Hidden Brain - Who Do You Want To Be?
Episode Date: January 3, 2023We all have to make certain choices in life, such as where to live and how to earn a living.  Parents and peers influence our major life choices. But they can also steer us in directions that leave u...s deeply unsatisfied. Psychologist Ken Sheldon studies the science of figuring out what you want. He says there are things we can do to make sure our choices align with our deepest values.Did you catch last week's episode about how to develop healthy habits? You can find it  here. And if you'd like to make a financial contribution to support our work, you can do so here. Happy New Year from all of us at Hidden Brain!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Religions tell us they have the key to our best lives.
Advice columnists tell us how to solve problems in our relationships.
And airport bookstores are stuffed with tombs on how to grow rich, manage our time better, and build effective habits.
All these sources of counsel can teach us valuable skills,
such as planning, patience, and perseverance.
These can be vitally important to success.
But in a world overflowing with useful advice,
why do so many of us feel stuck?
How is it even the very successful?
Often feel like there is something missing from their lives.
Why do so many
people spend years wistfully thinking about choices they might have made?
One answer to that problem? Many of us are leading lives that are misaligned with our own
deepest values and preferences. This week on Hidden Brain, what psychology can teach us about living
our most authentic lives. When you're a kid, grownups ask you what you want to do when you're an adult.
When you're a teenager, college counselors ask you what you want to study.
Once you join the workforce, managers ask you what your goals are for the next few years.
At every stage, we are really being asked the same question.
What do you want to do with your life?
At the University of Missouri,
psychologists Ken Sheldon studies the science
of knowing what to want,
how to set your sights on targets
that will actually make you happy if you achieve them.
Ken Sheldon, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Hey, I'm happy to be here.
I want to take you back to 1981, Ken.
You just finished college and moved to Seattle.
You wanted to become a musician.
You started a band.
How did it go?
Rock musicians can be kind of flaky and unreliable and we were all in our 20s and everybody had
different goals. Everybody was kind of self-centered and they might not have
been committed the way we thought that they were or maybe the guitarist slept
with the singer unexpectedly and you know there's a lot of things that can just
get in the way of having a smoothly functioning unit. We just weren't able to
make the agreements and follow through with them that we would have needed to make real progress.
I understand that at one point you were recording songs for a radio song contest and things didn't
quite go smoothly. Yeah, I had recorded my tracks on the song that we were going to submit
to this contest. I left for a weekend hiking trip, expecting that the bandmates would put
their tracks down so we could send in the song of the next Monday. And I got back and nobody
had done anything. And I was very disappointed and I remember walking in the rain, it was Seattle,
wondering what to do next,
and coming to the decision that this is probably not gonna
give me a way to make a living,
and that music, or at least this particular band,
episode was not gonna work out,
and that I needed to get serious about maybe something else.
What happened to Ken, of course, has happened to millions of people.
Maybe it's happening to you right now.
You set your heart on something and then find the thing you wanted, doesn't look anything
like the thing you thought you wanted.
So Ken did what lots of us do.
He flailed around looking for something new. He signed up for a master's
program. Yeah, it was a program at Seattle University in existential phenomenological psychotherapy.
Wow. That's a lot of syllables, but it is a certain tradition within existential philosophy
and counseling psychology to to a legitimate approach to helping people.
And I was very interested in that program,
not so much because I wanted to become a therapist,
but more because I've always just been very theoretically oriented.
And these were new ideas that I didn't understand
that seemed like they might be very relevant to
the search for clarity,
a search for what to do with myself.
Again, Ken was doing what lots of us do.
We looked to the outside world to give us answers to questions about what we should do
with our lives.
Ken's foray into existential phenomenological psychotherapy was short-lived.
The answers he was looking for were not forthcoming.
I really enjoyed the year.
My fellow classmates, we formed a tight cohort.
We did things together.
I learned a lot.
And the main thing I learned was that I didn't think the answers I was looking for were going
to come from that area of knowledge.
So what did you do?
Well, I once again stopped doing that. I dropped out after the first year.
And in the end, I was felt kind of stuck. I was living in Seattle. The jobs I was working were not very well paying, very high status, but here I was,
a Duke graduate, you know, maybe I should be doing better than that. So I was in a sort of
period of really, really not knowing what to do next.
In addition to not knowing what to do next, Ken felt like he was not measuring up.
He sensed a world expected more from him and his impressive college degree.
He expected more from himself.
He felt lost.
Still looking for answers, he signed up for a workshop that was all the rage in the 1970s and early 80s.
It was called the AirHard Seminar's Training or S Training.
Yeah, the S Training was created by Warner AirHard.
It is not a spiritual guru. He was actually a salesman who read a lot about optimal performance and communication and what is the mind and mind training classes he tried them all and then he created his own version called the S training.
And it wasn't a spiritual thing, it was actually designed to train you to understand your own mind
and to control it better. I understand that at one point you had this training with a 60-hour
course spread across two weekends.
To describe the course to me, what happened and what would you learn and how to end it?
Yeah, but the way the training was set up, you'd be seated in a ballroom.
They'd rent a hotel ballroom and they'd have chairs lined up.
And so there would be two or three hundred of you lined up in your chairs.
And then the trainer would come out and there would be volunteers who would bring microphones
to people to speak into when they wanted to say something.
And the trainer led us to a variety of explorations,
processes, activities designed to show us
how our minds work and how they're currently
not working and training us to work them better.
I understand the course guaranteed enlightenment
at the end of the second weekend.
That's right, that was actually the thing
that attracted me to it most.
I wasn't sure that I needed a self-help training,
but that promise of guaranteed enlightenment,
I was fascinated to find out what
that was going to be. And so what happened the second weekend? Well so we're on day
four at Sunday of the second weekend and it's sort of building and building and
you're getting closer and closer to the material that they really want to hit
you with at the end and the moment of enlightenment was being told
that this is it.
You're already enlightened.
There's only the present moment.
This is it.
Imagine this must have been something of a letdown
for the 200 people in the hall.
Yeah, I mean, it sounds like a bait and switch almost.
So after the trainer told us this, a people were like, what do you mean this is it?
This isn't it.
So it's interesting.
So in this period of your life, I think you went through what a lot of young people
go through.
You've just graduated college, you're trying your hand at different things, you're throwing dots at the wall, nothing's really
sticking. There must have been a period in your life when it felt, it must have felt
quite discouraging. Did that, did thoughts of self-doubt go through your mind at
this time in your life? Oh yeah, yeah, I would say that I've had a lot of self-doubt
that I've struggled with, but you know, a big part of the self-doubt that I've struggled with, but a big part of the self-doubt involves
the knowledge that it's only you who is making the choices in your life.
And that's kind of scary.
It's all up to me.
And I wasn't sure that I was good enough to do what maybe I was capable of doing.
A drift and uncertain can ask himself what he wanted from life.
The band hadn't worked out.
The master's program in existential phenomenological psychotherapy
turned out to be a bad fit.
The S-twork shops were a lead down.
Ken had always enjoyed science and big ideas. He decided to
enroll in a PhD program in psychology. At first this seemed like another mistake.
But several years into the program a teacher came along who changed the way
Ken thought about the question of what he should do with his life. This wasn't
probably till my fourth year that Robert Evans arrived and I was a little
bit adrift up to that point, but once Bob showed up, I recognized that the research he
was doing was fascinating than I really wanted to learn about it.
And so what he was doing was a new approach to studying personality, or instead of giving people a trait questionnaires
on how extroverted are you and how agreeable and so forth,
he gave people a blank sheet of paper.
And he said, tell me what you're striving to do.
And so there'd be, say, 15 blank lines,
and the participant would write down,
you know, 10, 15 as many as they wanted,
things that they are striving to do in their life. And that really intrigued me because it's what I had
been trying to do. My whole life was figure out what to strive for.
Observing how other people write down the things they were striving for, gave Ken a crucial insight.
Yeah, there's a blank piece of paper and people write things down.
And if you think about it, how do we know or how do they know they're writing good stuff down?
You know, maybe they're just writing down what their mom told them or their friend told them
or what society has told them or their friend told them or what society has told them.
And so it was only thinking later about,
what does the meaning of these goal statements
people are giving us that I started to wonder
what if they're writing down the wrong things?
The hard question can realized
wasn't figuring out how to get where you were going.
It wasn't figuring out where you wanted to go.
When we come back, how to find the answer to that difficult question.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta. Psychologist Ken Sheldon studies how we choose goals for ourselves.
His research is found that we often select the wrong goals,
that is, we point ourselves in directions that don't ultimately lead to lasting happiness.
An important reason for this error is that people don't have a good sense of what will make
them happy.
One of the main things we find is that people are not very good at all at knowing how achieving
their goals will affect them.
They can have a completely off base feeling that this goal, if I finally get it, is going
to make all the difference for me.
But then when we actually come back and measure their happiness later on to see how it's
been affected or not affected, we often find no change.
So one of the biggest reasons that you and others have found that people come up with the
wrong goals is that we blindly follow voices in our society that tell us what we ought to want.
I want to play you a famous clip from the 1987 movie Wall Street. Michael Douglas plays Gordon Gecko, a wealthy corporate rater who has some strong views about greed. of the evolutionary spirit, greed in all of its forms, greed for life, for money, for love, knowledge,
has marked the upward surge of mankind and greed.
You mark my words.
We'll not only say, tell our paper,
but that other malfunctioning corporation called the USA.
Thank you very much. So, Ken, today we might say that Gordon Gecko goes too far, but even if we are not willing
to be as explicit as this, can you talk about some of the subtler ways in which society
tells us that money and power and status are the ultimate barometers of a successful life?
Yeah, well, there's many ways. we're all immersed in a material consumer culture
which is trying to get us to buy things, click things, make more money so we can acquire status
symbols. Not all of this fall for this it depends a lot on the support and relations and connections
that we have but if you're not sure what to do and so many of these broader cultural messages
are telling you to be greedy, you're pretty prone to at least give that a try to see if
it works.
Yeah, and I suppose another major way that many of us might end up pursuing the wrong
things is that we choose goals set for us by other people in our lives, and very often
these might be people whom we love.
You know, our parents, our teachers, our friends, people who say they want the best for us by other people in our lives, and very often these might be people who we love. You know our parents, our teachers, our friends, people who say they want the best for us,
but people who might not actually know what will make us happy.
Do you hear that from your students as well, Ken?
Yeah, that's a very common complaint.
College students are still trying to figure out what they want, perhaps independently of
their parents.
It's their first real opportunity
to get away from their parents and explore on their own. And parents often have very firm ideas
about what they want their children to do. And it's not a bad thing. In many cases, they
are good ideas, but ultimately parents are not even as good a position as we are to experiment
and find what we really want.
Parents have goals of their own. They want to acquire the status of having a doctor as a child.
And they sometimes can't separate that out from their love and concern for us.
So some years ago you were approached by a law professor at Florida State University
and Lawrence Krieger wanted to discuss a problem he was seeing among some of his law students.
What did he tell you?
In his view, you know, in law schools, there's intense competition, there's grading on a curve
so that even if you learn almost all the material, you might still only get a C.
You're trying to get the prestigious positions.
You might end up accepting a job
because it's the highest paying,
even though once upon a time
you might have thought you would have hated doing
that type of job.
So it can be really confusing for students
and Larry was trying to humanize legal education.
I understand the two of you went on to co-author a number of studies involving law students
and practicing lawyers.
Tell me some of what those studies found.
Yeah, we've published several studies.
Our first came out in 2004.
We were able to track a sample of law students over their entire three-year career to see what
changes occurred in their well-being
and in their mental state.
And the first thing we found was something that had been shown before that their sense
of well-being really plummeted quite dramatically and that levels of depression went up quite
a bit over the course of the legal career in ways that are more extreme and more
concerning than in other professional education. Another thing we found was
that there's this paradoxical thing where the students who began with the most
idealistic motivation tended to do well. They got good grades in their first
year of law school, but that had a sort of corrupting effect where they being the highest graders, they became the highest data students and their their values shifted in the direction of looking good, having status instead of helping others. And so their idealistic motivation
turned into much more self-centered motivation over time.
Here was a set of ideas to explain why people found it hard,
why can himself had found it hard,
to figure out what to do with his life.
By the time a person is in their early 20s and is making important decisions about careers had found it hard to figure out what to do with his life.
By the time a person is in their early 20s and is making important decisions about careers
and relationships, they've had a good two decades of indoctrination.
Indoctrination from the culture, which tells them what's what's driving for and what is
not.
Indoctrination from parents and well-wishers who have told them what is high status and
what is not.
And indoctrination from schools, they're often take passion and enthusiasm for a subject
and turn it into a race for grades, certificates and academic honors.
The irony is, the better one does at each stage, the harder it becomes to ask
if you're actually doing what it is you want to do.
Soon the systems of carrots and sticks that guides us through adolescence and youth is now
driving us through our careers.
In one study of 6,000 practicing lawyers can found that many of these professionals prioritize
things that the world had decided should make them happy, Often at the expense of things that actually made them happy
Yeah, we were looking at everything about lawyers that we could think of that might affect their well-being
that
Most people would think are most important like how much money do they make?
How high status is their job or did they make partner?
But we also included these more psychological variables that we thought would be more important how high status is their job or did they make partner.
But we also included these more psychological variables that we thought would be more important.
Like, do they enjoy and believe in what they're doing?
Do they feel like they're making a contribution
to the world in what they're doing?
And what we found was that, yes, in fact,
income correlated with happiness,
but it was a pretty small effect, a surprisingly small effect.
A much larger effect was their motivation for doing the job. Was it something they wanted to do?
They believed in it. They felt like they were contributing to the world by doing it.
And that was a much larger determinant of how happy a person they were.
So you've said that unhappy lawyers might represent an especially striking
example of a widespread phenomenon, which is that these people are
privileging extrinsic motivations over intrinsic motivations.
What do you mean by those terms again?
Intrinsic motivation is just doing something because you like to do it. It's rewarding, it's
interesting doing it as its own reward. Extrinsic motivation is when you don't really like it,
you don't like doing it, but you like what you get from doing it. So you're trying to get a reward
from the behavior that will only come after you're finished.
I understand that you have done work with Ed D.C., who conducted some of the earliest studies
into the nature of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation.
Tell me about what you did together.
Ed was one of the first people to show that not only is intrinsic motivation real, it really
matters to be engaged and interested in what you're doing.
He also showed that
intrinsic motivation is kind of fragile. It can be spoiled pretty easily and he
called that the undermining of intrinsic motivation. Ed DC found that these two
kinds of motivation had different sources of nourishment. Intrinsic motivation
springs up from the inside, it's often shaped by
interest and curiosity. Extrinsic motivation comes from the outside. Of course, by the time
professionals have embarked on a career, they've had 20 or 30 years of carrots and sticks,
thrown at them by family, by teachers, and by the world.
The experiments that EDDC ran show that even when people started doing an
activity because of interest and curiosity, adding external rewards and punishments had the
paradoxical effect of destroying intrinsic motivation. And so we did this classic experiments
showing that when you pay people to do something, it makes them not want to
do it anymore.
So if you're solving what should be a fun puzzle that almost everybody likes to do, but
you're doing it because you get a dollar for each correct solution, and then you're left
alone in the room for a five minute period and you can either do more puzzles or you can
pick up a magazine. In that condition,
you pick up the magazine or today you bring out your cell phone. On the other hand, the participants
in his studies who were just told, hey, check out these puzzles, see if you like them. There was no
mention of money. When they were left alone in that room, they kept on trying to do new puzzles.
the load in that room, they kept on trying to do new puzzles. They retained their intrinsic motivation.
And this has huge implications for how we get people to do things. Do we try to sort of bribe and coerce them using external rewards? I mean, sometimes that's necessary, but it's also very powerful
medicine that can spoil an activity maybe maybe for life, for a person.
Your child starts to take piano lessons and you increase their allowance when
they practice a certain amount. That may keep them practicing for a while, but in
long run, they're probably going to lose interest because they've lost touch with
the inherently enjoyable part of playing the piano.
You conducted a real-world study that had some remarkable findings.
You're working, of course, at the University of Missouri, which is a very extensive athletic program.
Some student athletes at the school are recruits whose tuition and expenses are paid for by athletic scholarships. Others are walk-ons who play just for the fun of it.
So one group has a bunch of external incentives to play. The other primarily has internal incentives.
Now you've studied these two groups of athletes and their long-term involvement with an enthusiasm
for their sport. What do you find, Ken?
What we were trying to do was show intrinsic motivation
undermining that last for decades,
not just a few minutes, right?
So DC's early studies showed, you know,
in that five-minute period, you wouldn't pick up the puzzle.
What we wanted to see was, during that four-year period
of college, when you were getting when you were getting everything paid for,
did that ruin that sport for the rest of your life.
And what we found was that the varsity athletes
up to 30, 40 years later were much less interested
in playing the sport in the present day,
or even paying attention to what was happening in the sport,
in the colleges or the professional leagues,
whereas the students who only participated as walk-ons
originally retained their interest in the sport.
I mean, that's such a paradoxical finding, isn't it,
because of course, the students who are the varsity players
are being rewarded.
They're being told we love how you play.
We're going to give you these incentives to keep playing.
It's really strange that these external incentives seem to damage people's internal drive or
love for the sport.
Yes, it is strange.
You would think that they're so good at the sport.
They've spent so much time practicing it.
They were able to earn a scholarship.
They should be the ones who really continue to like it. So good at the sport, they've spent so much time practicing it, they were able to earn a scholarship.
They should be the ones who really continue to like it.
The reason that they don't comes down to the fact that they felt very controlled during
their college years.
They felt like they had to do it.
They'd lose their scholarship if they didn't.
People were talking about them on the discussion boards.
The fans were criticizing them.
The coaches were bossing them around.
And so when people feel controlled by their environment
or their situation, that really tends
to undermine their intrinsic motivation.
And so as soon as it appears that it's
OK to stop doing it, they're prone to go ahead and stop.
So I want to summarize where we are.
You know, if we want to know what to do with our lives,
we need to examine our inclinations and propensities.
We should try and hold it bay the signals we get
from the outside world about what's truly important.
But it turns out that doing these things may not be enough.
In some ways, maybe we should go back to the days
after you graduated from college. You know, I think you were following your inclinations and propensities when you decided to become
a musician. You were not following the dictates of money and power and status. Some of
you research is focused on what may be the trickiest problem of all, which is we fail
to understand ourselves because when we look inward, we can only see one aspect of our
own minds. How so can?
Yeah, I think this might be one of those profound problems that we human beings face.
The fact that we are kind of stuck in a psychological world that is sort of a simulation of what's
going on underneath. We can only be conscious of a limited amount at any moment.
And the things that we think in our conscious of
can be very influenced by outside forces and pressures
as we've discussed.
And so it takes quite a bit of time and work
to figure out what you really want to do.
Some of this has to do with the fact that
when most of us think about our own minds,
we think that our minds adjust our conscious minds,
but some of your work has looked at the idea
that a significant portion of our minds, in fact,
are hidden away from conscious introspection.
Yeah, there's a large tradition in motivation research and in other areas of psychology
that sort of revived the idea of the non-conscious mind, not saying that it's Freud's idea of
the place where the nasty stuff is hidden. Instead, it's the place where
we have habitual inclinations, emerging intuitions, motives that we kind of go after, maybe even without
our own awareness. And so it's pretty important to learn to hook up the two minds as much as we can to get our conscious cells to accurately reflect
what's going on in there at a deeper level.
When we come back, how to figure out what's inside, well, your hidden brain.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Psychologists can't sheldon studies how we come up
with the goals that animate our lives.
He is the author of freely determined what
the new psychology of the Self teaches us about how to live.
Cancer is such as found that happiness comes when we bring together the propensities and
inclinations we are aware of with deeper preferences that lie in our unconscious minds.
Can you have a name for this process of successfully matching our goals to our conscious and non-conscious
Inclinations and propensities you call this self-concordance. What do you mean by this term?
self-concordance is
simultaneously a simple and a complex concept
People pursuing non-concordant goals are often
concept. People pursuing non-concordant goals are often doing something mainly because somebody else wants them to, somebody who's important to them, could be parents, it could
be a spouse. Other times, they are trying to be something that they themselves think they
should be. They've got this idea, maybe it goes way back in their lives of what kind of person they are, and
what they need to do to be that kind of person.
And the problem with both of these types of motivations is it makes it difficult to hear
more subtle signals that are coming up from our non-conscious minds that might help us
to realize that this isn't quite yet yet.
So, of course, the things that are in our minds that are not consciously accessible to us
are by definition not consciously accessible to us.
So merely asking ourselves what our non-conscious minds are up to will not give us the answers.
So, you're research has found that one way to get at what's happening in our non-conscious minds
is to follow a path that artists, designers, and inventors take as they engage in the process of discovery.
What are the steps in this process, again?
Yeah, this was a very interesting connection that occurred to me at one point because I used
to study creativity. I was my dissertation research topic. And there's an important idea in creativity theory
of the four stages of creativity.
That you start by asking yourself a question.
You don't know the answer.
You want the solution to the scientific problem
or the new approach to painting
that seems to be in there,
something intriguing is calling to you.
So you're asked yourself this question and you don't know the answer.
And so then there needs to be an incubation period where you go and think about something
else.
What happens is that your non-conscious mind keeps working on the problem while you're thinking
about something else, just because you sort of consciously posed that question to yourself.
And then you went away and now it's working on it.
And so hopefully, along comes a moment of inspiration and a ha moment where some stray thought or idea or image pops up.
And you recognize, whoa, that's interesting. What's that about?
And you start to work with that idea and you realize that it's the solution to the problem. So this is a very common sort of creative
sequence. And my idea was that maybe discovering what we really want is a creative activity. And maybe
we can self-prompt this activity. We don't just have to wait for insights
out of the blue. We can consciously ask ourselves question like, why am I so unhappy? What
do I really want? What's bothering me? What's happening inside of me? And when we ask those
questions, we don't know the answer right away, but very often we begin to get hints.
So partly what I hear you saying is that this process of preparation is really important.
It's important to actually try and grapple with the problem consciously,
even if it turns out that the answer lies in our non-conscious minds,
because by grappling with something consciously, you're setting the stage, if you will, to have a conversation with your non-conscious mind and to allow
something to bubble up.
That's exactly right.
And a colleague and I now are writing a review article where we're trying to make a firm
connection between the phenomenology of conscious choice of asking one's mind questions and neuroscience.
What's happening in these brain networks when we do that?
And we're finding some really striking points of connection, supporting the idea that when
we ask ourselves a question, it puts our brains to work in ways that we don't know about,
but that can do an amazing job of helping
us.
So once a period of preparation has led to a moment of illumination, we then have to
proceed to the stage you call verification.
Is that right?
Not every revelation we have will pan out.
That's true.
Not every aha experience is the best or final aha experience.
And so life is an experiment.
And then we need to test the idea once we become aware of it.
And we might realize that no,
we don't want to quit everything and move to Mexico
and lay on a beach.
That's not really going to be as fulfilling as we think.
Let's keep thinking and maybe a better choice will come.
In order to know what we really want, we need to get better at attending to subtle thoughts and
feelings that many of us have spent lifetimes suppressing. Like many other skills, the ability to listen to yourself can be improved through deliberate practice.
Ken says there are techniques that can help.
One of them is to use mindfulness meditation, where you're just trying to do nothing.
You're just being a blank conscious screen and you're trying to watch what pops up and you're trying to stay present
and not being sort of sucked away by the next thought or the next fear or emotion.
And the usefulness of mindfulness for discovering what you really want is that
you're learning how to notice these subtle signals that might be lurking on the fringe of consciousness.
You might not recognize those until you develop the skill
of really kind of picking up on these subtle things
that are happening if you'll just shut up and listen. Can in your book freely determine you write about a character you call Amy.
She's not a real person, but an amalgamation of many people you've worked with.
And you use Amy's story to illustrate your technique of getting to self-concordance.
Set things up for me.
Who is Amy and what is the challenge she faces? As a college student, Amy was very influenced by a friend who encouraged Amy's
interest in the environment and influenced Amy to join groups with her and work for the
environment. So that was a big part of Amy's life in college, but then she went to law school
and did very well. but she fell prey to this
problem I described earlier that the high-performing law students tend to become sort of corrupted
by their success. And she ended up as a wealthy partner, extremely successful by conventional
standards, lawyer working in a big farm in a big city, but she was miserable.
And she had no idea why at that point. One weekend she talked to her brother at a family gathering
and brother asked some difficult questions, well if you're so miserable, why are you still doing this?
And that caused her to start thinking in the way I've described.
It set her unconscious mind into motion. And the first effects of that process was when
the thought of the woman that she knew back in college popped into her head one day at
work. And it had been 25 years. Why was she thinking ever now? And she finally got to a point where she
Googled that person and discovered that they ran their own consulting firms for environmental
issues. And it took a while for Amy to go from this knowledge to saying, well, maybe I'll reach out
to her and see, you know, email her and see how she's doing.
But when she finally got to that last point, the friend was very glad to hear from Amy.
Thought that Amy had skills that she needed and invited Amy to come
work with her.
And so Amy changed her job.
She took a 50% cut in salary and she moved to a different city,
but she's way happier now than she was before
because she has gotten back to those early adult interests
and making a difference in the world.
So in terms of the specific techniques
that you mentioned a second ago,
the idea of preparation, illumination and verification, how does Amy's story represent those stages can?
Nothing happened until she started to ask herself, what's the problem? What do I really want?
And then nothing happened after that for quite some time because it was a big problem. and it took a while for her non-conscious mind to process it.
But then that mind found ways to bring to her attention this relevant image from her past.
But she still needed to recognize the aha moment.
And then she still needed to elaborate it and follow it through and contact
her friend and so forth.
But the whole sequence fits this model that we've discussed quite well.
You know, it's so interesting when you think about it, so few of us actually ask ourselves
those big questions, and those of us who do often don't listen to the voice of illumination
that might pop up, and then those of us who do that might not actually stop to verify or elaborate it and
it really is several different steps and each of them is actually quite
important. Yes it is true they're all important and the process can be
stalled anywhere along the way. One of the biggest problems Amy had was when she had this invitation to join her friend's
company was making the cut from her old job because she knew that her old colleagues would
see it as a step down, you know, working for so much less, so much less status.
And so she needed to muster the courage to go ahead and take stuff anyway.
One of the subtle traps that you have studied
is the idea that once we make choices,
our minds are very good at coming up with reasons
why those choices are, in fact, the correct choices.
It becomes very difficult to actually evaluate
the choice really on its own merits.
Can you talk about that idea that there is a commitment that happens inside our minds
once we've decided to go down path A rather than path B?
Yes, Peter Goldwoods there in his great research has shown that at some point we cross a
Rubicon of decision.
And what that means is we make up our minds.
We're no longer thinking about what we might want.
We've now made a choice and we're going to go ahead with it.
And what his research shows is that once we cross that Rubicon from deliberation to implementation,
our minds operate very differently.
We're no longer questioning what we're thinking.
Instead we're trying to make plans.
We're trying to preserve the goal.
We don't want to wimp out on it. We want to take the next step. We don't want to have to go back to that uncomfortable position of wondering what we want.
In some ways, we become almost prosecutors. We're basically a massing evidence for a conclusion that we've already reached
instead of having an open mind.
That's exactly right.
We don't want to think that I chose the wrong thing.
That creates dissonance, it's uncomfortable, and so we protect ourselves from that thought.
And many times, that's a good thing.
We don't want to let ourselves worry too much.
We want to get on with things.
But sometimes that dissonance can be a valuable signal, as we've been talking about with Amy,
that can let us know that maybe it is time to go back to the deliberation phase.
Once we take the time to really look inward and listen to the quiet voices within us,
there is still an important hurdle to overcome.
Just because Amy discovered what felt like her true calling doesn't mean that the rest
of her life is going to be a bed of roses.
Getting to self-concordance is a great way to harness the power of intrinsic motivation
and to start to live your life in accordance with your deepest values.
But changing course and making plans for a new life isn't enough. As boxing heavyweight champion
and part-time psychologist Mike Tyson once said, everyone has a plan until they get punched in the
mouth. I played Kenneth Clip from the movie Wild. It's based on a memoir by Cheryl Strade
recounting her experiences hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. In this clip, Cheryl
played by Reese Witherspoon is hiking. She's carrying a very heavy backpack and
starting to regret her choices. Do you know what you're making sure? I like to sit on a real toilet with blush,
like to cook food, eat food with other people.
People, that's the other thing I like.
I like talking to people,
listening to people,
I guess it's probably one I to hide me when I had new rules I had
Until I decided to walk on my own to the f***ing dirt
So the Pacific Crest Trail that we hear about in the movie can run some 2,600 miles from Mexico to Canada
You've studied the motivations of people who successfully complete the trail in a single spring, summer season. What do you find happens to their
intrinsic motivation as the trail unfolds? Yeah, this was a really interesting
data. The most dramatic thing that happened was that their intrinsic
motivation to do the hike plummeted over the course of the summer. It no longer seemed so interesting and challenging and fun at the end.
Instead, it was much more of a slog for most people who were able to go that far.
You found that when intrinsic motivation wins in this way,
it can actually be replaced by something else,
a different reason for pushing forward, but
one that is still positive.
It's called identified motivation.
What is this can?
Yeah, identified motivation is the kind where it's not that you're doing it because it's
fun and interesting.
Instead, it's you're doing it because it's meaningful and expresses your values and
it's important to you.
And so even when intrinsic motivation fails, identified motivation can still keep going,
because it believes in the journey, even if the journey is now becoming more and more painful.
You know, it's so interesting. A lot of this research I think speaks to the importance of mindfulness, of being, you know, willing to listen and pay attention to where you are
and how you might really feel.
I'm not quite sure it goes all the way back to that S seminar that you did in your 20s,
but to some extent some of it is about, you know, really paying attention to where you are.
It's true, and that is something that we all need to know how to do better.
It's something that our schools don't teach us, our parents don't teach us.
We're self-programming organisms.
We are creating our lives via our choices, but we are not taught how to do it well, not
taught how to ask ourselves the questions that will get us the answers that we need.
Psychologist Ken Sheldon works at the University of Missouri. He's the author of
Freely Determined, what the new psychology of the self teaches us about how to live.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you, Aaron. Thank you for inviting me.S. about how to live. Thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Thank you, and thank you for inviting me of how to great time.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Ani 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.
A run-song hero this week comes from our sister podcast, Mayan Sunghero.
In 1997, Azim Sharif was a 10th grader at a high school in Vancouver. He had an English teacher named Darrell Wakeham.
He took on this kind of father role
for a lot of kids who were at the time in sort of bad straits.
Me included, it was a tough time for me.
Personally, I had some family stuff going on
was in a bad mental health position.
He noticed that and kind of swooped in at a time when I really needed somebody to do so,
and I remember him saying, I know you don't think you're important enough for somebody to care
about this, but you are. You are important enough. And it was just such a reassuring thing for somebody who's, you know,
reeling at the age of 15.
Darrell introduced Azeem to psychology and sparked an intellectual curiosity in him.
Eventually, Azeem became a teacher himself, a psychology professor.
In my intro-psych class, the last class is always a class on positive psychology. I always leave
the students with these three tasks which have been empirically demonstrated to actually
improve people's happiness for several months. One of them is this thing called the gratitude
visit. Basically, what you do is you pick an unsung hero and you write 350 words, thanking
them. If you can see them in person, you go up to them and you read this, and it turns out to be this extremely powerful visit, this extremely powerful
moment for both people involved.
And every year I would think of the same guy, this English teacher, from way back in the
day.
But every year, even though I was asking my students to do this, I was a big hypocrite,
because I never did the gratitude visit for him.
In 2018, Azim moved back to Vancouver and one day he decided to go to the beach.
And it is a clothing optional beach.
It's a great beach.
It's got such a lively culture there.
I was down there, clothed.
And so there he was, completely naked, throwing a frisbee, and I thought,
now is my chance, and my chance is coming when he has no clothes on, and this is very awkward.
Because usually you don't see your 10th grade English teacher completely naked, and when you do,
it's awkward to approach him. And so then I kind of, I thought, should I go? Should I go talk to him now? And the awkwardness was too much.
So I didn't talk to him.
Until later, he put on a srong
because that's what people seemed to wear on this beach
and was walking by.
And I said, hey, Darryl,
and he recognized me, he remembered me.
And I gave him what I'd been preparing in my head
four years, which is this 350-word statement of gratitude,
which was about the inspiration that teachers and students who eventually become teachers pass down to each other. to play a similar role for my students that he played for me,
it gives some sort of meaning to the struggles that I had.
I don't like to romanticize what I went through too much,
but the ability to potentially help some people
make all of that worth it.
And I think it was the same thing for him.
He was able to channel his own struggles into something
which made it worth it by helping other people.
It's a paying-it-back thing, right?
Azim Sharif, he's a psychology professor
at the University of British Columbia
and a former guest on Hidden Brain.
You can hear him in our episode titled Creating God.
We reached out to Darrell to ask for his thoughts on a Zeme.
He tells us that a Zeme was one of the brightest minds he ever worked with in nearly 40 years
of teaching.
And he says, A Zeme's thank you at the beach that day made him remember why he became
a teacher in the first place.
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 find our work to be useful in your life, do your part to help us thrive.
Go to support.hiddenbrain.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam.
See you soon.