Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Befriending Your Inner Voice
Episode Date: August 1, 2022You know that negative voice that goes round and round in your head, keeping you up at night?  When that negative inner voice gets switched on, it's hard to think about anything else. Psychologist Et...han Kross has a name for it: chatter. He says it's part of the human condition, but there are ways to keep our negative emotions from morphing into chatter. If you like this show, be sure to check out our other work, including our two recent episodes on how our mindsets shape our lives in subtle but profound ways. Episode 1 looks at  how we respond to stress, and episode 2 examines how our beliefs about food and exercise affect our bodies. Also, if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org. Thanks!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
When was the last time you stayed awake at night, unable to sleep,
replaying something in your head that happened that day?
Did you notice how your thoughts coil back on themselves,
how you went in circles as the night wore on?
All of us, even those who have been spared the pain of insomnia,
have heard that voice.
If you've messed up a presentation at work or flubbed the tested school or been rejected in love,
you've heard those nagging, doubting thoughts, borrowing themselves deeper and deeper into the recesses of your brain.
Oh, how can I say something so stupid?
Why did I-
How does a mess-
I'm always so stupid? Why do I have to do this? I was a mess. I'm always so lazy.
I really should have worked out.
I do not believe you forgot to fill out that permission form.
You forgot about parent's or your conferences.
What the hell?
Thirds.
My back hurts.
My body is just falling apart.
Why does this inner voice seem to love to torment us?
Wouldn't life be better if we could just make it stop?
When that negative inner voice takes hold, that is all we can hear because it is consuming
our attention.
Today we kick off our long awaited annual series, U2.0.
All through the month of August, we'll bring you stories that will help you see yourself
and the people around you with fresh eyes.
We'll also give you research-based ideas on how to approach life's challenges with wisdom.
There's a fallacy that your first thoughts are your
best thoughts and so you don't want to trust your gut, you want to test your gut.
I don't think there's very much evidence at all that people are chokers or
thrivers and I think anyone can learn to perform better at what makes them most
nervous when the pressure is on. The people who know us well are good observers of
our behavior and often can deduce our feelings better than we can. We begin our
series by examining that nagging voice inside your head. How it works and
what you can do to make it work for you this week on Hidden Brain.
You might be an expert, you might be a novice, you could be a veteran or just starting out in your career. You've almost certainly heard that voice inside your head questioning if you know enough
questioning if you are enough. At the University of Michigan, psychologist Ethan Cross studies that voice,
what it does, why it exists, and how we can learn to befriend it. Ethan Cross, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me, Shankar. It's an absolute delight to Hidden Brain. Thanks for having me, Sean Cards. Absolutely delighted to be here.
Ethan, I want to start by talking about a couple of incidents in your own life,
where you had to confront what you call the chatter of your own in our voice.
When you started college at the University of Pennsylvania,
you came in as a very strong student with stellar grades from high school.
Can you tell me how you fared academically
in your first few months at Penn?
I think the best word that I could use
to describe my experiences, it was a disaster academically.
My first semester, I came in, I had graduated
as valedictorian from my high school
and thought I knew how to study.
And it turned out I did not know how to study very well
for college classes and
ended up getting a sea of bad grades and I also felt like I didn't exactly fit
in at Penn. I had come from a working-class neighborhood in Brooklyn and I was
surrounded now by students from more privileged backgrounds that I had come from, and they
talked different.
They dressed different.
So all of those thoughts about whether I fit in, whether I belong, that became a distraction.
And that weighed on me.
That there was a mental burden that exerted, which was unpleasant and was something I had to figure out how to address.
I want to fast forward a couple of decades to another moment in your life when the voice inside
your head was deafening. You'd become a successful academic. You were married. You had a growing family
and wonder, you were playing with your young daughter getting her ready for her nap. Can you
paint me a detailed picture of what you were doing and what happened next season?
This is a painful experience, even when I reflect back on it now.
When my youngest daughter was less than one at the time or right around that age, we would
have this ritual of sorts that we would engage in where before her nap, I'd read to her,
I'd play a little
bit, change her diaper, and then I would like launch her off of the changing table, swirl
her up and down like a spaceship in the sky, and then flip her on her back and very quickly
kind of put her down in the crib and she would love it, always smiles and she always expected
it. So something we she always expected it.
So something we did every single time.
And this one episode, I started going through the procedure,
she knew exactly what was coming, she was loving it.
And the only problem is when I went to land her,
so to speak in the crib, she started screaming.
And when I say screaming, I mean,
I'm talking about ear
shattering screams were coming out of out of her mouth. And she started grabbing
reaching for her arm. And so I immediately called my wife, told her what
happened. She then started to come home from work. And I'm then just I'm sitting
on the rocking chair with my daughter screaming, looking at me and
I'm thinking, oh my God, what did I do?
I started simulating in my mind the worst case scenarios.
Have I permanently injured her or are we going to need surgery?
Oh my God, what a surgery like when a kid is this young.
So I started catastrophizing
as though that were insufficient for working me up.
Then I went in a different direction with the catastrophization.
I started thinking, what is the doctor gonna think
when I bring my daughter in?
Are they gonna think I might have deliberately hurt her?
And that made me feel terrible.
And when you couple that with the pain I felt
when just looking at my child who was screaming in pain,
was a terribly chatter-provoking episode in my life.
And not a particularly pleasant episode to relive.
Ethan would later discover his daughter
had dislocated her elbow.
But in that moment, the uncertainty of not knowing
what had happened allowed his chatter
to spin out of control.
Oh, absolutely.
I mean, we know that uncertainty can fuel chatter
because we don't know what's gonna happen.
And our mind is incredibly adept confuul chatter because we don't know what's going to happen and you know our
mind is incredibly adept at simulating all sorts of possibilities and in that
moment my mind was it was firing on all cylinders and that's certainly
contributed to that negative state I was experiencing and I feel that this is
as close to a universal experience as there is.
I think almost everyone experiences this.
One of the more dramatic examples of this phenomenon that took place in public involves
a baseball pitcher, Rick Ankeel.
And for listeners who don't know much about baseball, can you tell me a bit about Rick Ankeel
and describe step by step what happened on October 3rd 2000.
Sure. So Rick and Keel was a new picture in the major leagues. And when he arrived on the
St. Louis Cardinals, he was touted as the next greatest thing. Not just that year, but he
had the potential to be according to the pundits, one of the greatest pictures of all time. And throughout his first year in the league,
that's exactly how he performed.
And Keely 11 and 7 on the year in 30 starts,
194 strikeouts breaking the record,
bio-ruppy.
He was lights out and ace pitcher.
His team ended up getting to the playoffs,
and during one of the playoffs came, he took the mound. And a few up getting to the playoffs and during one of the playoff
games he took the mound and a few batters into the game he did something that was very
uncommon for him. The ball hit the dirt at the batter's feet and shot past the catcher.
The runner-run first ambled over to second base. This was not the sort of thing fans expected from Rick
and Keel. It was uncommon for him because he had such incredible control over where he placed
the ball, and after he throws his wild pitch he pauses and he says to himself, huh? I just
threw a wild pitch. He shrugged it off, and then he winds up to throw another pitch.
And this one's even more wild than the one that came before it.
Another wild pitch over the head of Hernandez, and back to the backstop.
And now he's starting to wonder what is going on.
He winds up for another pitch.
Wow.
The screen again hits off the backstop and right back to the backstop.
And this one is even more wild than the last.
It sails over the catcher and the umpire.
And on and on he goes through this inning,
it's incredibly painful to watch his implosion on the mound.
And another wild one.
And Maddox will score. It's ball four to Galerogga.
He finally gets that ball.
A picture we previously was able to hit targets with pinpoint precision.
And he's just walking batters across the bases.
And ultimately has to be taken out of the game.
Never regains his form when describing what he underwent on the field that day and during
subsequent outings in which he tried to regain his control,
he talks about this monster that was born inside him,
and the monster is a name that he gives to his chatter.
I wake up in the middle of the night,
you know, having the nightmare that I couldn't throw a strike,
I'm soaked and sweat, and it's like this thing won't even leave me alone
during my sleep. Every time he would wind up to throw a pitch, he would start thinking about,
is he squeezing the ball too tight or is it too loose? Is he distributing his weight appropriately?
And ultimately, this monster, his chatter ended up sinking his career.
his chatter ended up sinking his career.
You see that the voice that he heard that day, this voice that he called the monster,
was louder than the 52,000 fans who were in the stands watching.
I mean, that's an extraordinary statement, Ethan.
I think it's also a statement that rings true for many people.
There's some wonderful research which shows that often what predicts how we feel at any
given moment in time is not what we're actually doing, but it's the thought streaming through
our head.
So, you can be on a carnival ride with your kids that should be enormously fun. But you're worried
about how the last conversation went with a guest, where things were a little choppy, and
you're not having fun. This speaks to, I think, exactly what, and
keel experience in that moment, and what so many of us experience at times, which is when
that chatter starts brewing, when that negative inner voice takes hold,
that is all we can hear because it is consuming our attention.
That negative inner voice is often lying in weight, ready to chime in.
It refuses to let mistakes go and reminds us of them at the worst possible moment.
When we come back, the many different drivers of this chatter and the psychological techniques we
can use to master the voices inside our heads. You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta. This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Psychologist Ethan Cross studies the phenomenon of self-talk and chatter. The voices we all
hear incessantly inside our heads.
We've seen how Chadda can take the form of a merciless tormentor. Once baseball star Rick Ankeel made one mistake,
his inability to set that mistake aside
produced the next mistake and the next and the next.
When Ethan accidentally heard his young daughter,
he found it really hard to forgive himself.
The harsh and unforgiving judge is a common role that is played by our inner voice.
But the more Ethan studied the phenomenon of chatter, the more he realized it comes in
many guises.
Ethan some years ago, you made an appearance on television that set off a firestorm of
chatter inside your head. Now this off a firestorm of chatter inside your head.
Now, this was a different kind of chatter.
Start by telling me about the TV appearance and what happened afterwards.
This was early in my career and my colleagues and I published a study that we were really
excited about.
It dealt with the idea that when we're rejected by someone else in a romantic relationship, people may actually
be referring to physical sensations in their body when they experience social pain.
And this was a study we were really excited about. We didn't particularly expect it to get a lot
of attention, but many people came calling and one minute I'm lecturing in introductory social psychology about the psychology of love.
And the next minute I'm in a studio across campus doing an interview for the CBS evening
news.
So when we're alone, we experience physical pain and that's a cue to say it's time
to get things back on track.
And that's what LeKeed is.
Fast forward about a week after this interview aired, I walk into work and I notice a letter
that's hand-addressed to me.
And I proceeded to open the envelope.
And that's where I saw a really chilling, disturbing note had been written to me.
All sorts of racial slurs, threats, ugly drawings of me.
I immediately broke out into a sweat.
And the first thing I remember,
the first thing I did was I showed it to my assistant
just to get a second set of eyes on this
to make sure I wasn't jumping to an extreme.
And I looked at her face and I remember her face went white
and the first thing she said to me
is you need to tell someone about this. A couple of hours later after talking to folks in the department
and at the university I ended up at the police station, showed them the letter, asked them what to do.
So their advice to me was to keep an eye out for people who look suspicious for the next few days
and make sure to drive home a different way from work each day.
So that no one follows you.
Which was kind of comical because at the time I lived like just a few blocks from campus.
So you know, there weren't exactly many, many different ways I could go home.
And this activated some chatter, some really significant chatter.
For the next few days, I, few days, I couldn't sleep.
I was pacing my house.
I had my baseball bat resting on my shoulder.
I was in protector mode.
I was constantly thinking to myself, what have I done?
Why did I do this interview?
My first daughter had just been born.
I've put her at risk.
I put my wife at risk.
It was really a scary
moment in life and it was an all-consuming one. And when your chatter is consuming your attention for
a long period of time, that makes it really hard for you to do other things in your life that matter,
like your work, like advising your students, writing papers, or even being a good partner and parent
to your partner and kids, right? Because they're trying to talk to me and I'm thinking about
this potential threat. So that was the letter and the chatter as I refer to that episode.
The chatter inside Ethan's mind brought him back to the letter over and over again.
He was trying to decipher clues about the person who sent it.
He was trying to understand their intentions.
It was actually from a nearby town which also magnified the significance of the perceived
threat.
But there was no reason why this person was making the accusations
that they were making. There was no reason why they drew the pictures of me that they
did and why they said the things they did. But that didn't make it in that moment, any
less threatening. And that's what Chatter does to us because it zooms us in on the things we're concerned about, whether it be whether we belong,
whether we're making grades, whether we've been rejected, or whether someone's coming to kill us.
Right? You're zoomed in so narrowly on the problem at hand, you lose the ability to see that bigger picture. So another form of chatter that's related to this
this idea of the fearful prognosticator is the problem of rumination and I think many of us are
affected by this, you know, we're bothered by something small and then we pull and pull and
pull on that ball of thread until, small mole hills become very big mountains.
A great example of this comes from the TV show
Seinfeld, the character Elaine is on a crowded subway train,
happily thinking about an upcoming wedding,
she's about to attend.
I'm really looking forward to this.
I love weddings.
Maybe I'll meet somebody.
Maybe not.
I love weddings. Maybe I'll meet somebody.
Maybe not.
Oh man, we're stopping.
Oh, this is great.
This is what I need.
Just what I need.
Okay, take it easy.
I'm sure it's nothing.
Probably rats on the track.
They're stopping for rats.
God, it's so crowded.
How could there be so many people?
What if I missed the wedding? I got the ring. What do you do? You can't get married without a ring. I can't breathe.
I feel faint. Okay, take it easy. It'll start moving soon.
Think about people in concentration camps, what they went through. The hostages, what would you do
if you were a hostage? Think about that. This is nothing. No, it's not nothing, it's something. It's a nightmare. Help me.
What's that on my leg?
So obviously, even this is comedy, but I love how the writers here start with the smallest
of inconveniences, and then 20 seconds later, Elaine's comparing herself being stuck on a
train to being in a concentration camp. Yeah, the mind's ability to make mountains out of
mollholes and to catastrophize is truly remarkable. You know, there's this one study that I really
love. It was this study done by the British anthropologist Andrew Irving. He basically went up to
New Yorkers on city streets several years ago and gave
them a microphone and just asked them to verbalize the stream of thoughts that were flowing through
their mind at any given moment in time. And what you see in those externalized inner monologues
is something very similar to what you hear Elaine going through in that clip.
One thing that I think is so interesting is there's a non-linearity to our inner voice.
We pinball back and forth all over the place in that clip, Elaine's not just thinking about the wedding,
but she's going to the concentration camp and then she's going back to the subway conditions.
We're moving back and forth very rapidly,
and the other feature of these externalizing hormonologues that was so no worthy is they often
dealt with negative content, not always, but that was the majority of the kinds of thoughts that
were streaming through people's heads. And I just find it remarkable at how facile we are
And I just find it remarkable at how fast I will we are in our ability to go from one negative thing to another and down those rabbit holes.
So another hallmark of rumination is that I think we feel as if we're making progress
on some problem, like we're thinking about something and we think, okay, if we think
about this problem, we can now make progress and solve the problem.
And then, as you say, moments later, we're pinballing off 17 different things.
And then we don't realize it, but we are walking in circles.
We're like the people who are lost in a forest who are walking in circles.
Can you talk about that?
That one of the hallmarks of rumination is it has sort of the circularity to it.
That we come back to the same stops over and over again,
but we don't realize we're going in circles.
You know, chatter is a term I use to refer to getting stuck
in a negative thought loop, this perseverative circularity.
Rumination tends to be about dwelling on the past.
Worry is more about what's happening in the future,
or the present, But the common theme
across both of those different states is this negative circularity, this perceiverative
negative cognition. And it is thought to be what psychologists call a transdiagnostic
risk factor for many different forms of mental illness, ranging from various forms of depression and anxiety to other kinds
of negative states.
For example, people who are overly aggressive and easily set off.
The common theme across many of those conditions is that people are herping on some misdeed
or grievance or concern over and over and over again.
So we've seen how the inner voice can take the form of the
harsh judge or the second guest, sir.
Sometime ago, we featured Kevin Cochley on Hidden Brain,
and he studies the imposter phenomenon, the phenomenon of self-doubt.
And in some ways, that's also connected to the story of chatter,
the ways in which people who are actually very good at doing some things can sometimes start to second-guess themselves.
You tell the story of Mr. Rogers on TV, he came across a serenely self-confident, but behind the scenes it was another picture altogether?
Yeah, there's this wonderful Chatter artifact of sorts that the New York Times published several years ago. Fred Rogers
had gone on a kind of sabbatical for a while from his show, and when he came back, he was
filled with self-doubt about whether he'd be able to perform at the same level that he
did prior to taking his break. And in this letter that he writes to himself, he very, very candidly expresses that vulnerability.
He writes, am I kidding myself
that I'm able to write a script again?
I wonder, why don't I trust myself?
After all these years, it is just as bad as ever.
I wonder if every creative artist goes through the tortures of the damn trying to create.
Oh well, the hour come of, and now is when I've got to do it. Get to it Fred, get to it.
So this is really remarkable to me, first of. I mean we're talking about Mr. Rogers
You know Mr. Rogers helped teach me how to manage my emotions growing up as he did countless other
Kids and probably adults too and yet here we see him admitting to struggling with his own
Self-doubt at times. So I think it's such an important message to convey to folks because it really says
to people, hey, if you've ever experienced chatter, if you've ever experienced self-doubt,
welcome to the human condition we all do at times.
There is one final form of negative chatter worth discussing.
Sometimes, the voice inside our heads takes the form
not of an angry judge or a fearful warrior,
but a disappointed parent or teacher.
Some time ago, Hidden Brain listener Jose Velazquez
shared the story with us.
I betrayed the trust of one of my closest family members
and left them with a financial disaster that they had to resolve entirely on their own and it took them a better half of five years to fix it.
And there doesn't pass a single day where I don't think about it and hate myself for it.
And even though the person I betrayed has forgiven me has said so explicitly,
I don't see how ever forgive myself.
It just haunts me every single day. So, Ethan, I'm struck by the line where he says,
I don't see how I can ever forgive myself.
I'm wondering if you can talk for a moment about the chatter that comes in the role of shame.
Chatter refers to getting stuck in those negative thought loops.
The content of that negativity can vary. In some cases,
it could be filled with anxiety-provoking thoughts, but in other cases, as you're referring to here,
it could be filled with shame-provoking thoughts as well. Both feel awful, but in very different ways.
But in my experiences, talking to people and doing research on this topic, what has become crystal
clear is just how normative this experience of chatter is for people.
Our inner voices can take many forms.
They can cause us enormous anguish.
They can cause friction in our relationships.
They can impair our performance, destabilize us.
It's enough to make anyone wish for a little peace and quiet.
That's exactly what happened to the neuroscientist, Jill Bolteiler. In 1996, she suffered a stroke
that silenced the voice of her inner tormentor. She described what that change was like in a TED Talk. My brain chatter went totally silent.
Just like someone took a remote control and pushed the mute button,
total silence.
And at first I was shocked to find myself inside of a silent mind.
And I affectionately refer to this space as La La Land.
But it was beautiful there.
Imagine what it would be like to lose 37 years
of emotional baggage.
Oh, I felt euphoria.
When we come back, Jill Bull Taylor
discovered something.
That nagging, bothersome voice she was so happy to lose, she starts to miss it.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Psychologist Ethan Cross is the author of the book, Chatter.
He has studied the different roles of the voices we hear inside our heads, the harsh judge,
the fearful prognosticator, the repetitive ruminator.
One of the puzzles that arises from this area of research is this. If our inner voice is
consistently a source of anxiety or a driver of depression, why do we have an inner voice
at all? Shouldn't natural selection have found a way over thousands of years to remove
something that causes so much harm? Ethan, you've called introspection the great puzzle of
the human mind.
What is paradoxical about it?
Well, what's paradoxical about it is that on the one hand, the ability to introspect is a
remarkable tool that is a source of innovation.
It's a tool that lets us solve problems.
If you think about verbal introspection specifically, what many people describe as
the inner voice, what that refers to specifically as our ability to silently use language to reflect
on our lives.
And that lets us do many, many different things.
Number one, your inner voice lets you keep information active in your head for very short
periods of time.
It's part of what we call our verbal working memory system.
So if you go to the grocery store,
and like me, five minutes after you get there,
you forget what you were supposed to buy,
and you pause, and you think to yourself,
why was I supposed to get?
Geez, yogurt, oranges.
That's you're using your inner voice.
You're using it to retain information.
But we also use that inner voice to do other things like simulate and plan. Before giving a new presentation,
I will go for a walk around my neighborhood and I'll go through what I'm going to say,
often word for word, in my mind. We also use our inner voice to control ourselves.
This morning I was exercising, it was a hard workout, I was literally coaching myself
along. Come on, you got this, seven more reps, then you get a break, and then I count to
down, seven, six, five. So we can use that inner voice to be a coach. And then finally,
we use our inner voice to tell stories, to create narratives that help us understand our experiences
in this wacky world, and those narratives that we create,
they give shape to our sense of who we are.
I think of the inner voice and more broadly
in respect, as a kind of Swiss army knife of the human mind
that lets us do many, many different things.
I'm thinking about one other feature that the inner voice gives us, Ethan, when we do something
that's wrong, we often castigate ourselves, we are mad at ourselves, we second-guess ourselves,
we experience shame, we experience remorse, and obviously it's not fun to go through those things,
but of course, if we imagine a world where we didn't go through them, where we did something wrong,
where we didn't reflect back on what happened, we might be entirely prone to make
the same mistakes over and over again.
Experiencing negativity and negative emotions isn't something that we want to shy away
from.
Many scientists, myself included, believe that negative emotions are functional when experienced
in the right dosage. We evolve the capacity to experience shame, regret, anger, sadness.
You fill in your favorite negative emotion for a reason.
They prepare us for dealing with that situation that we're managing, and they often serve
as cues to say, hey, you need to focus here so you don't repeat this mistake again. So we don't want to
rid ourselves of negativity. What we do want to figure out is how to prevent those small spikes
of negative emotions from morphing into chatter. So earlier in the episode, we explored the story
of the neuroscientist Jill Boltaylor. She suffered a stroke that left her unable to engage in introspection. And at
first she welcomed the absence of her bothersome in her voice. But Ethan
finished the story for me. Did the relief that Jill Boltaylor felt at
losing her inner voice was that long-lasting? What ended up happening was the
euphoria that she initially felt when all of her chatter
went away, that morphed into a state of dysfunction as time went on.
Because although she stopped worrying and ruminating, she also stopped being able to do
basic things like keep information active in our head.
The inner voice is part of your working memory system.
She lost that ability to organize her thinking,
to make sense of what was happening in her world.
And the lesson that she learned from going through this stroke
was that the goal for her was no longer
to identify ways of silencing her inner voice,
of getting rid of it.
Instead, the goal became to learn how to manage that inner voice more effectively.
So, I want to take you back to a story that you told me at the start of this episode.
And I want to have you tell me how you in some ways managed to control the chatter
that was unfolding inside your head. This was after you went on TV and you received
a threatening letter, you were terrified, you started pacing about your house at night
with a baseball bat patrolling your house. At one point, Ethan, you sat down at your computer
and began to search for ways that you could protect yourself.
What were you hoping to find with your Google search and what happened subsequently?
Look, anyone who's experienced chatter knows that the rabbit hole, when you're really
in it, can take you down it quite deep and I was very deep down the rabbit hole.
And at the very worst of it, I sat down at my laptop and I had the thought, why don't I search for a
bodyguard that specializes in protecting academics? And I didn't actually hit enter on the search.
I did type it, but then I thought to myself, first, what if someone sees you type this?
They'll think you've lost it. And then I actually said to myself, what are you doing? Get your
act together. And I started talking to myself like I was talking to someone else. And it
instantly snapped me out of that very narrow view of my situation that was filled with
thoughts about threat and oh my God, what if this happens? And it was more, it was a broader
view that I adopted well look
I'm not the first person to experience this situation the police told me that other folks get letters on occasion
They usually blow over this will too. It's not doing any good to not sleep
so why don't you go upstairs and stop this stuff and
upstairs and stop this stuff.
And that's exactly what I did. And interestingly enough, if you think back to that
letter by Fred Rogers that I read before,
he did something very similar.
He used his own name.
It was almost as though in both of our circumstances,
we were thrust into this other advisory mode.
It was like we were giving advice to a good friend.
And we then went on to do research
on this tool. We call it Distanced Self-Talk. And what it involves doing is trying to coach yourself
through your chatter using your own name or the second person pronoun you. And it turns out this
is a useful tool for helping people gain distance from what they're going through in ways
that can be quite useful.
So I want you to talk a little bit about that research
because in some ways, beyond the fact
that talking to yourself, as if you were outside yourself
helped you, you actually have data to show that,
in fact, this technique is effective.
You publish a study where you asked volunteers
to think about personal events that they will worry about and you asked volunteers to think about personal events
that they were worried about, and then ask them to think about those events either in
the first person or using a different pronoun. Tell me how you ran that study and how it unfolded.
Well, what we did in that study is we had people first tell us about experiences from their
past that people might ruminate about and in another study
it dealt with future worries and concerns. And then during the study we would have
people reflect on those experiences. We'd have them think about them and then
try to really work through their deepest thoughts and feelings surrounding
those events. Half of the time we had them try to work through their feelings as
we normally
do in the first person. So, why did I feel this way? What was going on? In the other half
of the time, though, we'd have them use their own name and the second person pronoun
you. So, Ethan, why did you feel this way? What was going on? And what we found was across both studies, people consistently felt less upset
when they use what we call distance self-talk,
when they use their name,
and the second person pronoun you
to try to work through
and make sense of what they were going through.
What this helps us do is it helps us step back
and think about our circumstances more similar to how
we would think about something that's happening to another person.
And when we do that, we have the enhanced ability to be more objective and deliberate when
we think about our problems.
So besides using our names or second-person pronouns when talking to ourselves. It turns out there are also other ways of creating psychological distance from our problems.
And you found many of these techniques to be beneficial.
One of these techniques involves visualization, changing the way we see things in our mind's
eye.
Can you tell me about the work that you and your colleagues have done to test the idea
of adopting what's called a fly on the wall perspective on our own problems?
Yeah, so when we think about negative experiences or when we anticipate future ones as well,
we often have mental imagery surrounding it.
And research has shown that we can think about different experiences in our lives from
different perspectives. So you can conjure up a mental snapshot
of a past event and actually replay it happening in your own mind from a first person perspective.
Or you can also think about that same experience, but from a third person perspective, like a fly
on the wall peering down on the scene. Research has shown that when people adopt a third person or a fly in the wall perspective,
that tends to be linked with lower levels of emotionality, and that's true for both
positive and negative experiences.
In one set of studies, we found that when participants were provoked, when an experimenter in the
lab acted in a very rude and insulting way to them.
If we ask people to reflect on the provocation from a distance, they were much less likely
to be aggressive towards that experimenter when given the opportunity than people who were
directed to just reflect on the experience as they normally would in the first person.
And so more broadly, what I think this speaks to is the fact that, look, it's very easy
for us to become consumed with negativity.
And when we're consumed with that negativity, we often say things and do things that we
would never dream of doing if the emotional amplitude was just a little bit lower.
And that's what we see happening
with many of these different kinds of distancing techniques.
It turns down the temperature just a little bit.
It doesn't, I should,
and I think this is an important point to convey.
When people distance in our studies,
we don't take a negative experience
and turn it into a joyfully blissfully positive event.
When I coached myself, you know, Ethan, what are you doing bodyguards for academics?
It was still a negative situation I was dealing with. But the intensity of it was diminished to a point
where I could think about it more objectively and deliberately.
And that can be really useful.
And often the difference between being mired in chatter on the one hand
and working through a negative experience adaptively on the other.
So we've seen how creating a little distance using language can be effective
and creating a little distance using spatial imagination can be effective. It turns out there's a third way we can also
achieve some distance from our own problems.
Can you talk about the idea of temporal distance, Ethan?
Yeah, I love this distancing tactic.
It's one that Oslem Ayduk and one of her colleagues
discovered a few years ago.
What it involves doing is remarkably simple and effective.
So take your latest worry, rather than think
about how awful the circumstance is right now, think about how you're going to feel
sometime down the road in the future. What that does, what engaging in that form of what
we often call mental time travel does for us, is it makes it clear that whatever
we're dealing with, as awful as it is, it will eventually pass. And that gives us hope
that can be a very powerful antidote to a negative mind that is overwhelmed with chatter.
Ethan and other researchers have also found it helps to give new labels to our emotions.
When a negative voice inside you warns of all the bad things that could happen and you feel yourself
getting anxious, relabel that anxiety. Another tool that can help people involves changing the way
we interpret what we're going through shifting from thinking about our circumstances
as a threat to thinking about it as a challenge.
And the way this works is as follows.
When people are experiencing stress, they often ask themselves, and this often happens subconsciously
to kinds of questions.
What's required of me in this situation and what resources do I possess to manage it?
If you answer those questions, if you know, okay, there's a lot that's being asked of me,
and no way I can deal with this, that elicits a threat appraisal which predicts all sorts
of bad stuff, poor performance, poor subjective feelings, poor health.
But as we saw in a recent conversation with mindset's researcher Alia Kram, we can see
better outcomes when we relabel problems, not as threats, but as challenges.
That predicts the opposite set of outcomes, better performance, better subjective experience,
better physiological responses.
And so that's another switch, another lever you can pull to shift how you're functioning in a particular situation.
Go from threat to challenge.
We've looked at several techniques that individuals can practice, but it's striking,
of course, that long before you had psychological signs come up with solutions to the problem of chatter,
societies have been grappling with ways to help people deal with stressors and out of control anxiety. You've cited a remarkable study
looking at a technique practiced by Israeli women living in war zones. What did the women do to
bring their anxieties and that chatter under control? Well, they activated an ancient Chatterfiting tool, which was they prayed ritualistically
and praying for them was associated with reductions in anxiety.
You look at cultures around the world, think about the death of a loved one.
Lots of different religions prescribe very, very different kinds of rituals for engaging
with that kind of chatter, provoking
event.
And research shows that engaging in a ritual can actually be helpful for modulating our
chatter.
One thing to keep in mind is when we're experiencing chatter, we often feel like we don't have control
over the thoughts and feelings that are streaming through our head. And one of the reasons we think rituals are helpful is because a ritual is under your
control.
It's a rigid sequence of behaviors that you perform the same way every time.
That's something that you have agency over.
And that's a way of compensating for the lack of control we often feel when we're struggling with chatter.
Another way that they can aid us is
they're often intentionally demanding, which is to say
rituals are often complicated and to execute them, we have to focus on the individual parts of performing those rituals.
And that can take our attention away momentarily from the chatter we're experiencing and give us a bit of of
distraction and so that's another pathway through which rituals can help.
And of course we see these rituals not just in the context of religion we see
this in sports all the time. You tell the story of the Australian swimmer Stephanie
Rice before every race she
swings her arms eight times, presses her goggles four times, touches her cap four times.
I mean, it does sound religious, but clearly it's just about sports performance.
Yeah, so there's research which has shown that you can give people arbitrary rituals to
engage in, you know, clap their hands three times, spin around in their seat twice, and then tap their head.
And engaging in those kinds of non-religious rituals can be beneficial as well.
Probably the most famous athlete who's known for doing rituals is Rafael Nadal.
Several years ago, a journalist asked Nadal, what's the hardest thing you struggle with
on the tennis court?
And his answer surprised a lot of people because he didn't say the hardest thing I do is, you know, making sure I keep my serve in check or return my opponent's backhand.
And said he says, the hardest thing I struggle with is to battle the voice inside my head.
The hardest thing he struggles with is his chatter on the court. And if you watch Nadal play,
you will see his solution for managing that chatter. He engages in elaborate rituals from the time
he enters the court to before every single serve, he has specific rituals that he engages
in. And when he's been asked, why do you do these wacky rituals? He says, and I quote,
these rituals are a way of ordering my mind, providing the order I seek in a match.
And again, Raphael the Down finds a way.
I understand that you have some rituals of your own to combat your inner chatter before
giving a big speech.
I do. I will pound a fist into my hand two or three times.
I will give myself a little mini,
very brief, distant self-talk, PAPTOK.
You know, come on, man, you've got this.
And if it's a really, really high stakes event,
I've been known to do a few pushups
right before Showtime as well.
Ha-ha-ha.
We started this conversation by having you tell me about your
experience as a young undergrad at Penn who was dealing with setbacks when you
first got a college. One of the people you reached out to for help at that time
was your dad and it turns out that your dad played a really formative role not
just in helping you while you were at Penn, but in some ways helping you think
about the whole idea of introspection more generally.
I'm wondering if you could tell me a little bit
about your dad and the connection between his insights
and the work that you've been doing
these last several decades.
One of the interesting ahas I had was that,
although I had been researching chatter
and how to manage it for about 20 years,
I've been thinking about it for close to 40.
The reason for that is I had an unconventional dad.
My dad was someone who, on the one hand, love watching the New York Yankees and driving
aggressively on the streets of Brooklyn and, you know, it's chain smoking, you know, Brooklyn bushy mustache kind of guy,
but when he wasn't doing all those things, he was, he was reading
Eastern philosophy and the Bhagavad Gita and meditating.
And when he wasn't doing those things, he was talking to me as a
three-year-old about what he was learning about.
He wasn't a college grad or, you know, this wasn't, he wasn't a professor, by the way.
It's just a hobby that he had.
He was fascinated by the mind and our ability to manage it.
And the message that he conveyed to me
from the time I was a little kid was,
whenever something is going wrong,
turn your attention and work and try to work through
the situation.
The way he said that to me was, you know, he'd give me this corny phrase, go inside, find
the kernel of truth, you would say.
That was a message that he just conveyed to me over and over.
I mean, I was a little kid and it was a tool that I, as a result, relied on throughout
my child and adolescent.
So, I get into an argument or I ask a girl out,
they'd say no, I'd go inside to the introspect,
try to work through, figure out why this happened,
come up with a solution and move on.
And then I got to pen, I experienced some of my own chatter,
and then I ended up taking a psychology class
and I learned in that class that lots of people do exactly
what my dad had told me to do
when they struggle with something and they benefit as a result.
This ability to introspect was a remarkable tool.
But in some cases, that tool failed lots of people as well
and discovering that puzzle, why is it that we have this tool?
Sometimes it helps, other times it hurts us.
That became a passion of mine that I've been trying to solve ever since.
Ethan Cross is a psychologist at the University of Michigan.
He's the author of the book, Chatter, the voice in our head, why it matters, and how to harness
it.
Ethan, thank you for talking to me today on Hidden Brain. Thanks so much for having me, Shankar, it was a 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 Marty Bonneffat. Marty is a small business benefits consultant
with Howard W. Phillips in company. He's in Washington, DC. He was really helpful
when we recently had to explore health insurance options for our company
Marty was responsive friendly and knew how to clearly explain
jargony topics to non-exports. We really appreciate your help Marty
Next week we continue our YouTube.io series with a look at how we make decisions
We usually think that we
know what's best for ourselves, but very often that is not true.
You know, it's just fascinating how easily people can convince themselves that they know
what they're doing, even when we know they don't.
Next week, we'll explore a better way.
If you're a fan of the show, if you feel we have given you ideas that have been useful in your life,
please help us make more episodes like this.
Go to support.hiddenbrain.org.
Again, that's support.hiddenbrain.org
and show us you have our back.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon.