No Stupid Questions - How Much of Your Life Do You Actually Control? (Ep. 15 Rebroadcast)
Episode Date: December 27, 2020Also: why do we procrastinate? ...
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Angela Duckworth.
Stephen Dovner.
We've been making this podcast for about seven months, and we're about to publish here our first ever repeat because of the holiday.
You okay with that?
With a rerun?
Yeah, I'm all right with that.
I was thinking, though, instead of calling it a rerun, I wonder if we should rebrand it, if we should psychologically manipulate our listeners into thinking that this perhaps familiar episode is the way that love actually
is for you, maybe even better.
Better and better and better.
Yeah.
Why don't we call it like no stupid questions, actually.
I can't improve upon that.
But Angela, I will say in all seriousness, it's been a lot of fun doing this with you.
And I hope you have a great break with your family.
Stephen, I want to tell you that I'm going to miss you.
Oh, it's nice of you to say.
Aw.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, how much of your life is in your control?
My teacher's unfair. They're always picking on me, and I get all these
marks on my record, and then I can't
go on the field trip.
Also, why do we procrastinate, and how can we stop?
I don't want to do that.
I really, really don't want to do that.
Angela, my question for you today is, I think, really hard, but perhaps important enough
to wrestle with.
Are you up for it?
Of course.
Okay.
This question arose when I was reading Maria Konnikova's new book, The Biggest Bluff.
So Maria, like you, has a PhD in psychology, but she's not an academic. She's a writer.
And this book is about her quest to become a professional poker player, starting from
scratch. So we made a Freakonomics Radio episode about her book that was called How to Make Your Own Luck.
And really what Maria is wrestling with throughout that book is the relationship between luck and skill.
She's doing it in the context of poker, but it's easy to extrapolate into our daily lives.
So here's the passage that made me think of you.
There's an idea in psychology, she writes, first introduced by Julian Roeder in 1966 called the locus of control. When something happens in the external environment,
is it due to our own actions? In other words, skill or some outside factor, chance? People who
have an internal locus of control tend to think that they affect outcomes often more than they
actually do. Whereas people who have an external locus of control think that what they do doesn't matter too much.
Events will be what they will be.
Typically, an internal locus will lead to greater success.
People who think they control events are mentally healthier and tend to take more control over their fate, so to speak.
Meanwhile, people with an external locus are more prone to depression
and when it comes to work, a more lackadaisical attitude. So, Angela, my question has two parts.
One, is it indeed better to generally have an internal locus of control, as Maria Konnikova
writes? And if so, if I am more inclined toward the external, if I tend to feel life is more happening to me rather than me making it happen, how can I shift to have a more internal locus of control?
It's a great passage from a great book from a great author.
So I'm glad to be asked this question.
I am going to throw in a bonus answer here.
You didn't ask me if I had an internal locus of control.
No, I know where your locus of control is.
Yeah, you probably do know where it is.
I have an internal locus of control.
And yes, it is generally a good thing.
It correlates positively with just about every life outcome you can think of,
you know, income and well-being and
not going to jail, etc. I guess my suspicion, the counter, would be that it might also correlate
with things like arrogance and narcissism. In other words, no characteristic that we think of
is unabated good all the time, obviously. Well, you're right that it can't be a complete recipe for a good
human. And there might be instances in which it could be bad. I am not aware of a lot of research
on the downsides of an internal locus of control. In my data, when I measure things that are conceptually siblings to locus of control, like growth mindset,
or self-efficacy, or optimism. I don't find negative correlations with good things. Now,
that might be because I'm studying teenagers, and maybe I'm not measuring all the right outcomes.
So, I would have imagined that your answer would be something along the lines of, well,
of course, you want to have an internal locus of control when you're talking about things
that you actually can control.
But it's really, really important to acknowledge that despite your best efforts, or maybe despite
your worst actions, that there's going to be a lot of countervailing
activity from institutions or society, systemic things, other people, and so on that you can't
control. So that's, I guess, the answer I was expecting to hear. But it sounds like you're
saying that the more internal you have, at least for teenagers who you've studied, the better it
is, yes? Yeah, I mean, you asked me a really straightforward question, which is, what's the correlation? Is it positive? Is it negative? And the answer is also simple,
which is it's positive. But I think we should move on to the more interesting question.
More than thinking about what's the downside, I do think we should think, like, is it a fully
accurate view of the world to think that you can control what happens to you? Or are people who are very
aware of all the things like luck and social inequality and racism and the list goes on,
is that a more accurate view of the world? The idea of locus of control goes all the way back,
as you said, to Roeder in the 60s when he was developing this idea. It was really on the heels of behaviorism,
where the idea that you would even have any thoughts in your head, expectations about the
future, that didn't really matter because we were basically all just animals responding in very
mechanical ways to stimuli, punishments, rewards, etc.
Is that really true? As recently as the 1960s, you're saying that was the standard
school of thought? Well, certainly the early 20th century was definitely behaviorism. And it was
pretty dominant. And that's why when you have a psychologist like Roeder, and then also like Al
Bandura, who is still with us, he's in his 90s. And at Stanford, he has a very similar idea called
self-efficacy. They wanted to make the
point that people are not just lab rats responding to rewards and punishments. They are thinking,
and they're projecting into the future and wondering, if I do this, is it going to pay off?
And so it really was a conception of human nature, which was much more agentic,
having agency and having free will and having an influence on your future,
as opposed to just, oh, when the environment does this, I do that. That's not just like
stimulus response. May I once again express my surprise and I would say borderline exasperation
at the idea that it wasn't until the early or even mid-20th century that psychologists
came to the conclusion that people, as you
put it, make sense of their environment and forecast into the future.
I have thoughts.
Does everything we know even about the ancients not persuade us that people have been thinking
about this for millennia?
Well, I think what happened is that when behaviorism had its heyday with Skinner at Harvard and
the major figures in experimental psychology, all testing
lab rats and shocking them and feeding them and seeing how well they could move around lab rat
behavior. I think maybe we did go too far and say like, oh, everything is about stimulus and
response. Everything is about reward and punishment. It was also a little bit of a desire to be like
physics, where there were these laws and the laws were very elegant and simple. There were only, you know, three variables in the equation. So, it's true that probably before this early 20th century movement, most human beings would say, as a matter of common sense, of course we have thoughts. Of course we have interpretations of reality and hopes and dreams and insecurities and all those things will determine
what we do. Okay, so Skinner and his cohort made us throw our common sense in the trash for a decade
or a few decades, maybe. Well, it's not that Skinner was wrong. It's true that in some ways,
we are very much reacting to where we've been rewarded, where we've been punished. I think where behaviorism went too far is to say, that's all there is. If you pay me a million dollars to eat a bag of
black jelly beans, I'll hate it, but I'll do it anyway. So everybody responds to incentives and
punishments. But to go so far as to think that we're just like lab rats, and even lab rats are
just like machines. You put an input and then the output comes out. That was not correct. Okay. So you say that generally now for teenagers especially,
but for most of us, an internal locus of control is desired. You wanted to give some more nuance
about what that is or isn't. Well, I'll say this, you know, in the measures of locus of control,
measures of locus of control, one of the very popular ways to measure it is you give people a forced choice. Like you get a bad grade on a test. A, you didn't study enough. B, the test was
unfair, right? And this forced choice is supposed to get to your inclinations. Like in an ambiguous
situation, where are you biased? Are you biased to think that the outcome was mostly of your own doing or mostly outside of your control? And I just don't want people to come away from this conversation thinking that believing that everything is under your control is a good thing. That can't be an accurate worldview, and it's kind of obviously a dysfunctional view.
Say, for example, I have a miscarriage.
You don't want to, like, misunderstand that as something that I could have prevented,
when in almost all cases you can't.
So I just want to give that nuance.
But in the measurement of it, you force people into this black or white view in order to
reveal their underlying biases.
So let's take that experimental situation.
Let's say you're the kid and you just did really poorly on a test.
You have a choice there.
You can assume the test was unfair, the teacher didn't teach it well, or that it was more
you.
So let's say you're taking the external route, right?
Bad teacher, unfair, too hard to test, da-da-da.
You're saying people would benefit from being more internal.
How can you move across that border?
If you are a 15-year-old who gets a C- on their Algebra 2 exam, if your thinking is,
it's all the teacher's fault, I hate this class, I do think that is not going to be a productive
line of thought. I think the most productive thing is to control the controllables.
What you want to do is have two categories in your mind.
Here are the things that I can control.
Here are things that I can't control.
But I know there's not an empty column for things I can control.
And therefore, I'm going to choose to allocate my finite amount of energy and attention
to those things that are in the column of things I can control.
Can you give me an example of a thing that many people might think they can't control, but that you, Angela Duckworth, think you can?
Well, just to extend the 15-year-old example, I actually have surveyed lots of kids, and I've asked them questions like, what wishes do you have?
And kids can write down anything.
And they tell us like, they want to go on the field trip. Well, that was a pre-pandemic wish.
But you ask them, what's the obstacle that stands in the way? Why do you think you might not be
able to go? And then kids will say, oh, well, my teacher's unfair. They're always picking on me.
And I get all these marks on my record and then I can't go on the field trip. And that's
an example of a situation where like, I don't even know this teacher or this situation. It could be
true that the teacher does pick on this kid a lot, but I think it is nevertheless beneficial to say,
assuming that's all true, is there anything that you have control over that you can then work on?
And that is a longer conversation. There's usually
a pause, as the student thinks for the first time, like, I don't know, what can I do? And then
eventually, most 15-year-olds, in my experience, are able to say things like, well, I guess I could
also do my homework. And then we start to talk about when and where they're going to start doing
their homework and why they don't do that as often as they need to. Okay, so do either of those things,
identifying and thinking through the obstacle and then really pondering what they could do to make
the obstacle smaller, do either of those contribute to a long-term or even a short-term change from
external to internal locus of control for these kids? Yes, And I've done some of this with Gabrielle Ettingen,
the NYU psychologist, in our joint work, but also in her more extensive research.
What she finds is that when you ask somebody about a wish that they have, and then you first ask them,
why do you have that wish? And they tell you all the wonderful things that will happen
if they do end up doing better in this class, or if they are, you know, working out more often. And then after people identify an obstacle, should that obstacle be something which is outside
of their control, gently, but pretty persistently, Gabrielle will bring them back to objects that
they can control that might be contributing to their lack of progress on this wish. And that has shown in her random
assignment experiments to increase goal achievement, because people having identified an
obstacle can now make a plan to get over it or around it. And in two-year studies, she's found
that, for example, when you do this with people who are trying to eat more vegetables, even over
the next two years, they will eat healthier. So it's not just a very quick fix.
Let me ask you one last question on this topic. I'm curious about the modern conception of
internal versus external locus of control versus the ancients. Obviously, there were a lot of
things that were different. There was a lot of science that didn't exist. So you could see how you might
be much more susceptible to thinking that things were happening to you 2,000, 5,000 years ago than
you making them happen. I get that. But do you feel we've perhaps tipped a bit too far in some
ways in that many, many people seem to feel that they should be able to have a lot more control driven by themselves, even though there are a lot of other people out there who have their own wants and needs.
And institutions and society at large limit the ability of any one person to make happen what they might want to make happen.
That wasn't so much a question as a kind of cranky old man observation. So, de-crankify me.
I want to be cranky with you, if that's okay. So, I do believe that focusing on things that
you can control is helpful, because what else are you going to do? And frankly,
the column of things that you can control is never completely empty, or rarely so.
But I do think there's two cautionary notes that I'd like to be cranky about with you.
One is, and it's kind of personal, but I'm going to share it. So I use the miscarriage example as a hypothetical, but I did actually have a miscarriage.
I now have two healthy daughters, but I remember calling my mom and saying, I had a miscarriage.
I'm, I don't know what I said. I was devastated. I'm sure I was crying. And my mom started telling
me about things that I should have, could have, would have done to prevent this miscarriage.
And I was like, mom, actually, just so you know, largely, these are not within the mother's
control.
And I do think it didn't even occur to her that there could be circumstances beyond my
control.
So that's a personal note.
But let me give you a sort of social science example, which I think is really sobering.
So Sholeh Allen is a great economist, and she did this random
assignment study in Turkey, which is her native country. And what she taught kids was basically
to have a growth mindset, to believe that their abilities could change, and to have grit. So she
did this week-long training for teachers, and the teachers had a curriculum, and then they taught it
to these kids. And the random assignment experiment was to ask,
does that treatment actually change outcomes for the children? And in some ways, they're very
similar to what we were just talking about. Yes. In fact, on standardized tests, even I think up
to two years later, kids who are taught essentially to believe in their abilities, their destiny,
like they actually did better. So, so far, it sounds like a fairy tale. So far, it sounds like,
yay, yay, internal locus control. All right, bring on the villain.
Okay, well, here's the subplot. So, these same children who now are working harder and doing better academically, they're asked in the study whether they want to share a toy that they've
been given as a prize. Do they want to share it with other children? Now,
if they're told that the other children were in schools where like they weren't part of the same
contest, then the kids are just as generous as the kids in the control condition. So far,
still a fairy tale. But if there's some ambiguity about whether the kids that they would be gifting
this to could have maybe earned it on their own, then the kids are
more selfish. And one could imagine this at the policy level as a kind of insensitivity to
circumstances that are beyond the individual's control. When, for example, you're living in
poverty and someone says like, you know... If only you'd work a little bit harder.
Exactly. And it just suggests to me that we have to be very careful in how we encourage kids to
think about their agency and their ability to make their lives better.
Because while I do want everyone in the world to believe that there's something that they
can do, I definitely don't want anyone in the world to think that there aren't real
structural problems that you just don't know about.
What you're saying really, especially when it comes to policymaking,
is that what it really is, is an argument for understanding cause and effect better.
In all its complexity.
In all its complexity, which is something that societally,
I feel, is one of the things that we do quite poorly.
Oh gosh, like horrifically badly.
And I blame our beloved media. I blame our beloved politicians.
I even blame people like you and me
whose jobs it is, really,
to teach people about this
because, plainly,
we're not doing a very good job.
So here's to continuing
our extremely uphill battle.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions,
Stephen and Angela discuss how to tackle that project that you've been putting off for weeks. So an example would be you're writing
a book and it's just, oh, the dread. My stomach hurts the minute you say those words.
Stephen, I have a question for you.
I'll answer it.
And I want you to answer it right away.
And that is, do you procrastinate?
And if you do, why?
As Mark Twain once said, maybe.
I mean, half the quotes attributed to Twain have nothing to do with Twain.
But anyway, as he may have said, why put off till
tomorrow what you can put off till the day after tomorrow? So, do I procrastinate how much and why?
Yes, of course I do, but much less than I used to.
In your callow youth.
So, I think the why, and maybe I'm wrong, you'll tell me, you're the psychologist,
you'll tell me, you're the psychologist. But the why, I think, is usually tied to a fear of some kind. It's not a laziness. It's not about time management. It's more about emotional regulation.
Can you give me an example?
Yeah, for instance, let's say I have a week where I have a lot of work that I care about,
like writing for Economics Radio, and maybe I'm writing some book chapter or something. And so
that's the kind of work that over the years, I've gotten pretty good at not procrastinating at.
But if there's also like a 10-page form that somebody sends me that has to be filled out for
media insurance, that's the kind of thing that I dread and procrastinate. And I think about it,
it's like, why? It's so stupid. It's not that hard, that I dread and procrastinate. And I think about it, it's like,
why? It's so stupid. It's not that hard, although, to be fair, a lot of paperwork of that sort is
written in a way that makes me just want to jump off a bridge because it's painful to read. It's
so bad and confusing. But I think the reason that I procrastinate things generally is because they
are intimidating or novel, and they seem like they are going to be really difficult
and painful. And in fact, once you actually do them, they're often not as bad. So that's,
I think, the why. And so I'm constantly trying to train myself to, rather than procrastinate
by keeping something at arm's length, at least take a look at it and try to get it in my brain
and get it cogitating and get myself to believe that, you know what, when I do have the time to attack this, it's probably not going to be as
difficult as I think or as gruesome as I think. So you said that in your youth, you procrastinated
more. Was it different then? Were you actually in part procrastinating because you were just lazy
or not good at managing time? Or has it always been that it's this emotional charge that you're trying to avoid a dread of some kind?
Right. So I think there are two reasons for why I procrastinate less now than I did then.
One is experience.
I mean, it's one of the better things about getting older.
Maybe the best thing about getting older is that you actually can look back through your mental file and remember the times that you profited from not procrastinating or suffered
from procrastinating. And I can definitely think of those. But the other thing that's different now
than when I was a kid, let's say a student, is I just didn't care that much. Like if you had a
10-page paper to write about something that you didn't care about, of course, it's more appealing to put it off.
Whereas now the luxury of A, being an adult and the super luxury of being an adult who gets to
do work that I want to do. And I realized that puts me in a really small fraction of humankind.
It means that when I sit down to work on something,
I have a real interest in it and a real drive for it. That said, I love deadlines and I need
deadlines. Freakonomics Radio is a weekly show, the finished script, which includes the interview
sections, the narration sections, all those things. It's usually about eight or nine thousand words.
That's the equivalent of like writing a chapter, and we do it every week.
It's a totally crazy amount of work to do from a reporting and research and production
and writing and editing angle.
It's too much.
But we get it done, and I think we get it done only because we have the deadline, and that if we didn't have the deadline, I personally would be about 90% less productive than I actually am.
And so to me, I don't procrastinate because I've built systems that make it really painful to do so, which is that there'd be a whole bunch of other people around saying, what the hell are you doing? Where's that script, etc.?
Did you ever hear this possibly apocryphal story of Voltaire,
who apparently had such a problem with procrastination that he gave his clothes to his butler,
and so he was totally naked, and then the butler was only allowed to give him his clothes back
if he had written a certain amount of text.
That's what economists, and maybe you you guys too call commitment devices, right? You back yourself
into a corner. So, presumably, your field of psychology has a great deal to say about
procrastination, right? The harms thereof and maybe even the upsides thereof. What can you tell us?
Well, mostly there are harms. So some would argue that procrastination
is a form of impulsivity. It would have a lot to do with failures to delay gratification.
In the marshmallow task, you're supposed to not do anything now so that you can
have two marshmallows later. It's really the same challenge, which is, are you going to put your
future self first, or are you going to put your future self first,
or are you going to privilege your present self?
So if you will ask me, like, well, what does being a procrastinator correlate with?
It's worse outcomes, like lower achievement, lower emotional well-being, etc.
It's definitely helpful to get out of a procrastination loop when it is causing you even more harm, like you didn't do
something. And now the fact that you haven't done it is even worse than just the task itself. Now
you're feeling bad about yourself for not doing the task.
A classic vicious circle.
Yes, absolutely. All that angst that you're feeling about not getting something done is
probably making you in an even worse position to do it. And I do think, by the way, that the escape hatch
from that spinning of your psyche is in some cases letting go of the thing altogether.
So I was surprised that you kind of summarily dismissed the upsides of procrastination.
Doesn't your friend and pen colleague Adam Grant preach some upside of procrastination vis-a-vis
creativity? If I recall correctly, procrastination vis-a-vis creativity.
If I recall correctly, procrastination is like you're keeping the file open on your desk. So rather than rushing to complete this thing. And close it. Yeah, you're keeping it in your mind.
And it reminds me of that idea that our minds are sharper when we know we've got more tasks to do
on the horizon. Like the Zeigarnik effect? The Zygarnik effect, yeah.
Yeah, that's one of my favorite effects in psychology.
All right, so tell us about the Zygarnik effect.
So the Zygarnik effect is named after the, I believe, Russian psychologist.
And psychiatrist, Bluma Wolfovna Zygarnik.
Zygarnik was sitting in a cafe or something, I was like really impressed by how many orders the waiter could remember and just seemed to kind of even defy
conceptions of what human memory could do.
If I recall correctly, it was more than just the open orders. It was like who's paid and
who hasn't paid, who's in a hurry, who's not, like all these things.
All these things. And then after all the meals are served and you ask the waiter,
okay, can you remember what waiter, okay, can you remember
what I ordered? And can you remember what she ordered? They can't anymore. So it's while the
task is unfinished, that your memory just like keeps it all. And then of course, you close the
file, and then you don't need it anymore. Like, I don't remember anything about how to raise a
four-year-old, but I apparently did it twice. But I don't need to know because guess what? They're 17 and 18. So I, for one, find that state of unfinished tasks incredibly exciting. One of my favorite
parts of every day is fairly early in the morning, have some coffee. I try to do some
good reading to start to get some good words in my head and some good ideas and whatever.
But then I sit down and start to do some tasks and the tasks are email
and scheduling and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And what I used to do is try to be very methodical about it, make
lists with all kinds of reminders.
And I realized I would take like 15 minutes to write a little to-do list.
And then it kind of wouldn't help that much because I'd have to keep looking
at the list and going back and then check it off the list and And then it kind of wouldn't help that much because I'd have to keep looking at the list and going back and then check it off the list. And it made it longer, slower, less creative and less
pleasant. And then I just started not making a list at all, but just keeping it all in my head.
As if you were this waiter.
And there's an excitement of having that file open or having those uncompleted tasks.
So I do think there's something about the way the mind engages with uncompleted tasks that is appealing and, for me, borderline intoxicating.
So I can sort of buy this argument from some people, maybe,
that procrastination is a useful creative tool.
And that's Adam's argument, among others, right?
That when you are not closing the file,
you actually have an opportunity to have new ideas, to connect some ideas that have been
rolling around in your mind, and you realize that they go well together,
but you needed that extra time. You sound not enthusiastic about that notion.
Well, one of my favorite pastimes is just arguing with Adam. So I usually
just start with the contrary position, see where it takes me. But no, I agree. I just wonder about
the term. So I would not call that procrastination. Say, for example, I'm working on a problem.
Like, how do you teach ninth graders how to be nice to each other? I think if I decided, okay, I have time on Tuesday at nine o'clock to think about that
problem.
I have all the way till 10 o'clock.
And then that was it.
That would result in a dramatically worse solution than if I started thinking about
it on Tuesday, but then like simmering in the back.
Almost all good ideas are like this.
And therefore, we don't want to close the loop or check off the box too early.
But I don't call that procrastination.
I think when people say, oh, gosh, I procrastinate, there's automatically this negative association.
That's because we are using that word procrastination to refer specifically to times where we regret having delayed and we wish we had done it earlier.
Yes. I take your point fully that it's different. The simmering is not procrastination.
Well, I think this is all especially relevant to this coming fall. Many students, whatever grade
level they're in, are going to be in some kind of asynchronous learning through digital technology environment for the first time in history, really. And I think
that procrastination, like at some point, please watch this 30-minute video,
is going to be a real problem.
And so if psychology has accomplished anything, I would like to think it has accomplished some
guidelines for getting things done, for setting goals and so on.
So what do you have?
Okay.
The first tip is to break down a big task into small tasks.
Chunk it.
Exactly.
Chunk.
I think of the chunky chocolate bar.
Oh, yeah.
I don't know if they still make that.
I'm afraid to bring up any food I like because we had the rum raisin fiasco a couple weeks ago.
That's right. Yeah, I'm coming around on the rum raisin.
Okay, so chunking, let's just use that word.
But basically, you take a big task and you break it out into a series of smaller tasks.
So an example would be you're writing a book and it's just, oh, the dread.
My stomach hurts the minute you say those words.
Right? I mean, it's terrifying,
horrifying, so hard. But if you think like today, my job is to make progress on the book,
who wants to do that? But if you say, okay, let me just take this one subtask. Like,
what I really need to do is review my editor's notes that they emailed me. That's a tiny fraction
of a fraction of a fraction of what you really have to do. But I think that works in part because the dread is often because when thinking of an enormous task,
you are kind of anticipating the enormity, the lack of progress. So Al Bandura, one of my favorite
psychologists, who, by the way, you were just talking about locus of control, was very much a pioneer in this idea
of human nature as being like agentic. Al Bander did a study of kids, these kids, I think they
were like elementary school kids, they were learning math. And so their condition was,
here's all this math, and here are all the pages you have to learn, etc. And the other condition
was a sub goal condition where they were given the same exact assignment, just framed a little differently. Like this week, do these pages. The next week, you would do these pages. And it was literally the same amount of work. And the kids who had this divided up did better.
even when I'm just not making progress on something, I always think, got to do what those kids in the Bandura study did. I have to actually start breaking these downs into smaller
bites. And if I can, I'll do better. And if I can't, then it means I probably have to go even
smaller. So, especially when I was writing books, and even before I wrote books, when I was just a
student writing and so on, and I was intimidated by the assignment, I would think, you know,
I know I need to work on this, but I don't feel like I'm ready or I don't want to. But you know what? I'm just going to pull it
up. I'm going to get out the paper, pull up the file on the computer, and I'm just going to look
at the notes that I made, or I'm going to just look at what I wrote yesterday. And then the mind
engages. And the next thing I know, I've been writing for two hours.
And to me, that's just self-deception.
I'm curious whether you think that's maybe sustainable and a good idea or ridiculous and to be avoided.
I do it myself.
So therefore, of course, I think it's a wonderful idea.
Let's take exercise.
Not a lot of people are writing books, but almost everyone's trying to exercise.
And sometimes when I think, oh, I should do an hour of online Pilates
class, it's like, I don't want to do that. I really don't want to do that. Well, maybe I'll
do it four o'clock. Well, maybe I'll do it six o'clock. Well, I guess it's not going to happen
today. So I'll do it tomorrow. Right. But here's a tricking of myself that I do that sounds a lot
like what you do, which is like, well, I'll just get into this tank top and like, whatever I could
still not do. Once I get into the tank top, I'm like, well, fine. I mean, I could just find the
right video. Don't have to do the video. And then you're right. As soon as you do like one minute
of an exercise video, it's in a way easier to keep doing the video than to stop doing the video.
So I think this idea of tricking yourself is maybe more about where you're putting your attention.
And if you're just putting your attention at the very front end of something, then you're not seeing the enormity,
right? So there's all kinds of ways to avoid dread. One is to literally make the task smaller,
but another one is to just put your eyeballs at the little front end, which isn't so bad.
And then by the time you get into it, you'll be in a different place.
So that we can be the opposite of Mark Twain.
Having said that, Mark Twain wrote a boatload during his life.
Gosh, can you imagine what he would have done if he weren't such a procrastinator?
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network,
which also includes Freakonomics Radio and people I mostly admire.
This episode was produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas.
And now, here's a fact check of today's conversations.
Stephen begins the procrastination conversation by quoting Mark Twain,
Never put off till tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow just as well.
Stephen was skeptical about the origins of this quote,
since so many pithy aphorisms are often falsely attributed to Twain.
In this case, the adage was published in The Galaxy magazine in 1870.
Twain apparently did author the quote,
but in the magazine, he comically attributes it to Ben Franklin.
Angela says that Voltaire's solution to his issues with procrastination
was to have his butler take his clothes
and only return them once Voltaire had written a certain amount of text.
This is actually a famous story about French poet and novelist Victor Hugo,
who authored Les Miserables and The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
Hugo would strip naked and ask his valet to hide his clothing
to prevent Hugo from
leaving the house when he needed to write. Finally, Angela was unsure about whether Chunky
candy bars are still in production. Nestle Chunky is a milk chocolate bar filled with raisins and
roasted peanuts. The candy was originally created in New York City in the 1930s, but instead of peanuts, it contained Brazil nuts and cashews.
In 1964, Chunky had its own pavilion at the World's Fair, where viewers could observe the candy being made at the aptly named Chunky Square.
Angela and Stephen will be happy to know that you can still purchase Chunky bars today.
That's it for the Fact Check.
No Stupid Questions is produced by Freakonomics Radio and Stitcher.
Our staff includes Allison Craiglow, Greg Rippin, James Foster, and Corinne Wallace.
Thanks also to our intern Emma Terrell for her help with this episode.
Our theme song is And She Was by Talking Heads.
Special thanks to David Byrne and Mourner Chapel Music.
If you'd like to listen to the show ad-free, subscribe to Stitcher Premium.
You can also follow us on Instagram and Twitter at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ
show. Also, if you heard Stephen or Angela drop a reference to a person or a study that you'd
like to learn more about, you can check out Freakonomics.com
slash NSQ, where we provide links to all of the major references that you heard here today.
Thanks for listening.
We raise little kids to think like, well, why don't you pull yourself up by your bootstraps?
Why don't you bake your own freaking cake, kid?
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