Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Regrets, I Have a Few...
Episode Date: August 31, 2021We all have regrets. By some estimates, regret is one of the most common emotions we experience in our daily lives. In the final episode of our You 2.0 series, we bring you a favorite interview with A...my Summerville, the former head of the Regret Lab at Miami University in Ohio. After years of studying this emotion, she says she's learned something that may seem counterintuitive: regret doesn't always have to be a negative force in our lives. If you like our work, please consider supporting it! See how you can help at support.hiddenbrain.org. And to learn more about human behavior and ideas that can improve your life, subscribe to our newsletter at news.hiddenbrain.org.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Whether or not you believe in them, you probably have ghosts that haunt you.
Not something sinister, but something you just can't get rid of.
These ghosts are relentless and they will make you rehash details from your past,
over and over again. Hi there, Sean Carr and friends.
Hello, Sean Carr.
Hi.
I was calling about, hopefully I sang it,
regardless of how few, so I won't list all of them.
My boyfriend of a year and I ended our relationship.
It's just looking back and thinking
that I could have done better and I didn't.
All these things keep popping in my head of small things,
maybe something I should have said differently
or something I should have done differently in a particular conversation or on a particular event.
It makes me cringe with regret and shame.
I have an affair. Everyone knows that it's not a secret, but it's a regret.
My great regret is leaving Woodstock on Saturday morning.
I was an evangelical Christian at the time.
And I remember my friends asking me if I thought they were going to hell.
And I told them that I thought they would go to hell if they did not become Christian.
And it's something that's bothered me for the last 10 years.
I am experiencing regrets on sometimes admitted by minute basis.
And it is the biggest regret of my life, honestly.
I hope you have a great rest of your day.
Bye.
Today on Hidden Brain, we're going to conclude our annual
YouTube.0 series with a look at regrets.
Why our tendency to dwell on the past may actually be helping us to prepare
for the future?
Amy Somerville is a senior research scientist at Cairo's research. When we spoke with
her, she was a psychology professor running the regret lab at Miami University of Ohio.
I don't know that I have a particular deep backstory about how I got into regret.
I actually was just generally interested in social psychology. And one of the
things that then drew me to regret from that is the fact that regret is among our most common emotions.
By some estimates, it's the second most common emotion mentioned in daily life, and the most common negative emotion that we mention.
And so this is really a pervasive part of how people experience the world around them.
And as I learned more, I really started to realize that regret is actually
a very hopeful emotion. It's something that is helping us learn from our mistakes and do better
in the future. So it's actually, I think, a really positive thing to get to study.
Amy, I'd like to structure this conversation around a couple of stories of regret. We actually
reached out to listeners of Hidden Brain some time ago and they sent in stories about some of the things they regret in life.
One came from Tom Bond's saint of Arlington, Virginia. Here's the tape.
I regret not taking the lead in a school play when I was in ninth grade. I was in a 9 through
12 school and I was surprised to receive a lead as a freshman that was somewhat
of a big deal considering that freshmen typically don't get those sort of roles and rather than
accept the fact that the director felt like I would be a good choice for the role.
I listened to people who said that I probably couldn't handle it and therefore decided to
turn the role down.
Later on in life I realized that when people present me with an opportunity like that, if
they have the confidence in me being able to be successful, they're likely not putting
me in that place to fail.
And so since then I feel like I've gotten a new confidence.
And so when faced with a similar situation in the current dice, I've been much more
likely to put my hand up and say yes.
I'm wondering how common this is.
Are people really good at taking what happened in the past and learning from it?
What spells the difference between people who actually are behaving like Tom, taking a
bad experience and saying, I'm actually going to use it, and people who just sort of stay
stuck in what that bad experience was and think about it over and over again?
So I think the thing that really characterizes it is less about necessarily what kind of
person you are, but rather the way that you're experiencing these thoughts.
So, there's something called rumination, which actually comes literally from bovine digestion,
the idea of how cows vomit back up things, chew them over, swallow them back down, and
so on and so forth. And in terms of our thoughts, it's actually this idea of the same kind of process
that rumination is having thoughts sort of spring unwanted to mind,
and we're chewing them over without actually getting anything new out of them.
They're just repeatedly, intrusively becoming sort of part of our mental landscape.
And what we found is that people who have intrusively becoming part of our mental landscape.
And what we found is that people who have room-initive regrets, so that they're both having this
regret, but also having it be something that's intrusive and repeated, tend to be people
who are also experiencing the most negative outcomes.
So are more likely to have clinical depression symptoms, anxiety
symptoms, things like that. There are some regrets you can learn from, like Tom's
story about trying out for the school play, but other regrets feel harder to
overcome. I asked Amy some of her about this and I played her the story from
Catherine Wiginton Green, a listener from Washington DC. My main regret, what
popped into my mind when I heard this on the podcast, was regretting
not stopping and seeing my estranged father.
He'd been estranged for our family for quite a while, and I had not seen him or spoken
with him in a very long time, his choice.
And I was driving along Barcrete Parkway, who is my boyfriend at the time, who is now
my husband.
And as we were driving up Barcrete Parkway, I looked to my right and saw him and the woman
he married, walking arm and arm.
And I saw him and I told my husband to pull over immediately without thinking.
And when we stopped the car, I started to unbuckle my feet belt.
And then I stopped and paused
for a moment and realized I had no idea what I was going to do or what I was going to say.
So I chicked out and buckled my seatbelt back and told my husband to keep driving, and
then I burst into tears.
And I realized that that was probably the last time I was going to see him, and that was
my only chance to talk to him again. So I still regret that. There's something really point in about that story, Amy,
because in this case it doesn't sound as if the regret has the potential for learning. She says
that she feels that the door was closed in terms of her ability to reconnect with her father
and she comes back to this memory over and over again,
and just remembers it as an opportunity that was lost.
Yeah, certainly in terms of the specific incidents that we regret,
they do seem to be most likely things where we had this opportunity in the moment,
but it's not something that we can go back and fix, because obviously,
if we could just magically go back and fix. Because obviously, if
we could just magically turn back and fix something, then most people would do that rather
than continue to regret it. What I might say is that I would imagine that one of the reasons
that this does wrinkle for this woman is that it's about something that's important to
her, it's about her family. And that perhaps this is something
that she can carry forward in terms of how she handles
other relationships going forward.
So I've heard people say that there are anecdotal reports
that the things that people really regret
are the things that they didn't do
rather than the things that they did do.
Is that just anecdotal?
Is that not actually true?
That people regret acts of omission
more than acts of commission? I would say there's some evidence for that. So one of the
more famous studies on this thought about this in terms of something that happens over
time. And what those researchers argued is that we regret things we did a lot more in the moment.
So if you say something really stupid in a job interview,
you're going to walk out and have that hand to the forehead feeling of,
oh, why did I say that? That was such a terrible thing to have said in that moment.
But in the long run, we tend to have things that are kind of incomplete goals,
stick around in our memory as kind
of a mental to-do list, basically. And that as a result, our inactions wind up
getting kind of added to that mental to-do list. So this may be something where,
if you ask me, you know, what could you have done instead of going to grad school?
I have this whole range of possibilities. I could have
been a doctor, I could have been a writer, I could have backpacked around Europe and found my passion.
And if you ask me, what are the things that you did yesterday that you could undo, right? I have a
finite set of things I actually did in my life. And so over time it may be that when we're trying to undo
something bad that's happened to us, it's easy to start imagining all of the things we might
have done in the past because we have a lot more of those available to us than the things we actually
did. There are times when we don't take responsibility for our actions, but at other times, we hold ourselves accountable for things that are outside our control.
James Cooper of Pittsburgh shared one of those stories with us.
My biggest regret is not listening to my father tell me about the mundane things that happened to him during the day
and instead just immediately asking for my mom when I called the house and
maybe when I talked to him I could have picked up on some other signs too and could have maybe
prevented his suicide. You know when I heard James's story Amy I wondered whether you know if he had
spoken to his father more would he have actually picked up on his father's mental health and even if he had noticed
could he have actually stopped his father from committing suicide
and it seemed to be that in this case james might have been taking on more
responsibility then was actually warranted i mean it's understandable certainly at an emotional level
but you've done some research looking at how sometimes when it comes to regret
we take on more responsibility than we should
yeah i think i would say exactly that.
I think that this is a case of probably imagining that there's more that could have happened
differently.
And it's certainly the case as well that I think people often tend to focus a lot on their
own actions about negative events.
And it's probably important to think about the fact that you're just one agent in a much
bigger framework that his father had other friends, hopefully had doctors, had his mother,
and that it's not just on James to have recognized these symptoms,
but that there were lots of other pieces that could have played out differently,
not just his own actions, but a broader set of things that could have changed.
Is there a way for people to look at their regrets and say,
this is the kind of regret that is actually useful and productive, and this is the kind of regret that is actually useful and productive,
and this is the kind of regret that is actually better set aside.
So I would say that we know that people tend to generate these what-if thoughts as a way of trying
to understand their experiences and as a way of trying to bring control to things that feel uncontrollable. We don't like the idea that bad things happen
with no reason and without the ability to predict them. And in the case of regret, I think it can be
that in James's case, for instance, not wanting to think about this tremendous loss as
something that wasn't predictable and wasn't controllable, that it's,
I think, very reassuring sometimes to try to come up with an explanation of, there's
a way that this could have been prevented, it could have been changed, and it feels
less random and less senseless in that way.
senseless in that way.
You know, I'm fascinated by what you just said, because essentially what you're saying is that the fear or the pain of having a world that seems, you know, without meaning or is unexplainable or unpredictable, that pain of that might actually be greater than the pain of taking on regrets for things that you actually maybe don't have
responsibility for and experiencing personal anguish about it. That's a fascinating idea.
Yeah, there's been research that says one of the ways that people can get a sense of control over their
circumstances is by having these thoughts about what might have been. The dark side of that, along with personal regret,
is there is also work where things like victim blaming
can actually come out of these thoughts about
what might have been.
So if you think about a woman who attended a party
and drank a drink that had been drugged,
and then was sexually assaulted,
it's very easy to think about that one moment of she took this drink.
And if she had been more careful, then this assault might not have happened to her.
And that that sort of gives us a sense of control, rather than the much more complicated
thing to think about undoing of, well, how could we have prevented this person who gave
her this drink and who committed this crime from doing it?
So yeah, these thoughts about what might have been help give us a causal structure to our world,
but sometimes they're not necessarily
the correct or the most useful ways of thinking about causality.
thinking about causality.
When we come back, a story of regret and karma. This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
I'm back with Amy Somerville.
Amy, let's listen to another story.
This one comes from Tania Stark of Farmington, New Mexico.
I'm going to play the story in two parts because I think it reveals two different
sides of regret. One of my biggest regrets comes from something I did in the fifth grade,
20 or more years ago. I remember making fun of this little girl who was a bit overweight
and me and another girl just teased her relentlessly.
And I think about some of the things that I said to her and some of the ways that I treated her.
And I just regret how cruel I was as a child.
And now that I'm older and I work in a field where I see the effects of bullying and meanness does to children.
I am so full of regret in that.
And if I could ever find her again or talk to her again because I've moved to three or four different places at this point in my life and have no idea where she is or if it even affected her, I regret the way that I treated her and I believe that I was so cruel.
Amy, I want to talk about the role of guilt in regret. They seem closely tied these two emotions,
but I don't think they're identical. Tom Bonsain from Arlington, Virginia,
regretted that he didn't get the lead in his school play, but there was no guilt involved.
Tanya, on the other hand, feels terrible about what she did. When you hear Tanya's story, are you hearing guilt or are you hearing regret?
So listening to Tanya's story, I would say I hear both guilt and regret, and both regret and guilt
are emotions that are based on a form of comparison. So regret, I'm comparing what really happened
to some imagined alternative.
And some of the time, that's all we feel, right?
I just imagined that something could have been better.
Guilt involves an additional comparison
to what has been called our personal standards rules and goals.
So what are the things that we aspire to in our behavior? And when we make a comparison
that says what we really did, fall short of those personal standards, rules, or goals for ourselves,
then we're likely to feel guilt. I want you to listen to the second part of Tanya's story. She
told us that she fully realized what she had done to this other little kid, only when events in her own life took a turn.
I think karma came and got me because while I was a petite little kid, as I got older
and do some injuries, I became quite overweight myself and heard the comments that were said
about me or how I became invisible and people didn't think that my feelings mattered.
The heaviest I ever was was 330 pounds,
and I have worked hard and have surgery and have lost.
Quite a bit of weight, I'm just about 195 now,
but I still see myself and still have the self-confidence
of a 330 pound woman, and I know how it feels feels and I regret making anyone else ever feel that way.
When you listen to Tanya's story, Amy, I'm wondering, do you hear sort of someone saying,
I really don't like the way the world has treated me?
Or do you hear someone saying, I realize the world has treated me really badly and that's
opened my eyes to the way that I might have treated other people in the past.
It sounds like in Tanya's case she's really developed a different understanding of the world
and used that to understand how her behavior may have affected other people
rather than necessarily being a particularly focused on feeling that she's been treated badly.
And I think that again, regret is based on this idea that we personally could have done
something differently.
And so in some ways, it's obviously a self-focused emotion.
It's about what we should have done, but I think it can also be a fairly selfless emotion
and be about how we relate to the people in the world around us. What responsibility do we have towards our fellow humans? [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing I wish that I could find this person and tell her about how I now regret what I did to
her when we were children.
And I think one of the things as well that's interesting about this whole episode is
that you have listeners calling in to tell the whole world, millions of people who might
listen to this podcast about their very personal, very private regrets.
Psychologists have talked for a long time about something called the fundamental
attribution era, which is how much do we believe actions of either ourselves or
others are caused by things that are intrinsic to us, things that are part of
our personalities, who we are, versus things that are shaped by the context, by the
situation in which we find ourselves. When someone like Tanya looks back as an adult
at her behavior as a child,
do you think the fundamental attribution
at her plays a role in some ways leading us
to believe that we are responsible for things
that maybe we were not responsible for,
that maybe really the context was driving
our actions and behavior way back when?
Yeah, absolutely.
Again, I think regret is based on this sense
of personal responsibility.
And certainly in Western cultures,
there's very much this belief that individuals
are responsible for their own actions
were responsible for our own destinies.
And I think that can lead individuals to think more
about how a given actor, including
themselves or including another person, played a role, and a lot less attention to the
whole context.
So in Tanya's story, I believe she started by talking about how there was another little
girl that she was friends with who joined with her in the bullying.
And I think it may be easy to ignore the degree to which she was experiencing peer pressure.
Right?
There was probably a social context in which this bullying occurred, which doesn't forgive
it or excuse it, but it's not necessarily just about who Otonia is as a person to have
done this, but rather really a much more complicated net of things that were influencing
her as well as who she was at that time.
I want to talk about the idea of counterfactuals.
A counterfactual, of course, is when we imagine that things could have turned out differently
than they actually did.
As it turns out, I'm recovering right now from a sports injury.
When I think about how I got hurt, the only thing I'm thinking about is what could I have done differently to prevent this injury from happening?
Now most of the time when I play sports, I'm not asking myself why didn't I get hurt?
So what do you think causes us to reach for certain counterfactuals at one point in time,
but not for others?
So we talk about counterfactuals as having two different directions.
So things imagining how the world could have been better,
we call upward counterfactuals,
and imagining how the world could have been worse,
we call downward counterfactuals.
And certainly in life, upward counterfactuals
seem to predominate.
And one of the reasons that we seem to do this
is that these upward
kind of factuals are helping us learn. So if you think about getting into a car
accident, if I say, you know, if only I hadn't been texting, then I might not have
had the accident, that's identifying a particular cause of the accident. It was
the texting and not my speed or the fact that it was raining or the way
that the road was engineered and designed for traffic flow. And downward counterfactuals seem to
serve a different function, which is that they make us feel better about the things that might have
happened. And so my collaborator, Soyeon Rim, and I have found that when people are focused on
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rather than to somebody else, those things we seem to be often somewhat more focused
on feeling better about.
And so with the example of your injury, it may be the case that it's helpful to think
about how things could
have turned out much worse than they did, that, you know, you're back at work. Hopefully,
you didn't need a lot of medical intervention or surgery, you know, and those would have
been things that would have been much, much worse than walking away with just maybe a
sprain or a strain.
So, I'm reminded of that great study that Tom Gilevich did many years ago at the Barcelona Olympics,
where he took photographs of the people who were on the metal stand.
And he found, of course, that the silver medalists tend to make these upward counterfactuals,
and they tend to look a little less happy because they wish they had one goal.
Whereas the bronze medalists tend to make downward counterfactuals.
They imagine all the other people who didn't win any medals at all, and find themselves relieved that they
find themselves in the medals podium in the first place.
And this is fascinating because how this happens, how we choose to make the upward counterfactual
or the downward counterfactual, this is largely happening unconsciously, and yet this unconscious
choice has an enormous effect on whether we feel happy afterwards. Yeah, and one of the things that shapes particularly the metal example is how easy is it to
imagine this alternative happening? So often for a silver metalist, it's much, much easier to imagine
how close they were to getting gold. Whereas for a bronze medalist, the thing that's easiest to imagine
is, yeah, not being on the medal stand at all,
because those are things that are actually closer.
Another one of my favorite studies about counterfactuals
is that if you think about a grade distribution
where the cutoff to get an A is to get a 90% or above,
students who get an 89 in a course wind up being less satisfied
than the students who got an 87.
Both of them have a B plus, but the 89s, it's so easy
to just imagine how did you get just that one more point,
whereas for the 87s, they tend to feel lucky
that they wound up where they are and aren't imagining
how they might have gotten the aim minus instead.
I understand you got married about a year ago and you applied some of your own research
on regret when it came to choosing a wedding dress.
I did.
I actually wasn't applying my own research.
I applied work by Shineyanger on the phenomenon of choice overload, as well as work by Barry Schwartz and colleagues
about the idea of maximizing versus
satisfying as strategies for decisions,
maximizing being the idea that you want to pick the best
of all possible alternatives and
satisfying being the idea that you're going to pick something
that meets all of your standards, but may or may not be the absolute best.
So when I was wedding dress shopping, I went to a couple of stores, I tried on five or ten dresses at each one,
and I found a dress that I absolutely loved and was in my price range,
and I realized that what the research told me was, I would never be happier than I was at that moment.
That if I kept rest shopping, I was going to wind up feeling overwhelmed.
You know, I could find a hundred different lace sheaths with a v-neck in ivory.
And I would wind up feeling confused about what are the differences between these.
And that the very act of trying to get the absolute best would
mean that I could never really be sure if I'd done it. Whereas if I adopted a satisfying
strategy, I could be sure I'm in a dress that looks beautiful on me and is in my price range,
and I should just buy it and be done. And so that's how I chose my wedding dress.
How I chose my wedding dress. Amy Somerville is a senior research scientist at Cairo's research.
When we spoke with her, she was a psychology professor running the regret lab at Miami University
of Ohio. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget
McCarthy, Laura Quarelle, Christian Wong, Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
Our Ronsang Heroes this week are the program directors at NPR member stations around the country.
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I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you next week.
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