's when we come back.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Before Celeste Kid became a psychologist,
she was a determined high school student living in a small town east of New Orleans.
Her dream was to graduate high school and attend college across the country in California.
To make this happen, Celeste had to go through her own version of the Marshmallow test.
I'm from a community that is literally on the swamp, there's alligators in the backyard,
it's everything you imagine.
And I really wanted to go to college.
I spent a lot of time in high school skipping out on things that my friends were doing in
the interest of saving up money for college.
One of Celeste's challenges had to do with restricting how much she indulged herself
when it came to a particularly delicious New Orleans treat.
Communal eating is very important in New Orleans and so it's common for you to be with a group
of people and they say, okay, we're all gonna order pull boys
from, I was like my favorite places, parasols.
And they're very delicious sandwiches.
But when my friends would order,
I would always say that I was not hungry.
And actually, I was hungry, especially for pull boys,
I was just eating peanut butter sandwiches on day old bread because it was cheap. I didn't want to spend the money on the
Pope. I didn't want that to make the difference and the people who were very
close to me who noticed this question whether or not I was being too
restrictive with myself, whether I was putting all my hopes too far into the
future when it wasn't even clear it was going to work out. And I had moments
of wondering if that was true too.
I had a boyfriend who said, is it really
going to make the difference?
Is this $20 going to make the difference between you
getting to go to college?
Or not, we had a big fight over it, actually.
And I said, it's not the $20.
It's the $20 on the $20.
It adds up.
It adds up.
And I know that it's not this one sacrifice I have to make a lot of them
for it to work out and what if it is, what if it is this $20 that makes the difference
between I can pay the tuition bill or not, I would be so sad if I was $20 short as
like closer it is, the more painful it'll be if I don't make it.
The most difficult thing Celeste had to give up was the annual
Mardi Gras Festival.
Every year in New Orleans, social clubs come together and plan
themed parades with elaborately decorated floats and costumes.
All of the parades are thrown by their called crunes, which are
essentially social clubs that get together and plan for most of the
year what the parade theme is going to be, what each of the folks is going to look like.
Obviously, that takes a lot of time.
It's very intricate work.
Each parade is a one-in-a-lifetime experience.
That you're there for or you're not, so. In her junior year of high school, Celeste was offered a babysitting gig for a bunch of
families attending a big party called a Mardi Gras-Bas.
But all her friends were going to the parade that night.
Celeste wanted desperately to go to.
But...
Junior year I was thinking about not having enough for college and it was very important that I get as much as I could. So I chose to babysit for the families that
were going to the Mardi Gras Ball. I love babysitting. But sitting there after the kids went
bed that night, I was wondering about what I had missed as one does when one skips out on something very exciting.
I was feeling a little bit sorry for myself.
But then when the families came back, they had had a really, really good time and they
tipped me a few hundred dollars.
They tipped me enough that I had to check the next morning to make sure that that's the
amount that they meant to tip me.
And yes, I actually don't think it was, but I think it was too. They were graceful
and they didn't want to say like that was actually an accident. Give that, they knew I was
saving for college.
So you eventually get to UC Santa Cruz for your undergraduate studies. And I'm wondering
when you got there,
did you have a sense that the things that you had foregone
that it was worth it to actually be at UC Santa Cruz?
Did it meet your expectations?
I could not believe when I first arrived at the campus
and I saw the giant red woods. The campus is beautiful. I
could not believe I had gotten that far and it had worked out. Then when I started
taking the classes and I could take as many as I wanted and there were so many ones
that were interesting and I had all of my day to take the classes I was delighted with my life choices up until that point.
So that was worth it.
That was worth it in the long term. It was painful in the short term.
Now, as you listen to Celeste's story, you might conclude she is the post-church child for Walter Michelle's marshmallow test.
Forgo delicious and tempting treats? Check. Do the hard thing now in exchange for the better thing tomorrow? Check.
Delay gratification and do well in life? Check and check.
But not long after she arrived in California, Celeste had an experience that
changed the way she thought about self-control. She was working at a family emergency center,
a place where parents and their children could access resources during difficult times.
Celeste of course, liked to spend time with kids.
It's hard to explain what the culture of an emergency family shelter is like. There's a lot
of hard stuff that's going on. There's parents that have substance abuse issues. There are parents
that are incarcerated unexpectedly. Working at an emergency family shelter also means that you
are opting into getting sick a whole lot just because it's the people are living in harsh conditions. So in some senses you would think that it should be hard, but working there was a
delight because the kids are so cool. Celeste had a job tutoring some of the older
kids at the shelter, but she developed a special bond with a preschooler named
JoJo. One of the first interactions I had with Jojo,
she had just told me she had a lollipop
and just as she was about to put it in her mouth,
I was turned towards the kids that I was about to tutor.
Out of the corner of my eye,
I saw another kid come bounding down the stairs
and grab the lollipop from her hand
right before it
goes into her mouth. I'd worked in a daycare before and I was
expecting her to burst into tears. So I instinctively whipped
around, expecting that she would need some comfort for this
upsetting thing happening. And to my surprise, she didn't have any
reaction at all. She continued walking like she had not had a lollipop in her hand at all.
Celeste was struck by JoJo's reaction.
The fact she didn't need comforting was worrisome.
I thought, oh no, that's a sign of something that's gone wrong.
I was like, she should have an emotional reaction.
Maybe she has some sort of psychological damage, some emotional stunting or some dissociation
or something else.
Maybe there's something wrong with her emotionally or maybe it's a memory problem.
Maybe she didn't remember that she had the lollipop.
I thought something was wrong with her.
But within a short time of working at the shelter, Celeste realized why JoJo had not been upset.
I never had a discussion with her about the lollipop
because it didn't take long before I figured out that it was me that made the error.
It wasn't upsetting because it was very expected.
It's very, very common for a bunch of kids that don't have a lot of adult supervision around to steal stuff from each other.
Jojo was little and she knew she was little. So she knew that there was a timer on her,
putting that olive pop in her mouth and she took a little too long.
And so it wasn't upsetting to her in part because it wasn't unexpected.
It was me that made the reasoning error and I will remember that forever.
Shortly after that moment with JoJo, another incident occurred that made a powerful impression
on Celeste.
I was there for a church group coming and giving out toys to the kids.
They lined them up, they gave many of them toys one at a time and a common response that the kids at the shelter had to getting these new toys
was to immediately break them and
the church volunteers that were giving them out. I heard them
talking about how these kids
they were not grateful and I mean I can't even
some of the things that were said
were so awful that I opted not to encode them.
But the suggestion was that these kids deserve the situation
that they're in, that they're the offspring of people
that are like this that aren't grateful,
and that's why they're here.
And I found that really upsetting because being there
and spending time with these kids and understanding
what their daily life was like,
it was very clear to me why they were breaking the toys.
At this shelter, each family got just one basket
that they could use to store things
and it was about the size of a shoe box.
If you imagine that you are in that situation,
you have one shoe box worth of storage
for your whole family, what's going in that box? It have one shoebox worth of storage for your whole family.
What's going in that box?
It's like paper documents that you need
as it gets IDs.
It's maybe some hygiene things.
It's toothpaste and toothbrushes and it's medications.
It's not a big doll.
A big bulky doll is not going to make it into that box
at the end of the day.
And these kids knew that.
And so all kids, I think, have thoughts like what would this doll look like with its head
pulled off?
What do they feel like to pull off the head of this doll and what prevents some kids from
pulling off the head of their doll is the expectation that they're going to be able to
play with it tomorrow.
And these kids just didn't have that expectation.
So hearing these moralistic judgments of these kids from people that didn't understand, they
weren't going to get to play with the doll tomorrow.
So there's no point in preserving it.
You should play with it hard.
You should make decisions that give you satisfaction right now.
If you can't count on what's going to be available to you tomorrow,
then to see these kids get judged for them was upsetting and also influential in shaping
my understanding of human behavior at large.
The summer after Celeste graduated from college, she decided to take some linguistics courses
at Stanford.
She became friends with a graduate student who was in several of her classes.
One day, they took a walk through campus.
So we were walking through the halls and discussing, you know, things like the Stanford prison
experiment and the marshmallow task came up.
And I had never heard of it before.
He was surprised I hadn't heard of it before.
And he explained that the Marshmallow test as being something
that you could administer to a kid early in life that could
tell you whether or not they were going
to achieve great things. He described it as a test where you give kids
a choice, a very simple choice between one marshmallow now, or if they can wait for the
researcher to leave and then come back, then they can have two marshmallows if they don't
eat the first marshmallow. My response to that initially was thinking, oh no, I was
thinking about JoJo, I was thinking about the other kids at the shelter, and the first
place my head went is knowing that these kids I was working with would eat that first
marshmallow right away. I don't think I'd even be able to get my hand up. And that made
me sad because I was there trying to help them avoid all of these negative outcomes
he was saying were predicted by waiting for that second marshmallow.
Celeste was training to be a psychologist. Her experience at the shelter prompted her to ask herself a provocative question.
Was it possible that Walter Michelle, one of the giants in the field of psychology,
had missed something very, very important?
One of the core ideas in social psychology is that the social and the psychological
are inextricably tied up with one another.
We think we are the captains of our ships and the masters of our own destiny.
We think we choose to be good or bad when confronted by an ethical situation.
Now there is certainly truth in that, our thoughts and preferences and choices do shape
our behavior in powerful ways.
But what most of us underestimate is the extent to which
the social world shapes the thoughts inside our heads.
Walter Michal's study, looking at the kids of well-to-do families at Stanford,
was being used to explain the behavior of kids growing up in very different contexts.
Was that fair?
Even more importantly, was that accurate?
The crux of the marshmallow test interpretation, that is most popular, which is that self-control
is causally responsible for your success or failure to achieve success in life hinges on
The individual and whether the individual has a particular ability or not and if they don't have a particular ability
The implication is they're not going to do well in life and also there's an implication that it's their fault If they were a different way they would deserve to do well
If they are not that way they get what they get I
if they are not that way, they get what they get. I recognize that there was an alternative hypothesis
that I thought there was good evidence
for even in Walter Michelle's own data.
And the alternative hypothesis is that
it's not that marshmallow test is measuring self-control
and self-control is causally responsible
for the long-term outcomes.
The alternative is what the Marshmallow test is testing
is a child's expectations about how stable and reliable
the world is.
Put another way, your ability to delay gratification
in the Marshmallow test doesn't just depend
on your capacity for self-control. It depends on whether you believe there really
is a second marshmallow waiting for you if you hold off eating the first.
As Celeste pursued a PhD at the University of Rochester, she designed a marshmallow
test of her own. We recruited three to five-year-old kids,
and then we randomly assigned them to one of two conditions.
They were either assigned to the reliable condition
or the unreliable condition,
and in advance of them doing the marshmallow test,
we gave them an experience, a set of evidence about whether or not
they could count on future
promised rewards being delivered.
Celeste and her colleague Holly Pahmeri told the kids they would be doing an art project.
They could choose to use some regular crayons and begin that project immediately.
But if they waited a few minutes, Holly would run out and come back with markers and some
fancy art supplies.
When we presented kids with this choice, just like in the marshmallow test, kids always
chose that they would like the second bigger set of art supplies instead.
Holly then left them alone in the room under the premise that she was going to get the
bigger set of art supplies instead.
And then whether or not she came in with them, depending upon the condition that the child was assigned to.
For kids assigned to the reliable condition,
Holly reappeared in a few minutes with a nicer out supplies.
The kids received a lesson that waiting did produce good things.
But for the kids in the unreliable group,
Holly would leave the room.
And then when she would come back,
she would apologize to the kid and say, I'm very sorry. I thought I had a big set of art supplies,
but it turns out I don't. But let me help you use these crayons instead and she would
help them open the container to get out the crayons and use that art supply.
And conceptually, what were you trying to do here, Celeste, with these two conditions
of the kids who basically waited for the better art supplies and got it and the kids who waited for the better art
supplies and didn't get it. Conceptually we wanted children to generate different
expectations depending upon what they had experienced in this specific context.
So we wanted the kids in the reliable condition to generate the expectation that if I wait,
it is worth it, it will pay off, and we wanted kids in the unreliable condition to have
the expectation that if I wait, it is not worth it, it will not pay off, so that we could
tell what the impact of expectations was on the Marshm marshmallow test that we did after the art project
task.
The marshmallow test was part two of the study.
After the kids finished their art project, Holly announced that it was snack time.
Holly would say, you can have this one marshmallow now, or if you want to wait for me to go into
the room.
If you don't eat this one, you can have two marshmallows instead.
And with that premise, that's the classic marshmallow test. She cleared all of the art supplies
out of the room and left the child alone with the single marshmallow on the table. And just like
in the classic marshmallow test, we measured and waited to see how long they would wait
before they ate the marshmallow. And what did you find?
We found that there was a big difference between the kids in the unreliable condition versus
the reliable condition.
In the unreliable condition, kids were much more likely to eat the marshmallow.
They waited an average of about three minutes.
That's very different from what happened in the reliable condition.
In the reliable condition, kids waited four times as long.
They waited on average 12 minutes before eating the marshmallow.
They were less likely to eat the marshmallow in the end in that condition as well.
At one level, you could say the results were entirely unsurprising.
If someone tells you to wait five minutes and they will be a wonderful treat at the end,
and you wait five minutes, only to be told no treat is forthcoming, how would you respond
if this person told you to wait another five minutes for a new treat?
You might say something along the lines of
Fool me once shame on you fool me twice shame on me
It only makes sense to wait for the second marshmallow if you expect the second marshmallow to arrive
If you don't expect for the second marshmallow to arrive you should eat the first marshmallow
In fact, it would almost be foolish for you not to eat the first marshmallow,
because if you don't eat it, someone else might come along and eat it,
while you're waiting for the second marshmallow.
That's right.
That's like the jojo thing might happen.
Like, if you don't put the lollipop in your mouth, right away,
somebody else might come along and take it.
You should eat that first marshmallow,
if you think there is no point in waiting for a second.
You know, I've always wondered what Walter Michelle would make of the way his test has come to be
received in the world today, Celeste. I'm not quite sure he anticipated it would take off the way it did
and that people would draw the implications that they did. I mean, at various points, he would say,
you know, this is a 15-minute test, you can't draw too much into a 15-minute test. Now he did do the longitudinal studies finding these long-term effects
But I'm wondering do you feel like your test has been a corrective not just to the marshmallow test, but the
Impact the cultural valence of the marshmallow test in the larger world. I don't know if I can speak to that
in the larger world? I don't know if I can speak to that.
Walter Michelle was invested in the idea
that self-control is an important virtue to develop.
That's also largely the point of the book
that he wrote about the Marshmallow Test.
At the same time, I don't disagree with any of the premises in the original studies.
It was inherently acknowledging that children's delaying gratification or not is a flexible
system that can be changed depending upon the attentional strategy that you hand them.
So I don't think that work captured the minds of people in the same way that the
promise of the predictive power of the Marshmallow test from the longitudinal correlations did
later. But Walter Michelle, to my knowledge, wasn't opposed to the idea that the system
is flexible.
There are certainly times where delaying gratification pays off, work hard and save your money, and you improve your options when it's time to go to college.
Study hard today, and you're likely to do better in your exams tomorrow.
Tolerate the discomfort that comes with learning a new musical instrument
and you might produce beautiful music in a few years. Patients and prudence can
be virtues. But in the popular understanding of the Marshmello test, many people
concluded self-control was a purely personal virtue. You had it or you didn't have it.
It was about you, the individual.
Celeste's reconception of the test underscores that core idea and social psychology.
The context matters.
Self-control is not just about what happens inside our heads.
Our capacity for self-control is shaped
by whether we live in a safe and predictable world
or a dangerous and unpredictable world.
Take the kids from the Stanford nursery
that Walter Michelle was studying
and put them in an unpredictable environment
for a few weeks, and they too might behave in ways
that would appear impulsive and short-sighted.
And they too might behave in ways that would appear impulsive and short-sighted.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Jacqueline Rifkin is named after her grandfather, Jack.
We don't know for sure how Jack would have performed on Walter Michelle's Marshmallow test, but we can't take an educated guess.
He would not have eaten that first marshmallow.
He fought for the US and World War II.
He actually helped liberate some of the concentration camps.
And his story, I think, was really instrumental in sort of how I was raised and how I see the world, even though I never got to meet him.
So when he got back from the war, he met my grandmother and they got married. And their plan was to be really frugal, save up a lot of money, be sort of conservative financially, and
then when he retired, they would travel the world.
And so my mom grew up with this very sort of low risk frugal kind of way of living with
this plan for ultimately my pop-ups retirement.
The sad part of the story is that they never really got to bear the fruits of all of this
saving because my pop-up was diagnosed with cancer in his 60s and he actually passed away
just a few months after the diagnosis.
And so my mom sort of told me that over the years, her mom, my mom, who lived for many years after that,
always kind of regretted the way that they had structured
their lives.
And my mom was always really vocal when I was growing up
that obviously responsibility and fragality
and prudence are great virtues,
but also not to save everything
for later all of life's pleasures.
It's a lesson that Jacqueline has tried to take to heart.
And yet, despite her mother's warnings and her grandmother's regrets, she regularly
notices that she is very much her grandfather's granddaughter. So I bought a white blouse from Old Navy several years ago.
And if there's something about Old Navy, it's that it's casual and it's not super expensive.
I think it was probably 1999.
And I didn't wear it right away, which is something that I am absolutely kind of a chronic
delayer of new clothes.
And so I didn't wear it, you know, for school,
I didn't wear it to run errands.
And somehow over time, it became a date night shirt
that I didn't wear.
And then it became a job interview shirt
that I didn't wear.
And I think after a few years,
the shirt was essentially no longer in style,
and I just had to donate it.
And it goes back to zero, right?
The person who buys it now for them, it's like a workout shirt.
But for me, we had gone on this whole journey together
where this simple old Navy shirt had sort of transformed into like a talisman, a fashion talisman.
You've likely experienced some version of this in your own life.
If it's not a new shirt hanging in your closet, maybe it's an unused gift card to a local
restaurant.
Jacqueline is now a marketing professor at Cornell University. She and her
colleague, Jonah Berger at the University of Pennsylvania, have examined what
keeps people from enjoying the things they own. We were really interested in these
things that we all own around the house that we like and we're not trying to get
rid of but we're also not using them. So I think a bottle of wine is an example that can resonate with everyone.
Jonah had socks that he always thought about. I had a blouse that I always thought about.
They were perfectly fine. They weren't special. They were kind of just normal.
But for some reason, they kept sticking around. We weren't using, but we weren't donating.
And so what we found through a series of experiments there was that sometimes people forgo usage.
They say, I'm not going to open the wine tonight.
I'm not going to bust out the candle and light it for the first time tonight.
And even though it's not our intention, we kind of feel like we're saving it.
So it goes from not now to not now and later. And the more that we
feel like we're saving, the more special that product becomes. And so we enter
this spiral, we call it a specialist spiral in the paper, whereby people are
foregoing usage for something normal. it feels a little bit more special.
So now we wanna find a slightly better occasion for it.
So then we forego usage again, becomes a little bit more special.
Okay, now I need to find an even better occasion for it.
And over time, this perfectly normal pair of socks
becomes a treasure.
That is only worthy for your wedding night.
a treasure that is only worthy for your wedding night.
Notice that the specialness spiral works like a ratchet. Each time you forego using the shirt, the specialness of the shirt reaches a new threshold.
The next time you think of using the shirt, the bar is now even higher than it was the last time.
That's exactly what happens. And we even asked people flat out, you know,
what is the right occasion to use this thing?
And I think the example that we used in that study
was just a $10 bottle of wine, nothing special.
For our folks, I had never passed up the opportunity
to use it.
And we said, when would you use it, when works?
They said a Tuesday night after dinner, nothing special.
For the folks that we had had them imagine
that they passed it up once or twice,
they did ratchet up that threshold.
They said, maybe a Friday, maybe a date.
And for the people that had imagined passing it up
over and over and over, they were
saying rehearsal dinner, 50th wedding anniversary, the moment I land my dream job. They were
ratcheting up this threshold of something that was always a $10 bottle of wine, but in
their mind it had sort of been accruing and accruing and specialness to the point where,
when is that perfect night? How many of us do see our 50th wedding anniversary? Now we're dreaming of an occasion that maybe most people don't even get to experience.
Call this, if you will, the reverse marshmallow test. The challenge here is not in resisting
temptation, but in having the ability to indulge in everyday
pleasures.
Another example from Jacqueline's life is a time she went on vacation and decided to bring
home some spices as a souvenir.
And it's not a very long story because I never used the spices.
I brought them with me from move to move.
They were always there.
They took up space in my cabinet, and it ultimately got to the point where I had to
Google when do spices go bad.
And to the point where those spices were almost definitely bad.
And so they just sort of became a souvenir.
They weren't really functioning as spices anymore.
I wasn't really getting out of them,
what I should have been by putting them in my food
and enjoying them with loved ones.
What Jacqueline is saying,
is it if some people have trouble with being impulsive,
others have a problem with giving themselves permission
to be indulgent.
I think the typical way that we like to think of ourselves is almost as sort of impulse,
laden, heat-ins. We see a candy barn, we can't stop ourselves from taking it or we have the
opportunity to play hooky from work and do something irresponsible and we just take it, we can't stop ourselves.
So there's incredible work from a not-kinan and Ron Kivitz.
They sort of challenge that assumption and think, well, maybe instead of being these sort
of impulsive heat-ins, a lot of us are actually too controlled.
A lot of us are too serious and afraid of indulging. So there's a lot of us that
don't take any time off, let alone playing hooky from work, where we're so fixated on being virtuous
and being good and staying true to our values and self-control that we actually don't indulge nearly as much as we should.
Can you talk about one challenge with the specialness spiral, which is we want to wait for the perfect
moment to use something, the bottle of wine, the expensive spices, but we don't quite know exactly
when that moment's going to arrive. We tell ourselves, when that moment arrives, I'll know it.
But in fact, at every given moment we say, is this the moment and we say, no, not quite.
That's exactly what happens. So there's a lot of research on what's called sequential search,
which is in contrast to simultaneous search. So simultaneous is when all the options are in front of you.
You've got your five flavors of jam in front of you. You can see them all. And so you pick one. Sequential search on the other hand
is if each jam was presented to you one by one. And so even though it's the same jams,
the decision becomes a lot harder because you can only evaluate one at a time. And maybe you don't
know what's coming next. You probably can't go back
and get one that you already passed on. You can't really evaluate all of your options at once.
It's just not possible. And Jam is a mundane example, but there's really big meaty versions
of this decision that we all deal with. Who do you marry? Who do you hire, you can really only evaluate one of these things at a time.
And so what the research suggests is that when we're having options presented to us one at a time,
it's hard to compare, right? You don't have all those jams in front of you. And so what a lot of us do
is we come up with a reference point in our mind of, well, what would the best jam be?
And that jam may not even exist.
We come up with this sort of idealized, aspirational, perfect match.
And now we're comparing every option against that ideal.
And so it becomes really hard to pull the trigger because we're comparing
against this perfect, it's potentially unmeetable ideal. When we do pull the trigger, we may
feel disappointed. We may pull the trigger much later than we ought to because we're stuck
into this, you know, when I see the ideal person, I'll know or when I see the ideal job candidate,
I'll feel it. And it creates
a lot of complications in decision making that ultimately lead to not only poor quality decisions,
but less happy people. So you're not necessarily saying that the ability to save for your retirement
or the ability to exercise or eat the right diet or
the ability to say, I'm going to quit smoking today even though it gives me pleasure today
because in fact 20 years from now my health is going to be better.
You're not necessarily saying those are bad things.
You're not saying that deferring gratification is always a bad thing.
You're just saying sometimes it can be a bad thing.
That's exactly right. So I by no means is delaying gratification, a bad thing to do, and especially when it comes to pursuits that we're doing for our own health, and trying to make sure that we're
setting ourselves up for success in the future financially or physically,
that's all great stuff to be doing and things that I work on,
and I think everybody should work on.
My fear comes in where that becomes the only mode of behaving
and at the cost of doing things in the moment for ourselves.
We have to start to retrain ourselves to seek out things that make us happy, not necessarily negative things like smoking, but
just a moment out in nature, journaling, having a really nice conversation,
healthy things that are really just for us and not for our future self and not for
anybody else.
Jacqueline Rifkin is a psychologist at Cornell University.
Jacqueline, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you. today on Hidden Brain. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy, Annie Murphy-Paul, Kristen Wong, Laura
Quarelle, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer.
I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor. Our unsung hero today is Patrick Cherry at Apple.
Patrick works on Apple's partnerships with podcasters and he played a central role in helping
to launch our new podcast subscription Hidden Brain Plus. Thank you, Patrick, for keeping us moving through our
2-Doo lists so seamlessly.
We really appreciate your help.
If you haven't yet checked out Hidden Brain Plus,
it's where you'll find even more of the ideas and insights
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You can try it for free and listen to our recent conversation
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Find Hidden Brain Plus in the Apple
Podcasts app or go to Apple.co slash Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon.
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