Hidden Brain - You 2.0: WOOP, WOOP!
Episode Date: August 25, 2020American culture is all about positive affirmations. Dream big! Shoot for the stars! But do positive fantasies actually help us achieve our goals? This week, as part of our You 2.0 summer series, we r...evisit a conversation with researcher Gabriele Oettingen about how we can make our goals more attainable.
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From NPR, this is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
There is so much in our culture that celebrates the power of positive thinking.
We're often told to follow our hearts, to dream big.
You can have, do, or be anything you want.
Whatever belief you hold in your subconscious mind will become your reality, bottom line.
Value yourself and believe in yourself.
Because believing that the dots will connect down the road, will give you the confidence
to follow your heart even when it leads you off the well-worn path.
But now, research a Gabrielle Eddie and says, maybe we should all dream a little smaller. Positive fantasies and daydreams as pleasurable they are, they have a problem when it comes
to fulfilling our wishes and attaining our goals.
Today as part of our U2.0 series, we bring you an episode from our archive that asks,
is there a methodical way to achieve your dreams? Turns out there is,
and this scientific technique has an acronym.
Woop!
Gabrielle is a professor at New York University, an author of the book, rethinking positive thinking inside the new science of motivation.
She's from Germany, and she said growing up, no one told her to shoot for the stars.
The idea of big dreams, big hopes was if it all more implicit than explicit.
When she came to the United States though, Gabrielle noticed a real cultural difference.
Well, when I came to America, it was wonderful because people always said, yes, do it.
Yes, that's possible.
Yeah.
Okay, this is a good idea.
Why don't you do it?
Whereas back in Europe, people were more cautious and said, you know, are you sure you want
to do this?
Are you sure this is possible?
So I was really happy to come to America
because people were just sort of encouraging
whatever idea you had.
So yes, positive thinking, indulging in fantasies
about the future does feel good.
But when Gabrielle started to research this topic, she found something
interesting.
Well, these positive fantasies, they seduce us to feel already accomplished and they take
our energy away. So we found that, for example, they're more positively women enrolled in
a weight reduction program, fantasized about their success in the
program, the fewer pounds they lost, three months later, one year later, two years later,
or the more positively university graduates fantasized about an easy transition into
work life, the fewer dollars they earned two years later, the fewer drop offers they
have gotten, and also the fewer drop applications they had sent out or take students. The more
positively they fantasized about getting a good grade in their exam, the less well they
did. The more positively they fantasized about getting together with a crushy, the less likely they were
to actually get in a romantic relationship. Or take the health domain. Same thing, the
more positively hip replacement surgery patients fantasized about an easy recovery, the less
well could they move their joint, the fewer steps they could take, and the less well they
recovered from
the surgery.
So when you look at each of these cases, I'm wondering if you could tell me what you mean
by a positive fantasy.
So let's take the student, for example, who is hoping to go out on a date with someone
that he or she likes.
You're sort of imagining, for example, going out on the date, things going really well,
there's other person really liking you as much as you like them.
Yeah, that's a good question actually.
It's not so easy to measure these fantasies.
So what we did is we gave participants a short story.
So for example, in the case of the people who had a crush on someone else, a short story
describing how they meet this person and they then needed to end that story.
And that story could either end positively or it could end not so positively.
So then participants fantasized and wrote down their fantasies about the ending of the story.
And the more positively these people had been fantasizing about the ending of the story. And the more positively these people
have been fantasizing about getting together with their crushy, the less likely
it was that they actually got together with the person they were in love. So the
idea really is the more idealized, the more positively people fantasize, the less
well they do because they don't put in the effort needed to
actually reach the goals and fulfill the wishes. Now is it the case that people
recovering from example hip replacement surgery when they have positive
fantasies of walking at one level you would have to say this is deeply deeply
understandable you know you you're you feel like you can't do the things that you're used to doing.
You want to get back on your feet and you want to dream of the day when you would be able to walk
or climb stairs or run without pain. Are you saying that that's a bad thing?
No, I'm not saying it's a bad thing. Actually, we have very nice data showing that these positive fantasies they actually come out of a person's needs and you are completely right.
A person who has a surgery and who used to be able to walk feels a need to walk
like before and they are the positive fantasies come from and I don't say
these are bad things at all because they are the beginning of action, but they
are only the beginning.
They give action the direction, but they don't give action the necessary energy.
In fact, when we induce participants to positively fantasize, to ideally depict them, positive
future, then we find that the blood pressure goes down,
and then we find that the feelings of energization go down,
and we find that people feel already accomplished.
So they relax, they relax, because mentally, they are already there.
There's something terribly sad about this, which is that the person imagines the happy future, perhaps because they're not very happy at the present, but by so doing, they in
some ways deprived themselves of the energy and motivation they need to make their futures
actually better, and thereby make their futures futures worse it feels like a vicious cycle.
Well it is not so sad if you consider that if you actually complement these positive fantasies
with considerations of what stands in the way, what is it in you that stands in the way
that you actually fulfill your wishes and attain your goals,
that then you actually get the energy and if these goals are attainable, then you really
go for it.
When we come back, we'll talk about the next steps to make that day dream a reality.
You think about the next four weeks. Now in the next four weeks, what is your most important wish?
Stay with us.
Gabrielle Etienne has found that positive thinking, while fun, may not be the best answer to
achieving your goals.
But she does say that noticing your goals, thinking about what it is you want, can be a very
important first step in making those dreams a reality.
You've done a lot of work looking not just at the potential
downside of these positive fantasies, but also how we can use these positive fantasies
in a very productive way and you call it mental contrasting. What is mental contrasting?
Mental contrasting is a strategy to fulfill your wishes and attain your goals. So, you first identify a wish.
A wish that is very dear to you.
So, for example, you think about the next four weeks.
Now, in the next four weeks,
what is your most important wish?
It can be a professional wish,
it can be an interpersonal wish, it can be important wish. It can be a professional wish, it can be an interpersonal wish,
it can be health wish.
This wish should be a wish that is a little challenging
for you, but that you actually can fulfill yourself.
Now identify that wish and keep it in front of your mind.
What you do then is you think about
what would be the best thing, the best outcome
if I fulfilled myself that wish.
And once you identify that and put it in front of your mind
then you imagine that best thing.
If you recognize now imagining that best thing is like positively fantasizing.
These are the positive datrums we are just talking about.
But then instead of carrying on with these positive fantasies, you know which gears.
And you say to yourself, actually, what stops me
from fulfilling my wish
and experiencing that outcome?
What is it in me
that stands in the way
what is my inner obstacle?
What is it in me?
And then once you identified your inner obstacle
and you need a little bit of humor
and a little bit of honesty to yourself.
Sometimes it's not so pleasant.
You don't need to tell anybody,
but you can identify that obstacle
and then you say to yourself,
if that obstacle occurs, then I will show a behavior or think outside to overcome that obstacle.
So if obstacle, then I will behavior to overcome art too. And that's what in the science language is called mental contrasting
with implementation intentions.
And to forget this complicated name, it's called in the science literature also MCII.
But we renamed it now and it's called now WOOP for wish.
First we started with a wish. Outcome, we then went on to
identify that outcome and imagine that outcome. Obstacle, remember the obstacle,
identify the obstacle, imagine the obstacle and then the plan. The if obstacle,
then I will overcome plan. And that's called whoop.
I asked Gabrielle how she would apply her strategy
to someone who has a crush on another person
but instead of doing something about it
just sits around daydreaming about a blissful honeymoon.
How would that person use mental contrasting or whoop to achieve their goals?
So let's say you have a young person who is interested in another person.
And so the wish would be, you know, I want to go with him or with her on a date and want to explore a little bit deeper what that person
is all about. So that would be the wish. The best outcome might be something like, you
know, we would have a really good time and we would feel kind of in harmony. But then
the person would change gears and say, what is it in me that stands in the way that I actually fulfill my wish?
That I asked this person out for a date and experience the harmony.
So what is it in me that stands in the way?
And then the person might discover, hmm, I might feel too shy, or I'm a little bit anxious,
reluctant to get a rejection, and then the person can elaborate on their
China's to be rejected, that fear of rejection can really elaborate on it, kind of understand,
oh yeah, this fear, that's my obstacle. And after that, the person could think,
what can I do to overcome this fear of rejection? So what can the person do? The person can
sort of understand, well, if the person rejected me, then I'm there where I'm right now,
because if I don't talk to that person, I will not meet that person anyway.
So I can't really lose anything.
And then he or she could do the if-then plan.
If I feel that fear of rejection, then I will tell myself,
just go to that person and approach him or her,
because I can't lose anything. And then the person will non-consciously
outside of awareness approach that person by sort of overcoming one's fears of
rejection. One of the things that I find so striking is that third step doesn't
involve saying what are the obstacles in my path?
But you ask, what are the obstacles in me
that prevent me from achieving the score?
That's correct, because the obstacles in me
doesn't allow me to come up with all these excuses.
So if I say, what are the obstacles in my path,
I could say, well, this person is in a different
building or whatever, or studies a different topic, or I don't have the time or I'm just
busy right now, and all these excuses, they fall away if you ask, what is it in you that stands in the way?
What is it really that stands in the way?
Now you extract the information out of that negative feedback
without getting hurt, so you don't take it personally,
but you take the information and compost in this negative feedback
and you use it to make the correct plans.
Has mental contrasting changed anything that you do? Well, I'm using a wolf on a daily basis and
we have devised next to the book, we have devised an app which gives you the instructions
of mental contrasting with implementation and intentions of Boop. So it leads you through
the four steps, which outcome, obstacle, plan. And interestingly enough, I thought I'm an expert on poop, but I'm using the app every day actually.
I'm using the app because it forces me to specify my wish, to specify my outcome, to imagine the outcome,
to specify my inner obstacle, to imagine the inner obstacle, and to form a very specific if obstacle, then I will behave to overcome obstacle
plan. So I do it every morning, other people do it in the evening or you know, doing lunch break
or when they wait for the bus or in the subway. What you need though for doing a group, you need to
have a quiet moment for yourself. You can be in some way when everybody is talking, but you need to be uninterrupted.
You can't do your email, you can't talk to someone while you're doing a group.
So you need to have a moment for yourself where you think, what is my wish?
What is my wish for today?
Or you might think, what is my wish for the next four weeks?
Or, what do I want in life? What is it really that I want?
So you can whoop, very big wishes or you can whoop, trivial wishes.
But what is important, it needs to be a wish which is dear to your heart.
And the nice thing with whoop is that it also allows you to finally think about what do I really want.
Gabrielle Etienne is a professor of psychology at New York University.
This episode of Hidden Brain was produced by Maggie Pennman and Max Nestrak. Our team includes Tara Boyle, Raina Cohen, Jenny Schmidt, Parts Shah, Thomas Liu, Laura
Quarelle and Kat Shupnik.
This week's Anson Hero is Jessica Goldstein, who is director of NPR's events and strategic
initiatives.
Since the pandemic began, Jessica and her team have pivoted to virtual events, bringing
the same creativity and enthusiasm to everything they do.
Jessica is someone who dots the eyes, crosses the teeth, and then goes back and
cross checks everything again. Thanks Jessica.
For more hidden brain, you can follow us on Facebook and Twitter. If you like this
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YouTube.os series by looking at ways we can invite more empathy
into our lives.
Please join us then.
I'm Shankar Vedantum, and this is NPR.