No Stupid Questions - 191. Can You Change Your Personality?
Episode Date: April 14, 2024Are you the same person you were a decade ago? Do we get better as we age? And is your sixth-grade class clown still funny?  SOURCES:Aaron (Tim) Beck, professor emeritus of psychiatry at the Univers...ity of Pennsylvania.Daniel Gilbert, professor of psychology at Harvard University.Olga Khazan, staff writer at The Atlantic. Brian Little, professor of psychology at the University of Cambridge.Jordi Quoidbach, professor of people management and organisation at ESADE, University Ramon Llull.Carl Rogers, 20th-century psychologist.Martin Short, actor and comedian.Richard Wiseman, professor of the public understanding of psychology at the University of Hertfordshire.Timothy Wilson, professor of psychology at the University of Virginia. RESOURCES:"I Gave Myself Three Months to Change My Personality," by Olga Khazan (The Atlantic, 2022)."You Can Be a Different Person After the Pandemic," by Olga Khazan (The New York Times, 2021)."The Theory of Modes: Applications to Schizophrenia and Other Psychological Conditions," by Aaron T. Beck, Molly R. Finkel, and Judith S. Beck (Cognitive Therapy and Research, 2020).“Brian Little: Are Human Personalities Hardwired?" by Guy Raz (TED Radio Hour, 2017).I Must Say: My Life As a Humble Comedy Legend, by Martin Short (2014)."The End of History Illusion," by Jordi Quoidbach, Daniel T. Gilbert, and Timothy D. Wilson (Science, 2013)."Age Differences in Personality Traits From 10 to 65: Big Five Domains and Facets in a Large Cross-Sectional Sample," by Christopher J. Soto, Oliver P. John, Samuel D. Gosling, and Jeff Potter (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2011)."The Rank-Order Consistency of Personality Traits From Childhood to Old Age: A Guantitative Review of Longitudinal Studies," by Brent W. Roberts and Wendy F. DelVecchio (Psychological Bulletin, 2000). EXTRAS:Big Five Personality Inventory, by No Stupid Questions (2024).Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, TV series (2012-present).
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Science needs rebranding.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Mike Mon.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, how fixed is personality?
I take comfort in knowing that I am just like everyone else in deluding myself. Angela, today we have a fascinating question about how fixed personality is.
Mike, you and I have been talking about personality so much lately.
I know, mostly because I think I need a better one
No, but you know what? I think a lot of us feel that way. Okay. Well, let me read you this question from Joshua Curtis
Hi Mike and Angela. I often wonder how fixed personality is
I feel that while my personality has definite patterns how pronounced those patterns are can vary given the environment that I'm in
patterns, how pronounced those patterns are, can vary given the environment that I'm in.
This seems to be true both in the short term, for example, I have different personality at work than at home, but also true in the longer term. My personality is definitely different now that
I'm in my late 30s compared to when I was in college. This makes me wonder if personality
tests should not be used to tell us about fixed traits that we have, but rather as tools for working to become closer to the people we would like to be.
Are there things we can do to intentionally change our personalities?
Thanks Joshua Curtis."
Can I just thank Joshua?
Because I feel like we live in a particular cultural moment where self-improvement is
a universal hobby. Andment is a universal hobby.
And it is a timeless question.
I mean, you know, philosophers and theologians of various types have been pondering character
and how malleable it is since forever.
So, Joshua, great question.
Before we jump totally into Joshua's question, I think it would help to just define, I mean, what is personality?
Personality is something that psychologists would say, and this is very close to, I think,
what most people would say who are not trained psychologists.
Personality is the pattern of acting, thinking, and feeling that you have that is pretty consistent, and the emphasis is on
pretty consistent, not perfectly consistent, pretty consistent across situations and across
time.
You know, your tendency to be cheerful or grim, your tendency to be talkative or shy,
your tendency to be gritty or somebody who gives up easily on things.
So when we talk about personality, the emphasis is on kind of the center of gravity of how
we usually behave.
Got it.
Here's where I'd love to get back to Josh's question and almost segment into two parts.
One, how do our personalities change?
And then can we do things to intentionally change our personalities?
So I thought it may be interesting,
or maybe overly vulnerable, I don't know,
to talk about how I think my personality
has changed over time.
I would love that.
Well, this is so on you, Mike.
Be vulnerable, tell me.
This feels uncomfortable.
Good.
And that's okay.
Let's get you out of your comfort zone.
And I think maybe before we go into this,
do you wanna just mention,
you've shared with me these big five personality traits just in their general sense, because I think
that will help me talk through the changes in my personality.
Your little story of young Mike Mon, before you became Mike Mon of today.
Yeah, for you and for Joshua and for anybody else who's curious about their own personality,
it would be helpful to say on behalf of psychologists everywhere
that there is an agreed upon classification of personality traits.
And what I mean by agreed upon is that if you go to University of Washington or you
like go to Stanford or Yale or anywhere, all the psychologists there who teach intro psych
will teach students that there are five
major personality traits.
They're really personality trait families because they have a bunch of very specific
traits within them, but there are these five families of personality traits that have been
identified across the lifespan.
So Josh being in, I guess he said his late 30s, like true for Joshua, but also true for me, who
I'm in my mid-50s, and my mom, who's 89, and even a 15-year-old, et cetera.
So true across the life span, and also true across culture.
So on every civilized continent, you can give people personality inventories.
And when you look at how they respond, you find these five clusters of personality traits.
So what are they?
There's an acronym that I find useful, OCEAN.
O-C-E-A-N.
Right.
And the five personality families, one is openness, openness to experience or open-mindedness.
That's the O. C is for conscientiousness, you know, color-coded spice racks and organized lives and so forth.
Then there's E for extraversion.
There's A for agreeableness.
And the last one's a little bit of a downer, sorry, but the N is for neuroticism.
It's like a kind of an anachronistic term, but it's about being emotionally labile and
also having a fair amount of negative emotion like
anger, sadness, anxiety in your everyday experience.
So O-C-E-A-N.
Okay.
Well, let's dive into the ocean of my personality.
That was such a lame.
Yes, let's get into the ocean.
So tell me.
I'm so curious.
Well, I tried to think through because again, you've shared this ocean idea with me before,
so I tried to go through where maybe I was spiking. And so, as a kid, I would say openness. I was
carefree, I was very creative, very playful, as far as I remember it, but somewhat introverted
and could be kind of shy.
Hmm, interesting.
As a teenager, I think conscientiousness took over, and I was probably overly serious.
I was very diligent, and I thought maybe if I did everything right, then no one could
criticize and then I'd just fit in.
As a college student, it was kind of interesting, because I think agreeableness and extroversion
took over in me. I loved college and I was very social and out there all the time. I also did a
two-year mission for my church and I think that was the first time I felt like I 100% belonged.
Where did you go? I think I should know this.
I went to upstate New York to Duanesburg where Stephen Dubner is from I
Always feel like when people say they go on a mission. It's some exotic location
Yeah, you think of Korea you think of like it's like
Duanesburg up, but people live there too. Yes, you do not pick where you go
They just assign you.
And I, in retrospect, was thrilled with the assignment.
But I think that that was like a place where this extroversion, agreeableness, I was kind
of at my peak.
And coming home from that experience, I think I was lost for a little while.
I was very outwardly open and happy and extroverted, but inwardly, I had some layers that I never let anybody in on.
Out of, I don't know if it was insecurity
or self-preservation.
This is a dumb example, but I think maybe signifies
how my personality changed.
I love football.
I would go to football games.
And in my earlier years, if your team would score a touchdown,
you would celebrate and be super happy.
There was a period of maybe 10 years where I'd be watching a football game, my team would score a touchdown, you would celebrate and be super happy. Yeah. There was a period of maybe 10 years where I'd be watching a football game.
My team would score the touchdown and everyone around me is high-fiving and
chest bumping, and I would just sit there waiting to see if there was a flag.
What?
Like I couldn't let myself enjoy the moment.
And then I would relax when I saw that we really did score.
And then it was just kind of like steady state even rather than like engaged.
Ah, interesting.
This is where I think I have changed most recently is that my whole life has sort of opened up.
Like I'm really happy again. I laugh more for you. I'm much more comfortable with myself and who I am.
And maybe the peaks and valleys and spikes are only observable to me,
but I feel like they've changed pretty substantially.
And maybe that's not just personality, but my ability to deal with self and the world.
But I think I've seen openness, extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness increase
significantly and neuroticism probably decrease significantly.
How old are you?
I can't remember.
I'm 41.
Oh, you said that in a kind of like, Eeyore way.
I actually love my life. But sometimes I think, wow, if I had the knowledge and perspective
and experience now and could plug that into a 25-year-old, I would be so much better.
Oh my gosh. Don't we all?
I know.
So let me ask you this. You're 41.
You have looked back upon your childhood as a little boy,
all the way up through your teens, your 20s, and your 30s,
and you see a lot of change.
A lot of that is positive.
There are nuances, but there's a maturation, if you will, of some of these dimensions of
personality that you're happy with.
When you look forward to your 40s and then beyond, like my decade and then, you know,
social security decade and the Medicare decade.
When you phrase it that way, how can they not look forward?
Well, the term in science for like the next decade, they literally called the old old,
like one old was not enough. They're like, there's the old and there it the old old. Like one old was not
enough. They're like, there's the old and there's the old old.
Science needs rebranding. That's terrible.
I know they need a whole marketing department for sure. But when you look forward to the
future, Mike, do you think you're going to change in the future? Or do you think you've
kind of reached who Mike Mon is? Like what's your just untutored intuition about how stable your personality is now compared
to the past?
I would hope to continue improving in increments, but I don't think there's going to be a massive
shift at this point.
Okay, well, I think that's pretty consistent with what is sometimes called the end of history
illusion.
Doesn't that sound kind of dire?
Well, when you say illusion, I feel like I'm just tricking myself immediately.
But there's good news, I think, especially given what you said about your aspirations,
which I think we all have.
We would all want to continue to grow and to learn and to become even better people
than we are now.
But a lot of us have a sense, and I do, you know, if you ask me like, do you think you'll
be a different person when you're 59 or 61, I think the intuitive answer
that I would give you is like, no, I'm pretty much me.
You know, I could tell you how I was different
when I was a cheerleader and I was in high school,
but like now I am Angela.
And this is called the end of history illusion.
And you're right, the term illusion or bias
is a pretty good tip off that what psychologists
are pointing to is a mistake that we're making cognitively.
And here I should credit the coiners of the phrase, so that's Jordy Quidback and then
Dan Gilbert and Tim Wilson.
They published this article about a decade ago.
And what they did was they measured the personalities using a standard inventory of personality and also the values and
preferences of more than 19,000 adults who ranged in age from 18 to 68. And they
very simply asked them to report how much they thought they had changed in the past
decade, so similar to my Mike Mon interrogation, but just in the last 10 years,
and or to predict how much they would change in the following decade.
And essentially what they found in this study was that young people, middle-aged people,
older people, everybody believed that they had changed a lot in the past.
But then when you ask them the parallel question about the next decade, universally people do not forecast changing
very much at all.
Like, they are like, oh, now I'm me.
So if at every decade you're like, oh, I'm done, I have finally become who I am.
But then when you look at the data and there is change in every decade, then people are
being pessimistic in their forecasts. Right.
We have the false sense that we're done changing.
But if we could like vault you into the future and show you yourself 10 years from now, you
will have changed more than you think you will.
Well, I take comfort in knowing that I am just like everyone else in diluting myself.
Yeah, I wonder if that is comforting.
I guess it is in a way. No, it's not that comforting. It's more like, okay, I wonder if that is comforting. I guess it is in a way.
No, it's not that comforting. It's more like, okay, I fell into the trap completely.
Let me read you this one thing, and I'm curious to get your take on it in context of what
we've just said. So, I listened to a talk by a Cambridge University psychologist named
Brian Little. He basically says that rank order doesn't change. So he said if you go back to your
sixth grade reunion, the rank order of people on these different dimensions stays relatively
the same and the kid who is the class clown, maybe he has a more sophisticated sense of humor than in
sixth grade, now that he's 36, but he's probably still the one cracking the jokes. And so his point was, yeah, we all change over time, but probably where you fit relative
to maybe your peers or others stays at least relatively consistent.
Okay.
Love Brian Little.
Super love Brian Little.
Don't agree.
I mean, I'd have to debate him on this and I could because he's awesome and he's fun
to debate with.
But rank order does get to be quite stable in about your late middle age.
What's late middle age?
50s or so.
But if you did this hypothetical example, like think of your sixth grade class and then
imagine doing this if you had the same 30 kids like at the end of high school and imagine doing it then in your like 20s and 30s and 40s and 50s.
At what point would the shuffling with the rank ordering like be zero?
Like you know it's like, oh, everybody's just standing in the same places.
It's never that people don't shuffle.
There's always rank order change, even in your 50s and 60s and beyond.
So that's where I would disagree with him.
But where he has a point is that there's less shuffling.
So you know, if you go from sixth grade to 12th grade, you're like, everybody stand in
line from like most cheerful to least cheerful in this hypothetical example, there's going
to be like a reasonable amount of shuffling.
And then there's like less shuffling and still less shuffling.
And that's why the end of history illusion is not like people are totally wrong.
Like you do change less as you grow older, but you never change not at all.
There's never a point in a lifespan where you have no shuffling.
And the tendency that's been observed across all the data that have been collected is very
awesome.
It's good news because even though our hips and our knees give out, one thing that we
can look forward to as we get older is it's usually called the maturity principle.
So just like you, we become more dependable as we get older.
We become more emotionally stable.
I always say that to 20-year-olds because I'm like, dude, this roller coaster that you're
on, I'm not because I'm in my 50s and you're in your 20s.
Yes, I will have ups and downs, but holy smokes,
they are not the ups and downs that I had in my 20s.
And thank goodness.
Thank goodness, I know.
I don't even know how we survive those tumultuous years.
So we get more conscientious, more agreeable,
more compassionate and understanding of other people
in their complicated lives.
And as I said, there's like a decrease in neuroticism where you could frame it as an increase compassionate and understanding of other people and their complicated lives.
And as I said, there's like a decrease in neuroticism where you could frame it as an
increase in emotional stability.
It's the same thing.
And then I think there's a little bit more debate about open-mindedness, but in many
studies like open-mindedness or openness to experience also goes up over much of adulthood.
So in adulthood at least, you know, adolescence is a whole other can of worms But just in adulthood from say your 20s onward there's increases in the mean levels of positive
Personality traits we are
Generally getting better. I love that you called adolescence a can of worms
I think it's almost sometimes a pit of despair
Nothing against those human adolescents, but well you said you were very anxious in your,
did I get that right?
You were like diligent, but in a way,
like driven through fear or something.
Yeah, I think it was a self-protective mechanism.
I mean, not everybody was Mike Mon as a teenager,
but I will just say that the things that we went through,
and I don't know how we survive our teenagers either,
like, wow, those were hard.
And in these personality studies where you track, you know, change, like mean level change, rank order change, but you're looking
at teenagers, there is a, sometimes it's called the disruption hypothesis. Basically, instead
of everybody getting better and happier and more dependable and more conscientious in
adolescence, in many studies, there's actually a dip. So like you're in a way going backwards in maturity.
So to speak, it's hard.
So when I teach the maturity principle,
I'm usually looking out at a sea of faces
who are already in their twenties.
And then I get to just emphasize the positive
because they are-
You've survived.
Yeah, they're getting to the good part.
Well, look, Angela and I would love to hear your thoughts
on how fixed personalities are.
Do you feel like your personality has shifted over time?
And have you ever intentionally tried to change it?
So 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 want to learn more about your own personality, head
to Freakonomics.com slash Big Five. And you can take the Big Five inventory and you'll
get an immediate personality profile and your results will be completely anonymous.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, is it possible to change your personality intentionally?
To increase agreeableness, she wanted to start sending out supportive texts,
think more positively about people who frustrated her,
and this is my favorite, she says, quote,
regrettably, hugging. [♪ music playing, fades out, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends, music ends Now, back to Mike and Angela's conversation about personality change.
Angela, I want to go to this other thing that Josh talked about, which is not just how fixed
personality is, but can you change it?
Right.
And I'm curious to get your take on this principle that Richard Wiseman, a psychology
professor at University of Hertfordshire, called it the as-if principle. Like, behave
as if you are the person that you want to be. And so, I want to give you an example
that I loved in a book I just read by Martin Short. So, Martin Short, movie star, comedic
legend.
Oh my gosh, I love Martin Short!
Oh, good. Like he hangs out with Steve Martin, super funny.
He's on comedians in cars or something.
Go on, sorry, I got distracted.
Comedians with cars getting coffee.
Comedians getting coffee in cars.
Something, Jerry Seinfeld.
Go on, go on.
But Martin Short is hilarious,
and yes, often with Steve Martin.
So he wrote a book called, I Must Say,
My Life as a Humble Comedy
Legend. And he actually starts the book with a really interesting anecdote talking about he and
his wife, Nancy. They were out to dinner, and this is May 1970s, early in his career still,
and he's working at Second City in Toronto, which is a comedy group, and he's early in his career still. He's working at Second City in Toronto, which is a comedy group,
and he's developing a character named Ed.
This is the character at the time,
did not have a last name,
but the character that we now know famously is Ed Grimley.
And so he and his wife are out to eat.
They're having an argument, not a terrible argument,
but there's some serious tension.
And his wife says to him,
I don't wanna talk to you anymore. I want to talk to Ed. And then he said that she looked past him
and she said, Ed, what's Marty's problem? And Martin Short transforms himself into this
alternate person and conversed with her as Ed. And then he said, Ed, whose sweetness
has a disarming effect on Nancy. When trouble arises, she calls on Ed to moderate, and when he appears, all things calm down.'"
Now, I'm not saying we should all play a totally separate character, but I wonder if in the
state of trying to change our personality, there seems to be some real value in acting
as if or, quote-unquote, playing a part in order to give yourself permission
to change and adapt your personality.
So I think you're onto something and definitely that Martin Short is onto something.
I used to talk about this a little bit with Tim Beck, arguably the founder of modern psychotherapy,
which is often called cognitive therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy.
And we talked about multiple personalities because I can be a completely different
person with my students. I really have the professor hat on. I'm patient, kind, you
know, I'm curious about what's going on with them. Like, that's Professor Angela or who
I try to be. But then when I'm with my husband, you know, it's a different Angela. So when I'm on a Zoom call with students
and I get off the Zoom call,
the tone of my voice even changes.
I'm like, okay, so that is due in a week.
All right, are we good?
Okay, great question, Francisco.
And then click leave call.
And it's like, hi, Levy.
The register changes.
It's very different.
But here's what Tim Beck said, and I really agree.
He thought as a psychologist and as a therapist
that all of us have multiple personalities
in a healthy way.
Because as he put it to me, he's like,
if you don't have multiple personalities,
if you're not able to be a professor with your students
and a spouse with your husband and a spouse with your husband and a mom with your
kids and a neighbor with your neighbors.
These are very different personality modes, he called them.
If you can't switch modes, then you have a real problem.
And so I think that part of personality change is like who we become in our 40s as opposed
to our 30s and this kind of gradual change, so personalities on the whole do change, but they tend not
to be like the difference between Martin and Ed.
It's kind of like a slow change.
But it is true that in a millisecond, we can switch our personalities if we switch modes.
And I think what I want to say to Joshua or to anybody who's like, you know, when I think of all the people that I am,
there are people that I like better. Like, there's an Angela mic that I don't think you've ever seen and very few people have.
It's a really hot-tempered, impatient, I mean, I have like thrown objects in my house, slammed doors like the door is going to fall off the
hinge, sworn like a sailor, but really a very mean sailor.
Like there's an angry Angela that I never show you, that I never show my students, that
unfortunately I have shown Jason and I've even shown my daughters.
I don't like that Angela.
So part of personality change is saying, you know, there are people in me I like better.
Maybe Martin's wife and Martin himself would say like Ed's a great person.
And like the question then is, how do I let Ed or cheerful Professor Angela or whatever
it is come out to play more?
And I think a lot of that is the secret to personality change is to put yourself in situations
or to bring out the mode that you like best.
Unfortunately, I also have a version of Mike
that I don't like, that I don't see very often,
that very few people thankfully have seen.
What do you not like about this Mike I never see?
I think it's the same type you just described, right?
For me, I would say that is more
when I am really stressed and have no time.
And so it's a time pressure and a stressful situation.
That's the mic I like the least
because normally I try in every way
to bring people with me and whatever.
And occasionally that's the slam the door, everybody's screwing this up,
get out of my way, I'm going to make it happen and I'm going to do it right.
Well, that's different from my worst, Angela,
because I have diagnosed myself as getting into these tornadoes of anger
only when I feel, it's not just stress, I have to feel like people don't appreciate me.
So if I feel like I have heroically done
the noble selfless thing,
and that I am overlooked and unappreciated,
that's what activates super angry Angela.
So this little bit of insight, by the way,
because I think we all have a part of ourselves,
a mode that we think is dangerous and bad.
For me, like it took me years, but I've tried to put myself in situations where that doesn't
happen.
I mean, part of it is if I see that I'm starting to martyr myself and like starting to say,
well, there you go, I sacrifice this and that and the other.
I'm like, uh-oh, I'm setting myself up for angry Angela to come out.
And it would honestly be better for everyone if I were a little more selfish now so as
to prevent Chernobyl later.
I also love the alliteration, angry Angela.
Let me share this.
I thought it was interesting.
This is not from a psychologist.
This is a journalist who is a staff writer at the Atlantic.
Her name is Olga Hazan, and she is the author of Weird,
The Power of Being an Outsider in the Insider World.
But she wrote several articles
about trying to change her own personality.
She just did an experiment with an N of one.
But she wrote this article,
"'I gave myself three months to change my personality.
"'The results were mixed.'"
Which I think, what an honest and true statement
for anyone trying to change their personality.
So to become more extroverted,
she made goals to meet new people.
To decrease neuroticism, she said,
I'm going to meditate often and make gratitude lists.
To increase agreeableness,
she wanted to start sending out supportive texts,
supportive cards,
think more positively about people who frustrated her,
and this is my favorite, she says, quote,
regrettably hugging.
So she hugged people.
Oh, I love this curmudgeon.
To increase extroversion, she took an improv class to help reduce social anxiety.
And then this is my favorite, quote,
to cut down on how pissed off I am in general, and because I'm an overachiever,
I also signed
up for an anger management class."
So she does all these things to try to change her personality.
And then what happens?
Again, in the end, she said the results were mixed.
She quotes a late psychologist, Carl Rogers, who just said, when I accept myself just as
I am, then I can change.
And so she said, I'm going to try all these things.
I kind of am who I am, but I was able to change slightly when she took a personality test.
She had increased an extraversion going from 23rd percentile to 33rd.
Her neuroticism had gone from extremely high to very high, but directionally, none of it changed that much.
It's not that little change, honestly.
If you go from 23rd percent to 33rd 33%, I mean, just think about that.
Like if you're taking some standardized tests, you're like, well, and then I did some prep
and I went from the 23rd percentile to the 33rd percentile.
I think you would be like, that was pretty good.
That's like, let's see, in technical terms, huge.
What's interesting is that this N of 1 experiment has been done.
So there have been researchers who essentially help people make plans.
They're like, okay, I want to be more extroverted. Okay, what do extroverted people do?
It is a little as if, actually. It's like, if I acted as if I were extroverted, what would it be?
And then you literally just make plans. You're like, okay, if I'm in class, then I will raise my hand.
You know, if I see a friend, then I will go over and hug them. Like, you know, you make all these if-then plans.
And the research shows that it can lead to some short-term changes in personality.
Honestly, I think in the research studies, not as big as 23rd percentile to 33rd percentile on average.
But I would say that there's some evidence that you can make plans to act as if you had a different personality.
You can, you know, in a way bring out that personality mode. But also, you know, it's interesting that she quoted Carl Rogers, because Carl
Rogers was one of the great humanist psychologists. Carl Rogers is no longer alive, but he preceded
Tim Beck and he had this approach to therapy that was like a lot of other humanist psychologists
based on the idea of unconditional positive regard.
That what we need to do, all of us, those of us who are really struggling and then those
of us who are like actually in a pretty good place in life, that all of us need to have
this rock solid foundation of unconditional positive regard to feel like you're okay,
that you're a good person, that you're worthwhile.
It's not often talked about these days, but I actually think Carl Rogers was right,
and I don't even see this as a contradiction.
I think we can say, like, you know what, I would like to be a little more cheerful.
You know what, I would like to not bring out angry Angela as much.
Like, I want to change.
And also, at the same time, without contradiction to say, I'm okay.
Like, I am in an unconditional way a human being who has a certain amount of worth
and dignity, and I both want to change and also feel accepting of myself.
So I don't know if that sounds like a contradiction to you,
but I think the healthiest people are exactly that.
They feel okay with themselves in an unconditional way
and they also are looking forward and hoping to change for the better.
I say all the time to friends whatever, I think one of the healthiest things in
life is learning to hold seemingly contradictory things at the same time.
Somebody famous said something like that but I can't remember who. It's like George Orwell.
I'm sure someone famous said it not only earlier, but way better than I am.
But that's where I think I've come with myself too, in terms of me telling you how my personality
changed.
Like, hey, I accept myself for who I am and I want to become better.
And both of those, they're at contrast in some sense, at conflict, but like also true. Absolutely. I don't know if we've answered Joshua's question in, you know, any kind of
complete way, but I will say this, Mike, the reason why we've been talking about personality
so much of late is that it is something we all ask ourselves, you know, who am I and
who have I been and who will I be? And I think that's the justification for devoting
not only this conversation to Joshua's question about can I change, you know, how Malibu's
personality answer like more than you think, but also for having five more conversations,
each dedicated to one of the letters in ocean. And I really look forward to that because
when I look at my psychological selfie, as it were that because when I look at my psychological selfie
as it were, like when I look at my own personality with any kind of honesty, there's so much
there where I could understand myself better but also in important ways improve.
Yeah, and I think as we go into these next conversations, obviously we've invited you
all to take the Big Five inventory at Freakonomics.com
slash Big Five, but Angela and I will also share some of that anonymized data and share
with you our own psychological selfies.
And look, here's what I would say to Joshua, in the process of all this, I'm going to take
the challenge myself to say on each of these ocean principles, what's one thing that I
can do to maybe improve
in each regard?
Maybe we should do that.
Should we challenge ourselves to not only stare at ourselves
in the mirror, so to speak,
but also if we want to, to mold ourselves a little bit?
I want to.
So yes, I'm in.
Okay, I am up for that.
Awesome.
Well, we hope you'll join us over the next five episodes
as we explore the different aspects of personality.
Mike, I cannot wait.
And now here's a fact check of today's conversation.
In the first half of the show,
Angela says that the big five personality traits
apply across the lifespan and across cultures.
However, it's interesting to note that recent research from leading personality psychologists
has found that the quote, little six, better represent the prominent dimensions of child
temperament.
These factors consist of the original Big Five personality traits plus activity, which
includes elements like physical energy and motor activity.
In addition, certain academics have proposed that the Big Five may not necessarily apply to
certain isolated indigenous people. For example, researchers studying the Tamane,
a hunter-gatherer community in the Bolivian lowlands, found that members of the tribe
rated themselves as both reserved and talkative, suggesting that the trait of extroversion
may not pertain to them in the way
that it's typically conceived.
Later, Mike and Angela nearly recall the name of Jerry
Seinfeld's popular talk show, which
features the comedian chatting with guests over a cup of coffee
and driving around in a classic car.
The show is aptly named Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee.
Martin Short appears in season 11, episode 8,
in which he and Seinfeld drive around Los Angeles
in a 1982 Mercedes station wagon.
Finally, Mike and Angela have difficulty remembering
the origin of a famous quote about the importance
of being able to hold seemingly contradictory ideas at the same time.
They were likely thinking of a moment from F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1936 essay, The Crack-Up.
Fitzgerald wrote, quote, The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed
ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.
One should, for example, be able to see
that things are hopeless,
and yet be determined to make them otherwise.
That's it for the fact check.
Before we wrap today's show,
let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode
on nostalgia.
Hello, Angela and Mike.
This is Greg Ward in Austin, Texas. I really
enjoyed episode 190 on the point of nostalgia. One of my favorite experiences is when nostalgia
is sparked suddenly by a smell or environment. For instance, the feeling of St. Augustine grass
on my bare feet or the smell of an automobile mechanic shop, which instantly
takes me back to my childhood visiting my grandpa.
He was the town mechanic in a small Texas town.
Even a sunny but crisp, cool day can for a moment take me back to recess in middle school.
These feelings are brief and spontaneous, but guaranteed to bring a smile on my face.
Hey, Mike and Angela. and spontaneous, but guaranteed to bring a smile on my face.
Hey, Mike and Angela.
Thank you for recording my favorite episode
of No Stupid Questions to date on nostalgia.
I'm someone who has followed nostalgia throughout my life.
Growing up, I was enthralled by the wonder of Disney movies
and my family's trips to Disneyland.
And that led me to a career working
for the Walt Disney Company for 10 years.
During that time, I also got my degree in sociology,
where I sought to understand the healthiest and most fulfilling way to apply nostalgia into my life. Nostalgia has caused
many of my peers too long for the past, but in my experience, nostalgia works best as a present
moment experience, where you just kind of stop and internalize that lovely feeling right there
and appreciate this amazing human ability we have to feel something so wonderful for a second time.
Then you go back out there, you make wonderful new memories that years down the line will be your new
nostalgia moments. A philosophy is notice, appreciate, smile, and move forward.
Eventually, I moved on from Disney to a new career in social research, but I'm happy to say,
I still get a blast of present moment nostalgia anytime I hear When You Wish Upon a Star.
get a blast of present moment nostalgia anytime I hear When You Wish Upon a Star.
Hi, this is Steve from Seattle. Nostalgia has affected my life very much because I hosted a Twitter chat about nostalgia for a decade. The chat was originally focused on retro tech,
things like floppy disks and Tamagotchis and music players with physical media like the Sony Walkman and Discman.
It wasn't long until we were talking about holiday memories, road trips, and foods that
brought us back to simpler days.
I ultimately ended the weekly chat after 11 years, not because nostalgia has become any
less interesting, but because our platform, Twitter, now X, was imploding.
So now we're nostalgic about Twitter.
That was, respectively, Greg Ward, Alec Hester,
and Steve Case.
Thanks to them and to everyone
who shared their stories with us.
And remember, we'd love to hear your thoughts
on how fixed personality is.
How has your personality changed over time? Have you ever tried to change it?
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, the first episode in Mike and Angela's series
on the Big Five personality traits.
Should you be more open to stepping out of your comfort zone?
I have never regretted the ex-Penedict.
Oh really?
I have always regretted the ex-Penedict.
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 Lyric Bowditch is our production
associate.
This episode was mixed by Greg Griffin with help from Jasmine Klinger.
Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra.
You can find us on Twitter at NSQ Underscore Show and on Facebook at NSQ Show.
If you have a question for a future episode, please email it to nsq at Freakonomics.com.
To learn more or to read episode transcripts, visit Freakonomics.com slash nsq at Freakonomics.com. To learn more or to read episode transcripts,
visit Freakonomics.com slash nsq.
Thanks for listening.
I have friends who color code their books.
Which looks very cool.
It is, but I have one friend who,
his wife color coded all the books
and his thought was,
it's really hard to find any of my books.
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