No Stupid Questions - 187. Is Fear Running Your Life?
Episode Date: March 17, 2024How can you summon courage when you’re terrified? Is hiking more dangerous than skiing? And what is the stupidest thing that Mike has ever done? SOURCES:Albert Bandura, professor of psychology at S...tanford University.Marc Brackett, founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and professor in the Child Study Center at Yale School of Medicine.Lisa Damour, clinical psychologist and senior advisor to the Schubert Center for Child Studies at Case Western Reserve University.Christopher Peterson, professor of psychology and organizational studies at the University of Michigan.Stanley Rachman, professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia.Mikaela Shiffrin, Olympic alpine skier.Lindsey Vonn, Olympic alpine skier.Shaun White, Olympic snowboarder.Joseph Wolpe, 20th-century South African psychiatrist. RESOURCES:The Emotional Lives of Teenagers: Raising Connected, Capable, and Compassionate Adolescents, by Lisa Damour (2023)."What Scares the World’s Most Daring Olympians," by John Branch, Mark Boyer, Larry Buchanan, Emily Rhyne, Bedel Saget, Joe Ward, and Jeremy White (The New York Times, 2022)."The Upside of Anxiety," by Christina Caron (The New York Times, 2022).Permission to Feel: Unlocking the Power of Emotions to Help Our Kids, Ourselves, and Our Society Thrive, by Marc Brackett (2019)."World With No Fear," by Invisibilia (2015).Abū Zayd Al-Balkhī''s Sustenance of the Soul: The Cognitive Behavior Therapy of a Ninth Century Physician, by Malik Badri (2013)."Searching for the Source of a Fountain of Courage," by Natalie Angier (The New York Times, 2011).Character Strengths and Virtues: A Handbook and Classification, by Christopher Peterson and Martin Seligman (2004).Fear and Courage, by Stanley Rachman (1978)."Relative Efficacy of Desensitization and Modeling Approaches for Inducing Behavioral, Affective, and Attitudinal Changes," by Albert Bandura, E. B. Blahard, and B. Ritter (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1969). EXTRAS:"Fear No Mort," S7.E10 of Rick and Morty (2023)."Can Fear Be Good Medicine?" by Freakonomics, M.D. (2022).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Mike?
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Mon.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, is it okay to be motivated by fear?
I'm fearful just listening to this.
That's terrifying. Mike, we have a great question from a listener named Jeff, and I'm going to read it to you.
Hello, Jeff.
Hi, NSQ.
My friend and I were recently watching an episode of a show in which the main character
jumps into a pit of fear.
And while it starts off with creepy creatures and generic fears, it turns into many of the
fears we deal with on a daily basis.
Fear of not being accepted by others, fear of losing loved ones, and fear of failure.
By the way, I have to say that I don't know what show Jeff is talking about.
Right.
I don't know what pit of fear.
It's so metaphorical, but then he mentions creepy creatures.
I immediately thought of a pit with snakes and spiders.
And then suddenly videos come up of your teachers telling you you're not good enough or something.
Right.
Yeah.
So Jeff goes on to say,
This resulted in my friend and I having a conversation about fear of making the wrong
choice, not living life to the fullest, and fear of rejection.
These fears seem to dictate our lives to a pretty high degree.
So I'm curious, how much do fears dictate our lives, and what are some of the ways we can overcome them?
Oh my gosh.
Right? Good question, Jeff.
There's a story I'd love to tell you about-
I love stories.
A brother of mine, he's the doctor.
He was telling me about these two surgeons
and he said, one of them will never be a great surgeon.
And I said, why? And he said, because the fundamental will never be a great surgeon. And I said, why?
And he said, because the fundamental premise
driving his life is fear.
Fear of failure?
Well, he said he's always afraid to make a mistake.
He's very cautious.
He's very deliberate.
He's very slow.
Isn't that good for being a surgeon?
Yeah, especially a brain surgeon.
I said, isn't that kind of what I want?
And so I asked my brother, I said,
what's the fundamental premise driving your life?
And he stopped and thought for a minute,
and then he said, continual improvement.
Every time I'm doing a surgery,
I am focused on how can I do it better?
How can I do it more efficiently?
How can I do it more safely?
And that's what flipped for me,
is the idea of being driven by fear, is the idea of being driven by fear versus
the idea of being driven by continued improvement. I will just say that it was uncomfortable
for me because as I thought through my life, I was like, man, I think I'm motivated by
fear a lot more than I was comfortable admitting.
Are you like even now in this chapter of your life?
I'm much better than I was for sure. But I usually don't care about like
what people think of me or whatever. But then occasionally you're like, oh,
I guess I care about that more than I thought.
You know, when I started studying grit and high achievers, I assumed that they would say things
like your brother did. Like I am driven by the desire to continuously improve.
I was surprised when, like, I'm making this up, but like maybe 10% of them or so would bring up
spontaneously that they were driven by fear of failure. And it shocked me. I was like, what?
And the reason why I was so surprised is that in psychology, there are these two different
motivations.
Like when your brother says that he wants to improve, right, he's kind of chasing achievement,
that's what we would call an approach motivation.
Being afraid of something so you can have this image of like something chasing you and
you just don't want to get caught by it, right?
Like that's an avoidance motivation.
And I thought that high achievers would be all about approach motivation.
A hundred percent. That would be my intuition is that they're the biggest strivers on earth
and nothing can touch me. Like no fear at all.
Right. But when I had this experience and I'm really impressed by some of these people's
candor because they really are at the top
of their fields.
It has to make you reckon with the possibility that fear, fear of failure and fear of rejection
even, that it's not necessarily an Achilles heel because otherwise what are these high
achievers doing with it?
Oh, it's harnessing.
Well, you know, I don't know whether these people
you could argue like, well, they succeeded in spite of,
but maybe some people did actually find a way to harness it
and achieve because of fear.
I mean, if we take a step back
and we ask ourselves this question,
like, why do we even have fear?
Yeah.
Like, I think in today's day and age,
the discomfort people have with negative emotions
is perhaps in some cases unhealthy, right?
Like let's try to live a life that has no fear, no anxiety, no sadness, no loneliness.
It's like, well, you know, that's not life.
And I think fear is an important part of life and actually it's an important part of your
psychology. Yeah, I think that is an important part of life and actually it's an important part of your psychology
Yeah, I think it's really interesting
I mean I may have shared this with you before but my sister who is a therapist always talks about giving yourself space to feel things
So when there's a loss so many people think oh I got to get over this and she said no you have to give yourself
Space to mourn feel the feeling and then you can deal with it.
And so I think what you're saying is fear is there.
For a reason, right?
Yeah.
Because what emotions are, including fear, is their information or their signals that
something is good, signals that something is bad, signals in the case of fear, it's
that you think something could be bad in the future.
That's where the emotion of fear comes from. You have a sense that something bad
is not happening right now, but is about to happen.
Right.
And if you ignore that, you know, that's a problem.
So fear is a good thing.
I think obviously when it goes into anxiety or whatever,
it can be crippling if we don't.
No, no, that's not true either.
Anxiety can be good.
I'm not saying like chronic anxiety or unwarranted extreme anxiety.
You know, I read this book recently by this psychologist named Lisa DeMore,
and she studies adolescent emotional health and she's clinically trained,
so she's talked to an uncountable number of teenagers.
And she had this one thing that she said in
her writing that really I was like, whoa. She was like, so many parents, when they call
their kids to see how they're doing in college or they're checking in with them, there's
like a gauge. When they're happy and they're confident and they're proud and they're energetic,
that's good. And when you check in with your kids and they're fearful or they're anxious or they're sad or they're lonely,
that's bad.
And it's understandable that we feel that way
because of course it feels better
and it does mean that your life is going better
when you're experiencing a lot of these positive emotions.
But she said a mistake that parents make
is to think that the name of the game
is to maximize positive emotions
and completely minimize all experience
of negative emotions.
And when I read that, I was like, I have been doing that.
Like if I call Lucy or Amanda, because as you know, they're in college and they're
having a bad day or a bad week, I go into like alert mode and I'm like, oh, this is
terrible.
I'm like, let's fix the problem, squash the negative emotions. And it's important to understand that these feelings are signals, like even anxiety.
You know, like having anxiety doesn't mean you have a mental health disorder.
You know what not having anxiety is? It's being a psychopath.
And I'm not kidding. Psychopaths are not able to experience anxiety, and that's a problem.
They have some other problems too.
But I don't know, that stopped me in my tracks.
When I was like, Lisa DeMora, you have a point.
All those things are, they're okay, actually.
There's a really interesting author.
I've just been reading a book called,
Permission to Feel.
Oh, by Mark Brackett?
Yes, yes.
I know Mark.
Are you literally reading that book?
He's gonna be so happy.
I'm gonna text him.
I am.
A dear friend recommended it.
So I tweeted out a year ago to my 17 followers,
just kidding, but I tweeted out and I just said,
"'What is a book that changed your life?'
Like, I don't want a book I like,
or here's a fun book that I read.
What's a book that legit changed your life?'
And a dear friend who I
admire deeply wrote back and said it was permission to feel.
I think Mark would say on behalf of emotion researchers, and Mark does run the Yale Center
for Emotional Intelligence, I think he would say on the topic of fear that we do have to
have the permission to feel fear as well as these other
negative emotions. And since you brought up Mark, I'll just say that he has this mood meter.
It's actually not just his. The field of emotion has said that, look, you can think of any emotion,
jealousy, pride, calm, bliss, boredom, frustration, like any emotion.
And you can place it somewhere in one of four quadrants.
So you can think of a horizontal and a vertical axis,
and the horizontal axis is often just negative on the left, positive on the right.
The vertical axis is arousal.
So high arousal emotions to at the bottom, like not a lot of energy.
Now that gives you four quadrants.
And I think where most people, especially Americans, want to be is the upper right quadrant.
Like high arousal, positive.
Right, right.
Excitement, giddiness.
But where we don't want to be is high arousal negative, like fear.
And we might not even want to be in the low arousal negative, like fear. And we might not even want to be
in the low arousal negative, right? That's like boredom. And then the fourth quadrant
is low arousal positive, and that's things like calm.
And anyway, the reason I asked permission from Mark for use of the mood meter is that
I wanted to start every single class with these four quadrants.
So, it's just, you know, the first slide that is in my PowerPoint.
And what the students do is they put themselves somewhere on the mood meter.
And it's kind of auto-populated, so you can kind of see where their little dot shows up on the screen in real time.
And as I say to the students every time, as you can see,
all four of these quadrants are populated, maybe not equally.
And I know where you want to be.
You want to be in the top right.
So do I.
I want to be there all the time.
But that's not life.
So I think this permission to feel fear
and to reckon with its function in our life,
and even to like embrace the fact
that like really high achievers, super achievers, the most gritty people, they are sometimes
driven by fear of failure.
For me it was like surprising but also very enriching.
I was like, oh, this is a much more complex view of emotion and even achievement.
Yeah, it's interesting.
There was an article written about a bunch
of winter Olympic athletes in the New York Times
back in 2022 called,
What Scares the World's Most Daring Olympians?
I mean, think of how fast Lindsey Vonn
is skiing down the mountain.
Think of how high Sean White jumps
on the half pipe in snowboarding.
Like it's actually crazy.
It's crazy.
And Michaela Schiffrin just got carted off the slopes
to the hospital.
Yes.
And Lindsey Vonn, that's happened to her a number of times.
It's terrifying.
Don't they reach speeds that like cars don't always reach
like in normal driving?
I mean, it's crazy.
Can I tell you the dumbest thing I've ever done
and then we'll go back to this?
Yes, please.
Of course.
I was skiing with my friend, Josh.
I still can't believe I did this.
Anyway, we're at the top of this hill
and he says to me, I'll race you to the bottom.
And I say, okay, cool.
We start going and I take a couple of turns
and I realize that Josh is doing
what's called straight lining.
He is just, his skis are straight.
He's bombing down the mountain.
Bombing down.
And I'm like, well, I'm not gonna lose.
So I start bombing down the mountain
and I get into the best tuck I can.
If I wiggle a ski at all, I'm gonna lose my knee.
I'm gonna, it's gonna be a bad situation.
We get to the bottom We still debate I beat him if you count the finish line is further
Anyway, we looked at our like Strava after showing how fast I broke 70 miles an hour
Oh my god, that is so stupid. I'm fearful just listening to this. That's terrifying
I think the world record is like a hundred and hour, but that person was wearing all the,
I don't know what it's called, Lycra suits or whatever. But anyway, the point is they go very
fast. I should never do that again. I did not feel fear in that moment because pure adrenaline
and stupidity took over. But going back to this New York Times article, they interviewed all these
athletes doing these crazy, daring feats, and it said they are scared, every one of them.
Quote, fear of injury is the invisible weight on athletes.
Fear might limit the top athletes, but it also might save them.
And they're listening to that emotion, right?
Like, I have a mild fear of heights, and so I just almost can't believe what these athletes do.
But what those interviews suggest is that what they do, they do even though they are
feeling fearful.
And I think that's actually what some psychologists who study courage in particular would say,
like, that's the answer.
Not that you don't ever feel fear, not that you feel ashamed of feeling fear,
but you permit yourself to feel fear and then your actions are not necessarily dictated
by that.
Yeah, look, I mean, to your point of why fear is helpful, and I just think this is a fascinating
story, there's a woman who's been studied a lot who just doesn't experience fear. They
just call her SM to protect her identity. But she has this rare genetic condition
that has completely destroyed her ability to feel fear. She's completely incapable of
it.
She has like an impaired amygdala because the amygdala is the brain structure that is
actually has lots of jobs, but one of them is fear.
But it's called Urbach Vita disease. Okay.
And with this disease, the big thing is that they have these deposits in their brain where the
amygdala is calcified. And so, she has all these stories of like being held at knife point,
and they're like, hey, I'm going to kill you. And she's just like, okay.
Wait.
Because she just doesn't have fear.
Is it getting in the way of her life?
It is getting in the way of her life in that she's been held at knife point, she's been
held at gunpoint twice, her first husband nearly beat her to death.
Okay, by the way, I don't want to blame the victim, but it might be that this statistically
anomalous frequency of life-threatening situations could have something to do with the fact that
she doesn't have
the fear response that gets us to avoid situations that are bad.
Like, it doesn't process in her head like it would most people.
Hey, it's dark, there's an alley, this should be a place that should cause fear.
So fear in that sense would be very valuable.
What they found kind of makes up for it is logic, but she's had to learn logically, hey, don't
do that.
Whereas for most people, it's this automatic response of fear that would protect you from
these things.
Well, look, Mike, you know, whether it's fear of heights or snakes or planes or getting
rejected, you and I would both love to hear what our listeners have to say about how fear plays a role in their life.
We want to know what makes you feel afraid. How do you manage those feelings?
Record a voice memo in a quiet place with your mouth close to the phone and email us at nsq.freakonomics.com.
Maybe we'll play it on a future episode of the show.
Also, if you like this show and want to support us, the very best thing you can do is to tell
a friend about it.
You can also spread the word on social media or leave a review in your favorite podcast
app.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, what are Mike and Angela afraid of?
I can hardly breathe.
People are trying to talk to me and I'm like, don't talk.
I can't cognitively function.
It's just pure fear.
Now back to Mike and Angela's conversation about fear. So, Mike, I think this has some grounding in the modern science of exposure therapy.
I'm sure you've heard of exposure therapy for fear.
Yes, yes, of course.
Yeah, you have?
I assume you haven't experienced it because it's usually only for people who have severe
fears.
I've never experienced it.
Definitely heard about it.
I will say you say you have a small fear of heights.
I always tell people I have a crippling fear of heights.
Wait, what? You ski. You went 70 miles an hour down a mountain.
I know, but like there's a lot of hikes that I just, I don't know, I can't do. Maybe you
should get exposure therapy for that, but I haven't.
Okay. So tell me about skiing and what do you feel when you are like, you know that part where the chairlift drops you off the top of the mountain and it's like flat for like two feet and then it's like on all sides the mountain just goes down. I, I like want to pee my pants, which is why I don't ski.
So I will say I in skiing there's the green circle, the blue square and then the black diamond.
Yes.
And the black diamond is the hardest and double black diamond. Yes. And the black diamond is the hardest. And double black diamond. Right, yeah.
So I tend to be more of a blue skier.
I ski on blues and I go safely but fast.
Okay.
And I do some black diamonds, but I will say for me, given the fear of heights thing, it's
the issue of standing on the edge and you can't really see the slope.
Oh, it's that steep?
Suffice to say that I've never gotten off a ski lift other than on a green.
Okay.
You can see the whole way down on a green.
But there's a moment sometimes where you can't quite see until you go over the edge.
And that for me, it's not that I can't ski it.
I actually can ski it.
It's that I don't want to go over the edge like that.
Okay. So you do experience fear.
And on a scale from zero to 10,
when you get off the ski lift
and you're at the top of a black diamond,
how strong is your fear?
So I will say maybe this is my exposure therapy.
Probably seven years ago when I picked up skiing again,
I just wouldn't do it.
Now I will go do it.
Yeah, so I guess I've gotten better.
Can you give me a number?
Is it possible to tell me?
Yes, this is like when they say,
how much pain do you have in there?
Like, I don't know compared to what, childbirth.
I'll just give a different example.
When I'm hiking this mountain,
there's a mountain in Utah called Mount Timanogos.
The last mile is along this ledge.
Everybody does it, it's safe, kids are fine,
but in my head, it's nearly crippling,
and I would say I'm at like a nine,
and in fact, I've decided never to finish the hike again,
because I get up there.
There's a structure built there
that everyone's sitting there eating lunch,
and I saw someone get engaged last time
I was on top of the mountain,
and I'm sitting there and I can't move,
I can hardly breathe, people are trying to talk to me and I'm like, don't talk. I can't cognitively
function. It's just pure fear.
And with skiing, you don't feel the same way?
Not as much.
Because then you're on top of mountain and the mountain is covered with snow and ice
and you have slats on your feet. So rationally, you should feel more fear, right, for skiing?
I guess, but I know that that's how I'm supposed to get down,
where the other I think I'm just going to blow off and fall into a crevice.
Do you think that's because of your practice in skiing?
Yes.
Because that's really what exposure therapy is. I mean, I am not an expert,
but what I know a lot of it is from reading these old articles by Albert Bandura. So, Albert Bandura is known for a lot of his major discoveries on confidence.
He thought that so much of what we do in life is because we believe that we can.
He called it self-efficacy.
I think the lay term would be confidence.
But he was also, for a period in his life, interested in phobic patients, people who had debilitating fears of heights or snakes
or blood or fill in the blank.
And he was among the first psychologists at least
to develop exposure therapy, meaning that, for example,
if you have a fear of snakes,
that it would be probably terrifying to you
to even look at a photo of a snake, right?
If you have this severe phobia.
But he would expose that to you.
So you would like be forced to look at some photos of snake.
And then what you would do is you would experience
the fact that it was okay.
So it's like, okay, well now let's watch a video.
Let's watch the whole documentary on snakes.
And so you don't wanna do it, you wanna look away now let's watch a video. Let's watch the whole documentary on snakes. And so you don't want to do it, you want to look away,
but you're forced to, and then you experience
that that was okay.
And then Al says, hey, in that tank over there,
behind glass and with a sealed top, is an actual snake.
And we're going to go look at it from 40 feet away.
And now we're going to look at it from 30 feet away.
Now we're going to look at it from 20 feet away. Now we're going to look at it from 20 feet away.
Now we're going to come right up to the glass of this.
And the exposure therapy proceeds all the way through, I think like holding a snake
in your hands.
And exposure therapy is one of the huge victories of modern clinical therapy, like because
it really works incredibly well.
So I'm wondering whether you ski so much because of where you live in Utah,
that you have been able to pair the experience of heights with,
okay, you get to the bottom of the mountain, it was okay.
Enough times that you have diminished in some respect the fear itself,
but also you have learned to do the courageous thing,
which is act in a way, even when you do have some fear.
I think that's true.
And what's interesting is you're talking about it.
I've learned to do it in the context of skiing.
I don't think I've learned to do it in the context of,
for example, maybe some of these hikes.
Yeah, it's specific.
But one thing that is actually an enduring truth
about human nature is that we are very
context sensitive.
And what I mean by that is that human beings, by our nature, are always trying to figure
out like, what do I do in a situation like this?
So a hike is different from skiing.
Skiing is different from a cocktail party.
Cocktail party is different from when you walk through a preschool classroom.
So we're always trying to adapt our behaviors to the context.
And so one of the challenges of trying to generalize to someone like
courage when they are around something that they're afraid of is that you have to
actually practice in all different scenarios.
I was talking to this coach recently, an Olympic coach, and one of the things that
elite coaches learn is that if you only have your athletes practice,
the kind of tempo and the level of noise and the energy and the pressure of practice,
which is pretty low, right? It's like it's a quiet gym. You have all the time in the world.
You can have do-overs. They never get good at playing.
So professional and Olympic coaches simulate the game day highest pressure situations
because we're so context sensitive.
Like, you know, if you're going to do exposure therapy, you have to practice in the context
that's problematic.
But, Mike, I just want to say I'm so afraid of heights while hiking.
Like, I don't have a problem when I'm in a skyscraper.
I don't have a problem when I'm in a skyscraper. I don't have a problem flying. But I think I told you that I was on vacation with Lucy and Amanda and Jason.
And it was a hiking vacation.
And I am not kidding.
There were times during that hike that I was on all fours.
I was like crawling like a baby.
And everybody was laughing at me, meaning my family.
And I was like, we are going to fall off this mountain.
They're like, mom, you cannot fall off this mountain. And I told them, I was like, I am never going
on a hike like that again. And I don't want to go on a vacation like this again. So I
will say this exposure therapy is great. But sometimes you just say to yourself, like,
it's also not worth it. Like, I don't care to pair the experience of being on an alpine
precipice with, oh, it turned out okay. Like, I'm okay with just being terrified and never hiking in the Alps.
Never doing something like that again. I hear you. Can I give you an example? I'd never thought of
this this way when you were talking about exposure therapy, but I admitted earlier that my life has
often been dictated by fear, or at least more than I would like to admit or be conscious of, right?
Yeah.
And so, when I was thinking of Jeff's question,
how much does fear dictate us and how do we overcome it?
One area for me that's been helpful
is kind of tackling a hard situation or a hard conversation
instead of avoiding it.
I've often had a fear of like,
oh, I don't know how that's going to end.
And so I just exercise pure avoidance.
And for me, that's been very well, I think probably for everyone is pretty unhealthy. But the
exposure therapy of, of every time I've gone and had the hard conversation, then the anticipation
and all the buildup, you're just like, oh, wow, that wasn't so bad. That was not worth what I just
put myself through. And so that exposure therapy, maybe that's different, oh, wow. That wasn't so bad. That was not worth what I just put myself through.
And so that exposure therapy, maybe that's different,
but has been very helpful to me to say, hey, guess what?
Every time you do this, it's okay.
So stop avoiding, stop going through
so much unnecessary anxiety.
So with all the things that we said about like,
it's okay to have fear, life would be difficult
and dangerous if you didn't have fear.
So fear in some ways is a good thing. But yeah, I think fear can prevent
us from experiencing things that are worth it. And one of the reasons why exposure therapy
needed to be invented is that the natural response often is just to avoid the thing
that's causing the fear. It's like a road you never go down. So it's like you never
learn that it's not as bad as you think it was going to be. And I think that's what a snake phobic
individual or somebody who has a paralyzing fear of flying, they just navigate their lives
around snakes and planes and so they never learn. And so that's what exposure therapy
really is. It's learning through experience that things aren't so bad.
And I think you are describing in a sense like self-administered exposure therapy. And
it reminds me actually, so I was just talking to Lucy. So she has no fear of hiking.
But her mother does.
Her mother thinks she should have a little bit more fear of heights than she does. But
she called me the other day because she's in this psychology class. And the homework
assignment is that she and a group of students and her team have to come up with a psychologically
wise intervention. And the idea is that if you really understand psychology, then you
can actually create interventions for yourselves or sometimes public policy that make life
better. And so she and her friends are sitting around thinking about like, what do they really know? Like, what do they know from their own experience? And I think
these are all, she's a junior, so I think these are upperclassmen. They're like, you
know, when you first get to college, you're afraid. You're afraid, first and foremost,
of being rejected. And by the way, as she was telling me this, I was like, oh, this
makes so much sense. Like, an older person would be like, are you afraid of failing your
classes? No, just being socially rejected.
So I asked Lucy for examples, because I was like trying to remember what it was
like, and it's been a while and she was like, oh, you know, like you walk into the
cafeteria and you don't know where to sit.
Oh my gosh.
Right.
Yes.
I hate this.
Doesn't that just bring it right back?
You've got the tray in your hands and you see this empty seat.
You're just begging for any friendly face anywhere.
Could someone please wave me over?
There could be a table of people and there's an empty seat.
And in your head, you are thinking, oh, they're probably saving it for someone else.
I'm going to sit down and they're going to like look at me like, oh God, we have to have
a conversation with you.
We don't even know you.
And that fear, she says, prevents people from sitting down at a table that they don't know
most, if not everyone.
And so she and her friends, her classmates, have this idea of creating intervention where
you go through an activity and you read statistics.
Like, I'm making this up, but like, you know, 95% of Stanford freshmen,
when given the following scenario, said that they would be afraid to take this seat at
the table. But by the time you ask juniors, only 20% say that and like, you know, quotes.
And so I was like, by the way, these things have to be true. You can't lie to people.
She's like, yeah, I know. But I just thought that was really interesting because I think
for somebody her age, it's not heights and it it's not planes, and it's not snakes, it's rejection.
You know, she and her friends were saying that, like,
you know, somehow they got exposed to the fact that, like,
A, most people are not going to reject you,
and B, and I thought this was really important,
she and her friends learned that on the rare occasion
that you are rejected, and they actually are saving that seat
for somebody else, and they actually don't want you
to be in their conversation, it's okay.
That's what I love, is that I think maybe by your junior year or whenever you also learn that like
90% of the time people will be happy you sat down and the 10% of the time it doesn't,
it's not that big a deal.
So Mike, look, we talked about how fear is part of the emotional repertoire.
I guess where
I want to end is I want to end with this idea of courage. I think this courage research
is interesting. I remember back in the day when I was first starting graduate school,
there was a psychologist who's no longer alive. His name was Chris Peterson. And he was creating
the inventory of character strengths for positive psychology. And he was working with my advisor Marty researching courage as one of the key
human virtues.
And he told this story always about firefighters.
He said, what courage is, it isn't not being afraid of dying in the fire.
It's going into the burning house despite the fact that you are feeling fear.
And I always thought that was just Chris Peterson's insight or maybe from his interviews.
But it turns out that there is a literature on courage and there's a psychologist named
Stanley Rachman who was a lifelong scholar of fear and courage, and he wrote a book of the same
title, Fear and Courage.
And he said people have the misunderstanding that courage means lack of fear.
And I think what Rackman would say is that there may be a class of people who have a
minimal fear response, but that is not the only way to be courageous.
Because any of us can learn to experience fear and do things nevertheless.
There was actually a New York Times article called,
Searching for the Source of a Fountain of Courage,
where the journalists talked a lot about Rachman's research.
I thought it was a very nice lay summary. This is about paratroopers, actually, who were being studied by Rachman as
they prepared for their very first parachute jump. So the article says, the work
revealed three basic groups. The preternaturally fearless, who displayed scant
signs of the racing heart, sweaty palms, spike in blood pressure, and other fight or flight
responses associated with ordinary fear and who jumped without hesitation.
The second group was the hand-wringers, whose powerful fear response at the critical moment
kept them from jumping.
That's a direct quote from the article.
Oh, wow.
So they just didn't do it.
Yeah, that would be me.
And finally, the ones who reacted physiologically, like the hand
ringers, but who acted like the fearless leapers. So this study by Rachman, so nicely summarized
in this article, I think gives us some hope. Those of us who feel like we have the racing
heart, we have the sweating palms, we have the spike in blood pressure, we have the fight
or flight response, we feel like we have a highly functioning amygdala.
I feel like for me, that is the only kind of carriage I'm ever going to be capable of.
And if I had to choose a surgeon or a collaborator or a friend,
honestly, I think I would choose those courageous jumpers who did it despite the fear, not because
of the absence of fear.
Right.
So, I don't know, Permission to Feel seems like a good, well, it's a great book, but
it's also just a good one-liner for this question that Jeff gave us and maybe for life.
So Jeff, there you have it, Permission to Feel.
And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation.
In the first half of the show,
Mike and Angela wonder which television show
in which a character jumps into a quote,
pit of fear, inspired listener Jeff to write in.
I reached out to Jeff and learned that he was thinking
of season seven, episode 10
of Adult Swim's animated science fiction sitcom,
Rick and Morty, in which the titular character,
Morty Smith, voiced by Harry Belden,
jumps into a fear hole in the men's bathroom
of a Denny's restaurant.
Later, Angela states that clinical psychopaths
do not experience anxiety.
This isn't necessarily true.
Recent research has indicated that there are at least two distinct subtypes of psychopathy.
According to work published in the journal Biological Psychiatry, primary psychopathy
is characterized by low anxiety and thought to result from a genetic predisposition, and
secondary psychopathy is characterized by high anxiety
and thought to develop in response
to environmental adversity.
Also, Mike says that he thinks that professional speed skiers
wear suits made out of lycra,
a highly elastic synthetic material also known as spandex.
These athletes actually wear airtight red suits
made out of latex, a naturally occurring
rubber harvested from the para rubber tree, along with aerodynamic helmets to help them reach maximum
speeds. Finally, Angela says that Stanford University professor Albert Bandura was among
the first psychologists to develop exposure therapy. Bandura's paper on patients suffering from ophidiophobia, or fear of snakes, published
in 1969, actually built on a model of systematic desensitization developed a decade earlier
by South African psychiatrist Joseph Wolpe, who paired incremental exposure to feared
stimuli with relaxation techniques.
We should also give an honorable mention to 9th century Persian scientist Abu Zayed al-Balqi,
who wrote in his essay Sustenance of theome things, and to force oneself to repeatedly expose one's hearing and sight to noxious things,
though disliking the practice until one's senses are familiarized by them. That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode on routines.
Hi Mike and Angela. Interesting conversation around routine. Ironically, I have no routines, I find it difficult to do almost anything consistently. In fact, I take a different route to work almost every single day. Inversely, and maybe related or unrelated. I have the ability to find a flow state due to highly detailed technical work, basically on command. Love the show. Thanks so much.
Love the show. Thanks so much. Hey, Mike and Angela, this is Alicia from Ontario, Canada.
And I recently heard your episode on the need for routine,
and it got me thinking of something my husband suggested when we were still dating.
And he said we should go on a date every single week.
And I was kind of skeptical at first because money doesn't grow on trees.
And I was thinking, how are we going to afford that?
And kind of jumped to imagining a very elaborate sort of romantic,
well-planned
thing every week, which didn't feel sustainable. However, we workshopped it a bit and sometimes
it was very, very low key. And when kids came along, it definitely changed. However, we
have been very consistent about it being every single Monday night and it being a line on
our budget because it's something that we've prioritized and thought was healthy for our marriage.
And so we did it, we made it work.
So I'm really thankful that there is a really good spot
in between routine and flexibility that can be found
and that can actually be really beneficial.
As somebody who loves spontaneity and surprises
and thought that it would not be compatible with this idea,
I have had my mind changed and happily so.
All right, thanks, guys.
That was Kyle Groene and Alicia Snyder.
Thanks to them and to everyone who shared their stories with us.
And remember, we'd love to hear about your fears
and how you deal with them.
Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com
and you might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions, do we place too much emphasis on grades?
How much of college is trying to get a perfect GPA and how much of it is actual learning?
That's next week on No Stupid Questions.
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The senior producer of the show is me, Rebecca Lee Douglas,
and Leerak Bditch is our production
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