No Stupid Questions - 190. What’s the Point of Nostalgia?
Episode Date: April 7, 2024Is it dangerous to live in the past? Why is Disney remaking all of its classic movies? And why does Angela get sentimental over a cup of soup and a free roll? SOURCES:Julie Beck, senior editor at T...he Atlantic.Danielle Campoamor, freelance writer and reporter.Kyle Chayka, staff writer at The New Yorker.Amelia Dennis, research associate in psychology at the University of Bath.Erica Hepper, lecturer in personality/social psychology at the University of Surrey.Lucy Hone, director of the New Zealand Institute of Wellbeing and Resilience.Imran Rahman-Jones, freelance journalist.Florence Saint-Jean, executive director of Global Trauma Research. RESOURCES:"Pancultural Nostalgia in Action: Prevalence, Triggers, and Psychological Functions of Nostalgia Across Cultures," by Erica Hepper, Constantine Sedikides, Bettina Zengel, et al. (Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2024)."From Rosy Past to Happy and Flourishing Present: Nostalgia as a Resource for Hedonic and Eudaimonic Wellbeing," by Erica Hepper and Amelia Dennis (Current Opinion in Psychology, 2023)."Locating Nostalgia Among the Emotions: A Bridge From Loss to Love," by Wijnand A.P. van Tilburg (Current Opinion in Psychology, 2023)."Hindsight is 2022: The Psychology Behind Our Cultural Nostalgia," by Kyle Chayka (Town & Country, 2022)."Why We Reach for Nostalgia in Times of Crisis," by Danielle Campoamor (The New York Times, 2020)."Mulan: Disney Remakes and the Power of Nostalgia During Coronavirus," by Imran Rahman-Jones (BBC, 2020)."The Three Secrets of Resilient People," by Lucy Hone (TEDxChristchurch, 2019)."When Nostalgia Was a Disease," by Julie Beck (The Atlantic, 2013). EXTRAS:Big Five Personality Inventory, by No Stupid Questions (2024).Zoom, by Istvan Banyai (1995).Peter and Wendy, by J. M. Barrie (1911).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, weirdo.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Mon.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, what's the point of nostalgia?
Who's this man flying around in green tights?
Hi, I'm Peter Pan. Angela, today our question comes from listener Mike Hole.
Alright.
He says, Sometimes when I'm feeling stressed, I'll close my eyes and pretend I'm in my
parents' backyard with my old dog, or at my wedding,
or pushing my daughter in a swing. All super happy places for me. I think I'd be a healthier person
if I had even more of those happy places to go when times get tough. Why does nostalgia exist
and how helpful is it?" That's beautiful. This is a happy place question. I guess it's a nostalgia question.
Yeah, so the thing that I thought was really interesting about how he asks this, he uses
it as almost an escape mechanism, a coping mechanism, maybe you'd say a grounding mechanism,
to go back to a happy place and kind of reset himself.
And I will say that I have most often thought of nostalgia
more as a place that I go when I'm just sitting around
with the family and thinking back to great traditions
that we have or-
So like not a coping mechanism, but just a savoring-
Yeah, yes.
Kind of thing.
But I like the idea of it as a coping mechanism.
So the first time I recall hearing the phrase happy place,
like going to your happy place,
it was the summer before my senior year in college.
And I was very stressed because I was working
at this summer program for little kids.
And it was a summer school taught by college students
and high school students.
And I had spent lots of time with kids with, you know,
my experience as a tutor and as a big sister
in a big sister program.
I had never, ever, ever worked that hard.
I mean, it was just brutal.
I think there was something about the hours
and the pressure of being a teacher suddenly, even though you were like
20 years old and you didn't know what you were doing.
And it was just, it was wonderful, but it was extremely stressful.
And at one of the staff meetings, the director, she said, I'd like everyone to close their
eyes.
And mind you, this is like 1991, I think, right?
So this is before we did like mindfulness en
masse. Right, right.
So it's like everyone close your eyes and I want you to think of a happy place. And
I want you to each go to that happy place and I want you to see and hear and smell and
experience all the things that that happy place was for you.
I closed my eyes and I didn't know where I would go and where I did go kind of surprised me.
I had this friend, Michelle, who I was really good friends with in middle school.
And actually by the time that this was all happening, my like nostalgia moment,
I didn't even consider Michelle and I to be very good friends,
but in middle school, we were best friends.
And I would go down the shore, as we say in New Jersey,
we don't say going to the seashore,
we don't say going to the beach,
we go down the shore in Jersey.
And I went down the shore with Michelle
to her parents' second home, this condo.
I remember it was on the second floor,
it was gray on the outside. I remember it was on the second floor. It was gray on the outside.
I remember it had a deck and I remember laying out on the lounge chair with of course
no sunscreen because those were the days and I just would go there every time
that I was asked to go to my happy place. And you know what, when I opened my eyes and
I got myself back into the president, I have to say, I don't think it made all my problems go away,
but it was incredibly calming.
It was kind of like a balm.
I will say, when I go back to my happy place,
my family, we would go to this lake in Utah
called Lake Powell.
We went there every summer with these four other families,
an amazing experience.
But once in a while,
my family would go, just us. And so, one time we went with just my siblings and my parents,
and I remember we had what I would call the perfect day. You know, we tubed and we skied
behind the boat and we enjoyed the sun and each other's company and we were all just together.
and each other's company, and we were all just together. And I, this is so dumb, I'm probably 14 or something. And I said to my family at the end of this day, I said, if this had to be
your last day on earth, this would be an awesome last day.
Jared Sussman You said that when you were 14?
Jared Sparrow Yeah, and they kind of laughed like, okay, weirdo. But I honestly, I go back to that as this beautiful place of nostalgia,
because there was complete belonging in my family, there was complete unity, there was so much fun,
we were outside with the sun. And anyway, that's kind of my happy place.
Nicole Smedley You know, the American Psychological Association,
I mean, I don't think they use the word happy place, but they
do have a definition of nostalgia.
Actually, they give two definitions of nostalgia.
So according to the APA, nostalgia can mean, quote, a longing to return to an earlier period
or condition of life, recalled as being better than the present in some way.
And here's the second definition, a longing to return to a place to which one
feels emotionally bound, for example, home or native land. See also homesickness. I think
what's so interesting about these stories that we tell, you know, like I'm no longer
friends with Michelle, you're not 14 anymore, right? I mean, like, Powell still exists and
you're still close to your family. But what's funny about nostalgia is it's defined as a bittersweet emotion. So there is this
longing, this sadness, this loss, but then also it's positive, right? It's always a memory
of a very positive moment in your life. and most people enjoy nostalgia.
What I think is fascinating is kind of our attitude toward nostalgia, if you look at
it now, versus how it was once viewed.
So during the 17th to 19th centuries, nostalgia was considered a psychopathological disorder.
This journalist Julie Beck wrote an article in the Atlantic called When Nostalgia Was
a Disease.
So a Swiss physician named Johannes Hofer coined the term in a 1688 medical dissertation,
and it comes from the Greek, nostos, or homecoming, and algos, or pain.
So this idea of homecoming and pain, right?
And they thought it was very similar to paranoia. And there were so many examples, especially in wartime, where these people would obviously
miss their friends and family.
Let me tell you the story.
In 1733, the Russian army says there is a, quote, outbreak of nostalgia.
And they're on their way to Germany, and the general told the troops that the first person
to come down with the, quote, nostalgic virus would be buried alive. And the general actually made good on the
promise.
Wait, what?
Yes.
No, you're kidding.
Which, as you can imagine, nipped that problem right in the butt.
Wait, somebody started telling stories about their childhood and then they like carted
him off, tied him up and buried him under the ground?
The second part, yes, I don't know that it was stories about one's childhood, but the
fact that it was viewed for a long time as a psychopathological disorder is kind of crazy
to me.
I mean, nostalgia, right?
So like, wait, nos means home and alge means pain?
Yeah, nosos, homecoming, algo-s pain. I mean, I think there's a reason why APA says
like see also homesickness, which is different, but it's related. I mean, when nostalgia is
studied by contemporary scientists, I don't know why it's bittersweet. And I don't know why the
sweet seems stronger than the bitter. People get nostalgic for music or somebody
they loved but isn't in their life anymore. Things they used to do, feelings they used
to have, I mean even like TV shows or movies, you know, I think it's so intuitive, like
we all know what it means to feel nostalgic. And you can see why it could be considered mostly bitter or kind of borderline
on homesickness or sadness or grief, because these are all emotions of loss. But the positive
side is clearly there, right? When I remembered my happy place, when you remember being 14 and being on Lake Powell
with your family, for some reason, the fact that that's no longer true, I'm not in my
happy place and you aren't either, somehow research now shows that on balance, it makes
us feel better. There's a nuance though, and I'm thinking about this article
by Erica Hepper and Amelia Dennis,
from Rosie past to happy and flourishing present,
nostalgia as a resource for hedonic
and eudaimonic wellbeing.
So what these two psychologists suggest
is that there are two ways
that nostalgia could make us happier.
And they refer to this Aristotelian distinction between the good life,
that's the eudaimonic life, like a life that is meaningful,
a life that has purpose, and then a different kind of happiness,
a kind of like shiny, cheerful happiness, the hedonic life.
And you can guess where Aristotle landed in terms of like, which one is the better life?
Like, yes, eudaimonic.
But we all actually have the need, I think, to experience happiness in eudaimonic and
hedonic ways.
And what these authors suggest is that the evidence on how nostalgia could help you lead a more hedonically happy life
is mixed because it's bittersweet, because the emotional signature, this reverie for
things in the past that we no longer have is not unmitigated pleasure, right?
There's this like after note, this like secondary tone, as they put it, of loss and longing. On the other hand, the idea that nostalgia
could help us lead a more eudaimonically happy life, there they say the evidence is really
solid that consistently when people remember things in their past, and you can randomly
assign people to do that in experiments, what you find is that, you know, inducing nostalgia actually
does increase measures of eudaimonic well-being, like feelings of social connectedness, like
feelings of meaning and identity and purpose. So I guess I want to say that when I think
back to what spontaneously leapt to my mind when I was stressed out, whatever
I was, 20, 21 year old, trying to cope with the summer that I was happy to be in, but
it was just the hardest thing I'd ever done.
I think maybe there was this like remembering a friendship that was like where I felt safe.
I felt wholly accepted. At least when I was remembering it, I felt like I was, I don't know, that was like where I felt safe, right? I felt wholly accepted at least when I was remembering it
I felt like I was I don't know it was like very little house on the prairie feeling like, you know
You're Laura with Mary
To you a reference that I don't know that I follow no that doesn't make you nostalgic
Just the words little house on the prairie make me feel waves of nostalgia
No, here's what I love about what you just said.
You talked about feeling safe.
I talked about these are places of belonging.
I think to take it even one step further, what I found super interesting, I read this article,
said why we reach for nostalgia in times of crisis.
It's by a journalist named Danielle Campo Amor.
She wrote in the New York Times in 2020, and she references this
trauma specialist, Florence St. John, who's the executive director of Global Trauma Response.
And Dr. St. John talks about nostalgia as a way to cope during these times of duress,
that our brains take us to a place, and uses the word that you use that is safe. And it helps us to have a group of, quote, safe places that we can go to in our mind
when people are experiencing trauma.
I'm not going to go so far as to say that Michael, who wrote in this question, is experiencing
trauma, but he talks about in times of great stress.
He goes back to these moments.
Dr. St. John again uses it with her trauma patients. The interesting thing though is,
she's very pro using this, but also warns of a couple of downsides. And one of those downsides
that she talks about is in trauma patients, if they're always reaching back for nostalgia,
especially, you know, if they're dealing with things now, they have a tendency to just look
at their past through rose-colored glasses.
Mm, and get stuck there.
Right.
They might think, for example, about an ex and a time they were with this person and
how great it was, but they forget to think about that they left that relationship because
there was a lot of negative things, and that's why they're no longer with the ex, but the
nostalgia takes them only to this happy place.
And then the last thing was this idea of it keeping us too anchored in our past
in a way that makes it so that we're just avoiding the future.
We're avoiding the problem, and in that sense, it doesn't allow us to kind of overcome the trauma
that we may be dealing with or the situation that we're fighting? Well, it might depend on the person, but I think in general, when you remember these happy events
that are in your past and that you no longer have, in general, on average, they make you more
approach-oriented and less avoidance-oriented, right?
Oh my gosh, I love that.
Like there's two things an organism can do, can like approach or avoid,
and then you approach things that are good,
you avoid things that are bad,
and generally, nostalgia seems to kind of like
make you feel emboldened somehow,
but maybe that depends.
I mean, honestly, I've been thinking,
like, why doesn't this make me feel worse?
And I don't have a fully satisfying answer.
I do think you're onto something,
or this general idea
is right, that what nostalgia is, is selective attention. Some people would say that animals
basically experience the present, but only human beings can do time travel, that we can
fully in our minds represent a future that has not come to pass. And we can fully recreate in as rich an experience as it was when we were there, something that
happened decades ago.
And so this question of like, well, when you do this time travel back to one select memory
and you're only going to curate the parts that were rosy, I do wonder, like, why wouldn't you just feel terrible that that's not, you know, like,
shouldn't I have, even at that moment, been mourning my lost friendship with Michelle?
It's interesting.
I watched a TED Talk that I cannot remember what it was right now, but it was about resilience.
And I'll never forget the question that this person talked about was asking yourself, does
this help or does it hurt?
And the example that she used was loss of a child and how sometimes, you know, having
pictures of maybe that child everywhere because she had lost a child, I believe.
Is it helping or am I doing something that's hurtful in trying to remember all these things?
Am I going down a spiral that's just going to hurt my ability
to kind of move on? Or is this helpful because it's a way of honoring the past and honoring
their legacy? I think on balance, like you're saying, it's generally helpful. But I think
that there are times when, like anything taken to extreme, there's a difficulty.
Right. Like when people grieve, you know, my father died, right?
When I grieve for my father, sometimes there is a kind of nostalgia, but sometimes it's
just sadness.
Yeah.
You know, there's the old adage, the past is to be learned from, not lived in.
I think that that is a way to think about this, right?
Nostalgia, if it becomes the only thing you have and keeps you trapped in the past and you're living there, that's negative.
Maybe you need to visit, but not take up residence.
Yes, a much more succinct way of saying.
So, Angela and I would love to hear your thoughts on how nostalgia affects your life.
How often do you reflect back on the past and how did these memories make you feel? Record a voice memo in a quiet place with your mouth close to the phone and email it
to nsq at Freakonomics.com and maybe we'll play it on a future episode of the show.
Also, if you like the show and want to support it, the 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 podcast app.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, has collective nostalgia gotten us stuck in a
cultural rut?
Don't roll your eyes the next time you see like Rocky 29. Now, back to Mike and Angela's conversation about nostalgia.
So, Angela, there's this article, Hindsight is 2022, The Psychology Behind Our Cultural
Nostalgia by journalist Kyle Sheka.
He talked about one of the challenges of nostalgia is that culture can get stuck on a loop.
And he uses the example of movies.
He says, unable to imagine the future,
we return to the past.
Oh, you mean there's like sequels,
there's like the eighth, the ninth.
It was a big deal when like Rocky II came out
because we were like, oh, come on.
Seriously, you're gonna make Rocky II?
And now I don't know how many Roman numerals there are
after Rocky, Mission Impossible.
Well, and you look at the Fast and the Furious franchise,
you look at the Marvel movies.
We just got kind of crazy with it.
This is a negative view of nostalgia then, right?
I mean, to state the obvious, but just to make sure.
This is like uncreativeive stuck in a rut nostalgia.
Yes, I think that that's what this article
was referring to is hey, culture is stuck on a loop
because we're staying in nostalgia
and we're not inventing new things.
Like a journalist, Imran Rahman Jones,
who writes for the BBC,
wrote about this remake nostalgia thing
where Disney has done all of these remakes
and with their six recent remakes as of 2020, they'd made almost $6 billion at the box office.
Wow.
The remakes were The Jungle Book, Cinderella, Beauty and the Beast, Lion King, Aladdin,
Dumbo.
They're things that we experienced in our childhood
and then your kids are old enough or your grandkids
and you want them to experience it.
Then we cart them off to the movies
because we want to relive it ourselves, right?
It's not nostalgia for our kids, it's nostalgia for us.
Exactly, but because the parent is buying the ticket
to the movie, it works.
So I think that was the argument against it,
that culture gets stuck in this loop
and maybe we are not as innovative,
maybe we're not coming up with as many new stories.
You know, it's interesting that that's the conclusion
of this article, because you could have ended
that article saying, look, you know, don't roll your eyes
the next time you see like Rocky 29.
Like, it's just human nature to wanna do this emotional
time travel and
relive this thing that was special to you, right? Like, yeah, you could say it's getting
stuck in a loop, it's being in a rut, it's not moving forward. And sometimes I guess
that's just an accurate description. But in some ways, I'm like, what, they remade Mulan?
Like I can't wait to like add that to my playlist.
Right. I'd love to watch Mulan again I can't wait to add that to my playlist.
I'd love to watch Mulan again, right?
So the fact remains, and actually there's new research on this, that nostalgia is a
universal human experience.
There's a study that was done across 28 different countries with thousands of adults, and they
surveyed people about nostalgia and also the effects
of nostalgia.
And what they found was that in every culture around the world that they had studied, these
28 different countries, nostalgia was like immediately understood.
It was always experienced as bittersweet and mostly positive, that recalling a
nostalgic memory increased social connectedness, a sense of self continuity
or identity that was consistent over time, and also meaning in life. So the
fact that this very complex emotion is so universal makes me think that even though there is a kind of like stuck-in-a-rut
aspect of it almost by definition, I think in a way this mental time travel that we do,
I think it's possible to have these bittersweet memories, but to have them mostly be nurturing.
Well, the phrase that I love that you said from the research was self-continuity.
It does give us that groundedness and I think helps us to figure out who is the self that
I created, what are the moments or places, even if they are romanticized in our minds
a little bit.
Those give us memories that give us a foundation, but it's this continuity of self that maybe
is why it's so helpful, because it's not an anchor in terms of like an albatross that's
dragging you down, but an anchor that's more of a foundation that's allowing you to continue
to build.
You know, I know where I came from.
I know what moments made me who I am today.
And maybe that's why when Michael goes back in these stressful moments and says,
hey, I want to go to my wedding, I want to go to pushing my daughter on a swing,
it's identifying who he is and that his self-continuity is not his job, is not that
stressful moment, it's not what he's dealing with in that vortex of life sometimes, but it's really,
hey, who am I? And I can create the self-continuity that reminds me to go back to my foundation instead of
reacting to the situation that we're in.
That frankly, no matter how stressful it is, we're going to forget in a month or three months.
I can't tell you how often in life, you know, I'm dealing with this thing at work or whatever,
and you're like, this is the biggest deal ever.
And then I can't remember it.
And this is like the worst thing ever.
Right.
We'll never get over this.
Mountains in retrospect are molehills.
Yes.
So the other day, my friend Naomi calls me.
My friend Naomi is somebody that I have stayed in touch with and she was my best friend in high school,
not middle school. And we started, I don't know, nostalgicizing. I think I said to her
like, oh my gosh, do you remember when we used to take the train in from the suburbs
to Center City, Philadelphia, and we would walk down Walnut Street, like the street with
all the fancy jewelry stores and clothing
shops and do you remember when we would buy a little cup of soup, not a bowl of soup,
because I don't think we had enough pocket money to buy a whole bowl of soup, but we
got the cup of soup because it came with a free roll, like the same size rolls if you
buy the bowl of soup.
She's like, oh my gosh, yeah.
And then on special occasions, do you remember going to the walk? Is the wok still there? And I was like, oh my gosh, Naomi,
it's not there anymore. Like this Chinese restaurant where you used to always get the
Kung Pao chicken, right? She's like, yes, I remember that. Anyway, so we take this walk
down memory lane. And I think in a way, when you're talking about this self continuity
and our narrative, you know, we're about to talk about personality a lot on No Stupid Questions.
Like, we're going to have a series on the Big Five personality traits.
Other psychologists who are not Big Five personality researchers think there's a dimension of our
personality that we would best label as our narrative personality.
The story of Mike Vaughan, the story of Angela
Duckworth.
And I think what nostalgia means to me is that it is a connection to the story of my
childhood and my young adult years.
It is this continuity.
I guess it is rose-colored.
You know, I could have remembered terrible times with Naomi, but I do think it is who
I am today.
Like it's gone.
Those stores aren't there.
The walk's not there.
I don't get to walk around with Naomi.
I hardly talk to her these days, but it was there and that means it's kind of still part
of me.
Angela, I want to end with the story of Peter
Pan.
Angela Brinkley I never read Peter Pan.
Jared Sussman Oh.
Angela Brinkley So, I'm all ears, but don't expect me to experience nostalgia.
Jared Sussman Are you serious?
Angela Brinkley Am I the only person who didn't read Peter
Pan?
Yeah, I'm serious.
Jared Sussman Or have you seen any of the plays or movies?
Angela Brinkley No, I'm Peter Pan free.
Jared Sussman Oh, I don't even-
You can't believe it, can you?
You cannot believe it.
The story is that there, oh, where do we even start?
There's a little boy who can't grow up or something?
Wow, Peter Pan is a boy who lives in a place
called Neverland, and Peter Pan and the Lost Boys
are all little kids.
And in Neverland, they never grow up.
And there is this mean guy named Captain Hook, who is, of course, an adult.
And Captain Hook has other pirates, and they're the arch-nemesis of Peter Pan.
And so, of course, it's setting up this idea of childhood versus adulthood,
and, you know, the joys of childhood and imagination and all of these things.
But Peter Pan comes to see a family.
And so, he sees these three siblings, Wendy, John, and Michael, and he watches them sleep
sometimes, which sounds so creepy. It's not in the way it's written. But he comes in to
their bedroom, again, sounds so creepy, I guess, when you think about all these things.
And he can fly, and he's teaching Wendy, John, and Michael at some point to fly, because
they all are going to go together to Neverland.
Oh, he like at some point introduces himself to these three children.
Yes.
Okay, got it.
There's this man flying around in green tides.
Hi, I'm Peter Pan.
But this is what he does when he teaches them to fly. And this is a quote from the book, you just think lovely, wonderful thoughts and they
lift you up in the air.
Oh God, I love that.
Isn't that beautiful?
Yeah.
And so, I love this idea.
Now, again, this is not just rose-colored glasses.
This is not just, hey, avoid your problems.
But I do think there's something really beautiful coming from this question from Michael, who's
saying, hey, in these times of stress, I go to this place, and maybe it's you just think
lovely, wonderful thoughts and they lift you up in the air, and you can kind of rise above
the stress of the moment.
You rise above whatever you're going through.
And nostalgia can be that place of anchoring, it can be that place of foundation, that place of self-continuity.
Yeah, you can see the whole landscape from this place with perspective,
which we generally can't do when we're feeling stressed.
Our vision goes, you know, like a laser to the thing that's the problem.
Maybe that's why we were doing that exercise, right?
When I was 20 or 21, listening to somebody just walk's the problem. Maybe that's why we were doing that exercise, right? When
I was 20 or 21, listening to somebody just walk me through this. But I think actually
that is what happened. Like it gave me perspective and I was like, you know what? In the grand
scheme of things, there's a lot to be grateful for. And in the grand scheme of things, this
is going to be okay.
I will say one of the best pieces of advice I heard recently was from someone was telling
me about a children's book, I don't know what book it is, but the entire book just repeats
over and over the two words, zoom out, zoom out, zoom out.
And maybe that's the power of nostalgia, put simply, it allows you to zoom out.
Zoom out and then zoom in on this very positive, probably highly curated memory.
So I think maybe this positive time travel that we do is exactly what you said. It kind
of like lifts us up. And maybe that's why we do it when we're myopically focused on
our problems. Exactly. But I think it's such an interesting, complex emotion.
And now here's a fact check of today's conversation. Florence St. Jean is the executive director
of Global Trauma Research, not Global Trauma Response.
The TED talk about resilience that Mike refers to
is The Three Secrets of Resilient People
from 2018 by Lucy Hone, who happens to be a former student of Angela's.
And the children's book Mike discusses at the end of the episode is Zoom by Istvan Banyai,
although it doesn't contain any words, just pictures.
Finally, Mike gets a few details wrong about the story of Peter Pan, at least as it's
told in the original 1911 novel Peter and Windy by Scottish author and playwright J.
M. Barrie.
Mike says that Peter Pan and the Lost Boys never grow up.
In certain adaptations of the story, this is true. But in Barry's classic, the Lost Boys do have the capacity to grow older and are eventually
forced to leave Neverland.
Also, Mike says that Peter teaches Wendy, John, and Michael that in order to fly they
just need to think lovely, wonderful thoughts.
Peter does say this in Barry's book, but the children find that his instructions don't
work, and
that they actually need fairy dust in order to fly.
That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode on
gut instincts.
Hello, NSQ.
I have a story where I ignored my gut.
I had just purchased a car three weeks earlier and drove to work
during the rain. There was parking along the side of the building and the first position
closest to the loading dock was vacant. This never happened. I pulled right in and when
I opened the door to get out, I noticed a lot of water was swirling around a drain right
by that space. I thought about it for a moment and then shrugged it off and
went in. Three times I got up from my desk during the morning to go out to check on the
car possibly even to move it and three times I stopped myself and sat back down at my desk
thinking nah there's nothing wrong. Then suddenly there was an announcement over the PA hey
anybody parked by the loading dock
in the back of the building,
you need to move your car, it's flooded.
I went running out there, there was a crowd
and there was a huge pool of water
and water above my door wells.
I should have listened to my gut.
Anyway, that's my story.
I hope you enjoy it.
Hi, Mike and Angela.
My name is Isabella from Medellin, Colombia,
and I just heard your episode on when to trust your intuition.
And all through the episode, I kept thinking about my career choice.
When I was in high school, I used to be like a physics nerd.
I went to math and physics Olympiads,
and it was very clear to everyone around me that I was going to go into physics
or maths or engineering or something of the sort and somehow I was really into
literature and I discovered historic novels and about three months before
graduating high school I was like oh no wait I don't want to be an engineer I
decided to go into history just like that.
And it was a big shock for my family.
My dad's an engineer and he didn't quite get it.
And well, I went into history, I did the program
and now I have fantastic work as a curator
and an investigator at a science museum.
And I design museums for other parts of the world
and in the university I met my girlfriend and now we have a beautiful house that we just renovated
and we have a really really nice quiet life and yeah like I went with my gut against everything
that was planned for me by me me, and it turned out great.
And I don't know, maybe that's not the way you should always choose your career,
but I do believe God has a big role into what we really, really want and we really,
really like in our soul. That was, respectively, Anthony D. and Isabella Viejas Correa.
Thanks to them and to everyone who shared their stories with us.
And remember, we'd love to hear about your experiences with nostalgia.
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, how fixed is your personality?
I'm really happy again.
I laugh more freely.
I'm much more comfortable with myself and who I am.
That's next week on No Stupid Questions.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics
Radio, People I Mostly Admire,
and The Economics of Everyday Things.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
The senior producer of the show is me, Rebecca Lee Douglas,
and Lerick Faudich is our production associate.
This episode was mixed by Greg Rippon
with help from Jasmine Klinger.
Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra.
You can follow us on Twitter at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ show.
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To learn more or to read episode transcripts, visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ.
Thanks for listening.
By the way, you did not mention the Star Wars franchise.
You better not or you're gonna get like death threats.
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