Pushkin the Happiness Lab. Listeners today, you're in for a special treat. If you're a regular listener of this podcast, you've probably already gotten a chance to hear from my good friend, the psychologist Ethan Cross. In fact, Ethan just visited the show as part of our recent how To season, where he gave us his top tips for hacking negative emotions. Lots of these ideas come from his new book Shift,
Managing Your Emotions so they don't manage you. But in that interview we only got to scratch the surface of the cool work that Ethan does in his Emotion and Self Control Lab at the University of Michigan. So to mark the publication of his new book, Ethan asked me to join him on stage for a live recording of this podcast at Choate Rosemary Hall, an independent school not
too far from my hometown in New Haven, Connecticut. In front of an audience of teen students, Ethan and I got to chat not about hacking our emotions, but about the effect that other people can have on our feelings and the big effects we can have on other people too. I definitely learned a lot from this conversation, and I think you will too. Welcome to the Happiness Lab Live
where we are coming in from Rosemary Hall. We have a fantastic audience of folks here for a really fun conversation with one of my favorite psychologists, Ethan cross.
So.
Ethan is a professor at the University of Michigan, both in the Psychology Department and at the Roth School of Business. He's the director of the Emotion and Self Control Lab. He's an expert on strategies we can use to control our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. As you might guess with an expertise the school, Ethan's a sought after consultant and speaker.
He's worked with famous CEOs, professional basketball teams, and has even been hosted at the White House, all to help leaders and folks who need it regulate their feelings and emotions. Ethan is the author of the national and international best selling book Chatter, The Voice in Our Head, Why it Matters, and How to Harness It. This book was chosen as one of the best new books of twenty twenty one by Washington BOSTHS, CNN, and USA Today. But he's just
written a fabulous new book. I'm so exciting. We're here on launch day today a fabulous new book entitled Shift Managing Your Emotions so they don't manage You. Ethan is already a regular on the Happiness Lab and I'm super psyched that he's agreed to help me out with this live episode today because we're going to be exploring an important topic, how we can harness the people around us
to feel happier. Please join me and welcoming to the Happiness Lab Live even talks all right, Ethan, So today we're talking about a bit of a paradox when it comes to our happiness and our emotions. You and I talk a lot about things we can do to be happier, and one of the biggest piece of advices that we often give is just that we can use other people to improve our happiness. Social connection is such a huge predictor of the way we feel. Often a thing that
we can do to make ourselves feel good. But if we're paraphrasing Jean Paul sart hell is, other people like other people can also be a little bit of a pain in the butt. As an expert in emotion, can you resonate with this like completely?
You know, other people can be our greatest ally or our worst enemy when it comes to managing our emotional lives. And what's really interesting to me about this issue is we don't get a user's guide for how to steer our interactions with other people. So I'm curious, and I think the rules here are no hands. But if you agree with something, clap? How many people here sometimes go to someone else to chat about a problem and find
that it just makes you feel worse? Often not our intention, but sometimes this happens with people we really care about. Sometimes it's our loved ones. I often joke, but mem is quite sick. Seriously, there are many people in my life that I am exceptionally close to. DNA determines those close connections, if you know what I mean. I don't talk to them about problems because I know that when I do, it's just going to take me down the
wrong path. And so I think it is critically important to understand how to harness your relationships with other people and also the way you interact with others to make sure those interactions contribute to fulfillment, happiness, and so forth, rather than push you in the opposite direction.
So let's take a deeper look at some spots where we get it wrong. One of the pieces of psychology that I think is really relevant here is some work on what's called emotional contagion, what's emotional contigion, and why can it kind of take us off track when we're dealing with other people.
So we are a social species. We are constantly looking to other people for how to understand ourselves. And what we have learned is that we actually catch feelings from other people quite eas So when you enter a room and you see people with a glum look on their face, sadly as professors, I think this may happen more often where they'd like to admit. Right, you go into the room and you see everyone, This immediately gives me information about what the temperature in the room is like, and
I experience that emotion and that could be adaptive. Right, It signals to me, maybe I've got to loosen things up. But we know that emotions cause what we call a ripple effect. They very quickly cascade into our own lives. And if you're not aware of this, like, you can catch the wrong set of feelings. And so we're all all vulnerable to this, for better or worse.
And I think one of the ways that I've seen this play out. Is that it's not just a like what on one contagion. It's not just like I might catch the emotions that you have, or I might catch the emotions from the audience, but then we tend to kind of transmit that to other situations, to almost like a virus. Right, So, say I have a conversation Ethan. This never happened with Ethan because obviously Ethan's a very happy person who's never gone. But let's say I have
a conversation with Ethan. He's feeling really frustrated, he's feeling really down. I leave that conversation, and then I go teach my class, and then I transmit that to my class, or I go on social media and I post something that's kind of frustrated and gloom or angry, like you can see what researcher Sigall Barsai calls these affective spirals, where it's like not just like one person catches one person's emotion, but it's kind of a spiral that I
can almost transmit to a community. So it sounds like this can be really bad when it comes to the sort of emotions that are kind of naturally free floating around. If we're dealing with negative emotion.
Well, with negative emotions, it can certainly be the case. And I think that's particularly true with social media, where we see the viral spread of negative emotions happening really really fast. You come across news and it affects you. You see someone else displaying a negative reaction, you feel it as well, and then you quickly pass it on to someone else on the feed, and then it just it just cascades further and further and further. And so this
is where I think knowledge is power. So knowing about how this works, I think for me and my experience as a human being is very powerful. So if I enter a room and I see one or two people are, you know, conveying facial expressions that I don't particularly think are conducive to the kinds of interactions I want to have, I'll try to loosen those people up and try to turn the you know, frown around.
And I think it's important to this idea of knowledge is power. I think in part when we're often in these social situations where around other people, it can be important to remember how affected we are by them, right. I think about this a lot in like workplace settings, right, where like you go to work and like the people on your team might be kind of feeling optimistic or they might be feeling not so happy, and like you're
going to catch that. But here we are at Chote today, I think this is so important in school context, right, whether it's like on your athletic team, whether it's in your classroom, Like, the emotions of one person are going to kind of transmit in this way that can be again sort of dangerous if they're negative emotions that we're dealing with.
Absolutely, how many people here have been told don't compare yourselves to other people. So it sounds beautiful that piece of advice, but easier bleeping said than done, right, Like is that easy to do? Just stop comparing yourself to other people. So talking about the way that other people can affect us, I'm reminded of the time that my daughter asked my daughter, who's you know in high school?
Wanted more screen time one night and was like really really supreme court level like litigation here arguing for more screen time. I was like, no, you know, and I said, well, no, other families give their kids more screen time. And then she comes back and goes, I thought you said, we don't compare ourselves to other people? Was pretty slick, huh. I mean I was proud inside, but I did not show it. I regulated that emotion and I just held true.
But what I realized in that moment was that that directive I gave, we don't compare selves to other people, probably the worst advice I could ever give, because it is not possible not to reference other people. We are constantly looking to others to make sense of who we are. Right.
This is called social comparisons. That's how we operate, and I think the more we embrace that, the better, because then there's an opportunity to make social comparisons wiser, right, to steer those comparisons so that they don't maybe negatively affect us. There's also the opportunity to benefit from this emotional contagion effect. Right Like earlier on when everyone else was clapping, did that feel good to folks here? I felt great? I loved it. I remember I was telling
Laurie the story earlier. When I was in college, one of the most memorable classes I ever took was a class on communications, and the instructor said, there is an art to being a good audience member. I'm scanning you all right now to see who's going to get an A versus an F. A couple of f's here, right. So the art to being a good audience member involves a gentle kind of raising your cheap bone, smiling, not your good I love it, keep going.
And pointing at once. Today it was like really kind of kindly smiling and looking.
At I mean, it's fine to do that. In your head, you could say this is terrible. Yeah, I can't wait to go back to what I'm doing. It doesn't matter for us up here, because we're catching these signals from you. You're conveying information to us, and so you can use that. If you know how this works, you can use it to your benefit to make other people feel better or not right. And so that's where the knowledge is power
for how I think all this works. And we'll talk more about social comparison, I'm sure, but yeah, well.
Let's come into it now, because I think you know, we were just talking about. Emotional contagion is one way that we catch other people's emotions in person and also online. As you mentioned, I think especially online, but also in person.
Another way that other people negatively affect our emotions is through social comparison, and that can feels regularly frustrating because sometimes even in a situation where you feel like you're like objectively kind of doing okay, if you see somebody doing better than you, it can make you feel kind of crappy, whether that's oh, they had a better vacation than me, or you know, again here we're in high school. They're getting better grades than me, they'd perform better than me,
they're doing better at work, making more money. You know, for folks in the adult world, it seems like all of it makes you feel kind of bad about yourself.
And it's always possible to find someone who's outperforming you. I mean, it's remarkable we can always find that person sometimes. I mean, a lot of people describe the experience of being on social media, A lot of people here on social media, I get. So anyone ever feel like when you're on on Instagram or whatever platforms you're on that it's kind of like navigating landlines, like you're going through it.
You're feeling good, you're seeing the funny movie great, great, great, and then you catch something that, oh, crap, I suck, Like does anyone ever have that experience? Just me yes, So you go and know when it's going to happen. And we do know from lots of research that most of the social comparisons we make, and we are doing these comparisons all the time, do tend to push us in the negative direction. So we make comparisons against people who a outperforming us in some way, we don't feel
great about our lives. You can actually reframe those comparisons to your benefit. And up until I knew about the science here, I was just a victim of these comparisons. I feel kind of glum, you know. I go lay on the couch, maybe put some washcloth on my head. Oh, I'm such a failure having lived up to my blah blah blah.
That was a joke. Cook, he's trying to make it.
The Yeah, we won't even try that one again because that was just stre I like this where you could just edit it.
We just edit it up. If the joke doesn't work in there, this is good.
So here's what you do. You can flip it. So now when I come across that situation, I think, Wow, they achieved this, so can I. And now it's not competition now, it's this is information that I can use to try to aspire to reach that goal. That's a little little reframe we call it. That is powerful because it neutralizes that negative social comparison is, which is inevitable.
And now that I know how to do it, and you know, this was a big reason for writing this book, is if you have the tools to push your emotions around, it becomes really easy to do it. It doesn't have to be super complicated. You can also do it in the negative direction. You come across someone who is doing a lot worse than you, and maybe you think yourself, oh my god, what if this happens to me? Right? That makes people really anxious. Sometimes rather than thinking about
making a comparison and feeling that way, you could flip it. Wow, I'm so grateful this hasn't happened to me. Simple switch puts you in a totally different direction. Do you ever do this when you make social comparisons, like tell the world, lurie you make you have be silent on you making the comparisons. It's been just about me so far?
Yeah, I think so. This is one of the one of the studies I teach in my class is just like so profound at how not only how bad social comparison makes us feel, but how much like sometimes when we're socially comparing, we just like don't have any justification for it at all. And it's a study that happened, a very famous study with in sports researchers went and
they looked at olympians who were on the stand. So these are people who won gold, silver, and bronze medals at the Olympics standing on the stand, and what they did was they videotape their facial expressions to see who was kind of who was feeling which emotions right, and so first the gold medalist, what are they feeling? Well, they're feeling like happy, elated, they're smiling. It's fine, right, they're best in the world. Right now we cut to
this silver medallist. What are they feeling? There's second best in the world, like literally better in whatever their sport is than billions of other people. What emotions are they experiencing If you analyze their facial expressions, it's not happiness. It's emotions like contempt, deep sadness, grief. Like they're not even in the positive camp anymore. They're just experiencing only
negative emotions. Why there's a really obvious social comparison there when you won the silver medal, you really almost got gold, but you didn't get it. So what are you feeling. You're not feeling like, you know, slightly less happy than the best in the world, even though you are the
second best in the world. You're feeling awful, right, But the reason I like this study is that it also points to a way that we can do better because those researchers also measure the emotions of the bronze medalist, the person who did third. Right now, you might think, what the silver medallist is feeling really terrible and contemptuous and experiencing grief, then the bronze medalist is going to be doing even worse, like they're going to be totally miserable.
Right turns out not so. The bronze medalist is showing incredible elation, huge smiles, sometimes even huger smiles than the gold medalist, which is weird. So you ask the question, what's going on, Well, what's going on again is social comparison? Who's the bronze medalist comparing himself against too not gold?
Because that was like several seconds or several points or whatever away the bronze medalist is saying, oh my gosh, you know, if I was just a little bit slower, if I perform a little bit worse, I wouldn't be getting any metal at all. Like I would just be clapping from the back of the stands going home empty handed. I feel awesome. The bronze medalist comparison makes him feel good.
And this is why always joke with my students that when you're trying to fight social comparison, you shouldn't look for the silver lining, because the silver maid you usually look for the bronze lining. I want to go almost like it was a good joke, thank you.
But but Laurie, like the way you just described it so completely read with that route to harnessing social comparisons. But when you describe the silver metallist as, hey, you are number two out of seven.
Billion people on the planet right now.
That's a reframe too that the silver medallist can use that is really powerful. And if there's one big picture lesson that I would love all of you to take away from this conversation with us about managing your emotions, it is that you can be proactive in how to do it. Oftentimes we just stumble into emotional reactions. We make the comparison, it leads us in a particular direction, and then we just kind of ride it out until
it peters out. But you could get in there strategically doing the kinds of things that Laurie and I are talking about to nip those reactions in the bud, or extend them, or lengthen them and increase their intensity, whatever you want to do, if you understand the specific tactics that exist.
And so when we get back from the break, we're going to talk about some tactics we can use to deal with not just the way other people affect our emotions, but the way other people affect our behavior. The Happiness Lab that we'll do what All Right, we're coming back from the BAK the Happiness.
Lab and Show grows all live.
It is returning. Okay, So before the break, we were talking about ways that other people affect our emotions. Now I want to get into ways that other people affect our behavior what we're actually doing. And there's a long history of this in the field of psychology.
Right, other people are in a position to push us around in all sorts of ways. They can affect the way we think they can affect the way we feel, they can affect the way we behave Okay, so just just look at Laurie and I right now. Anyone noticed something similar, Like, they're all different ways we could have chosen to sit Like I could have done this. I was going to do a lotus position yoga. I can't actually do it, but like a lot I could. I could. I could be like.
This, put your hands or popped over.
I could, you know, But we're like this, we're mimicking.
Cross knees, both looking exactly right and.
Kind of upright. So there is this chameleon effect where if you are in the presence of someone in particular at your level or above someone you admire, you tend to automatically mimic their behavior. So if you've ever been in an interaction where someone starts doing this, you cross your hands, and then the person next to you crosses your hands. Anyone ever like witnessed this kind of mimicking
that occurs. This is endemic to how we function, and interestingly enough, it can improve rapport between people because there's this matching between us.
In fact, thing they often tell you to do if you want to become friends with somebody. Get to know people, let somebody else know that you're listening to them, is to what's called mirror their behavior, So not like perfectly copy it, but kind of do it. Turns out this is actually a podcast or technique. When you're doing it lives for me.
To copy your actions.
So you make you feel like I have you been doing?
I feel very welcome, presents, warm cup of tea.
But what are some of the consequences of this? It means that, like naturally, without realizing it, we're like soaking in the behaviors of others and copying.
In it other people. Look, the world is messy, the world is unpredictable. We are constantly as human beings striving to make sense of how to optimally navigate this world. You, as someone who I can trust, someone I admire, you're giving me all sorts of information. So I'm taking that in and I'm using it to guide my own behavior unconsciously because I could count on you. Now, if it's someone else who I don't know and I don't trust,
I'm not going to mimic them as much. Now, you can have fun with this effect if you want, Like you might be talking to someone and you could push its limits, you know, like Laurie does this when she interviews new graduate students. I'm just joking about that's going to be an added But but you could you can do a little bit of experimenting to see how this
actually operates. It is a powerful, powerful phenomenon. And if you see someone mimicking you, I think it's a sign of a flattery, like they actually hold you at some level of esteem. Now, if you're not mimicking, don't take that the wrong way. If you're not being mimicked, right, you could reframe it.
So, but that's kind of the behavioral copying we do just kind of unconsciously sometimes when we see other people's behavior, it affects the way we think about things and reason about things. This is a phenomenon that's often been called social benchmarking.
What's that. This is the this wonderful study where I don't think you could actually do this nowadays in the lab. This was done maybe sixty years ago, this study, and participants came into the lab and they were actually injected with adrenaline, but they didn't actually know it was adrenaline. I think they were told it was vitamins or something to that effect, and so they've got these kinds of arousal symptoms. Right, they're like energized physiologically. They don't quite
know where this energization is that a word. We're gonna run with it. It sounds okay, okay, energization is coming from. It's definitely not a word that energized feeling. They don't know where it's coming from. And what the experimenters do. In one condition, they have this actor come into the room and he acts like you fork like she's just super super happy. And in another condition, have an actor
come in and he's really angry. And what the experimenters want to see is does the subject who's been shot up with this adrenaline does the behavior of the other person change the way that they behave Right, So you've got all this feelings, but you're not sure how to make sense of it. And so what they end up finding is that when you're in the presence of someone acting really angry, you start acting more angry as well. If you're in the presence of someone who is acting
you for, you kind of start behaving happier too. So it's another example of how other people have a potential to powerfully shape the way we ourselves respond and in this case, behave. And that is particularly true when you are not sure of how to behave, or you are not sure how to make sense of what is going on inside you.
And I think that particularly fits with this study, right, you know, these subjects are shot up with this chemical like they thought they took a vitamin, and now all of a sudden they're feeling like this sense of energy, like they don't know what's going on, and so they look to this other person to be like, oh, we're angry now, we're angry at the experiment. Oh we're you
for it. But and that happened in this weird, strange, you know, possibly an ethical now experiment, But this happens all the time when we have an experience that we're kind of not sure how to make sense of, and we have to look to other people.
So this reminds me of a story with my oldest daughter and a couple of years ago, she transitioned to a new school. It was a lot more demanding academically than the school she was in before. And I go up into her bedroom one night and I noticed she is she's physically distressed and she's really getting worked up. She seems very very anxious in a way I've never seen her experienced that emotion before. I go, Sweetie, what's
going on, what's wrong? And she goes she's like breathing heavy and like, I don't know what's happening, Like I'm feeling these things in my stomach and what's going on on? And so then that's my opportunity to get in there and help her interpret this uncertainessy sweety, that's your body doing exactly what it's supposed to be doing right now. You've got a really important test tomorrow, and you're experiencing this response that's saying, hey, you need to do a
little bit more studying before you go to bed. That's it. You're actually lucky, you're fortunate you're experiencing this because it's like a little internal queue telling you to prepare. And the moment I gave her that interpretation, her entire demeanor changed, right, the anxiety went way down, and she got into studying. So what I've done there is I reframed the experience
for her. I reframed her bodily reaction. This is taking a page straight out of research where you tell people to either make sense of their physiological symptoms of anxiety, either as a threat, oh my god, something may be wrong, versus a challenge like this is your body rising to the occasion and it worked like clockwork. And so that is one powerful potential that other people have for us.
Other people are often in a position to help us reframe our circumstances in ways that can really put us on the right trajectory.
Or the problem is that, or put us on the wrong trajectory. And I'm cognisance. We're having this conversation in front of a high school audience. You know, students. How many times have you you know, gotten a bad grade on something? Not really sure how to take it, but you show your parents or you show your friends, and they either react and like that's fine, it's like just one paper, or they're like, oh my gosh, like you
get that grade. I don't know how that's going to affect your college, Like what does that do to you? And so I think, you know, it's great that your daughter had a parent who's so careful to help her kind of rethink that emotion in a way. That's good. I worry so often we do this in a way that's like, that's not great. That like as parents, as ment towards our first reaction is to kind of feel upset at someone's failure rather than say like, oh, this
is great, this is a cool opportunity. But our reaction is changing how somebody else might be feeling about a particular situation they find themselves in.
I worry about it too, And that's why I think conversations like this, all the this aside with you all are exceptionally important because what knowing about how this works gives you the opportunity to do is number one. When people come to you, when your friends, your siblings, later on in life, other colleagues come to you for support, you are now mindful of the powerful role that you
exert on their emotional lives, and you should take that. Really, that's a serious responsibility that you have to do good for other human beings, and if you know how to steer their ways of thinking, you can really help them. But it also gives all of you the opportunity to be a lot more selective about who you talk to about the issues that you are struggling with. I think a lot of us don't think twice about who to go to for support. We just feel like we've got
to talk to other people. Let's find someone and let it out. And sometimes it's like flipping a coin. Who's going to push you down the wrong path or the right one? And it doesn't have to be that random.
So I think this is sometimes I think that's about other people affecting us. That's so frustrating. Is like people who are trying to do good, trying to give advice, trying to help, sometimes wind up messing us.
Uh.
And you've actually seen this in a new domain and a new paper that just came out where the kind of advice that people are giving, maybe even about the benefits of social connection and talking to people, can sometimes go awry. Tell me about the new Loneliness study.
So this is some really exciting research. It's led by a graduate student in my lab, MICHAELA. Rodriguez. And let me start by just asking all of you, how many if you here have heard quite frequently this messaging that being alone is bad for you, it's toxic, right you want to stay away from those experiences. This is a pervasive message right now. There's a huge amount of attention with this country and several others as well, there's i think a Minister of Loneliness in the UK and Japan.
There's a huge amount of attention trying to help people combat experiences of being alone and the feelings of loneliness that accompany those states. Being lonely has been compared to smoking cigarettes in terms of its impact on your health. And so what we've done across a series of studies is try to understand how the messaging that we are giving to society about this might help or hurt folks.
And so here's what we've learned. Number One, there's actually nothing intrinsically bad about being physically alone for you know, circumscribed periods of time forever chronicization, but being how many people here actually find value in being alone sometimes right, it can be kind of great, It can be restorative, It can be a source of creativity. So what we've seen in lots of research is how you think about being alone, is it good for me or bad for me,
directly impacts how you experience that site. If you think being alone is bad for you, if you're sitting at the lunch room and you're eating by yourself one day and you think, oh boy, not good. That's going to lead you to feel lonelier. If you think this is an opportunity to rest and restore be alone with my thoughts, this could be a good thing. You actually feel better when you spend time alone. Okay, and we see that over and over again. Here's why this is really important.
We did this analysis where we went back several years and we looked at every major news article that talk about being alone, and we coded it rigorously for are you describing this experience of being alone as something that's good for you or bad for you? Overwhelmingly, the media describes experiences of being alone as bad for you, as toxic.
Why that matters, We've shown if you give people news articles in one condition, they describe being alone as bad for you, and in another condition being alone is good for you. What information you are exposed to there directly impacts how you think about what this state does for you. So if you're reading these articles being alone is really bad for you, you think it's bad for you, and that in turn makes it bad for you. It's almost a self fulfilling prophecy.
So it's again it seems like another situation where hearing how other people are talking about it is affecting how we might think about it. Maybe we're kind of in between of like, yeah, in good points and bad points where you hear other people saying, oh, this is so bad, comes a social benchmark which affects your own emotions when you're in that state.
That's right, And what's really what's really tragic about this phenomenon is I genuinely think the folks who are behind this messaging are pushing it out there to help people. But what we are learning is that their attempts to help society maybe actually backfiring.
And so we want to avoid these moments where being around other people winds it backfiring. We want to avoid these moments when other people's emotions make us feel bad or other people's behaviors make us do something that might not fit with our goals. But how do we do that? Luckily, when we get back from the break, Ethan is going to help us out the Happiness Lab Live. I'm sure it is very hard, we'll do it. We are back
to Happiness Love Live from show. So now we're going to do the fun part of our conversation because we're going to talk about how we can kind of use other people in a way that really does make our emotions feel better, that does allow us to achieve our behavioral goals, and so on, a kind of set of like social hacks that can be these powerful tools for shaping our happiness ultimately. So let's go back to one
of the things we talked about before, emotional contagion. What are some hacks that we can use to kind of have other people like? What are some hacks that we can use to catch other people's emotions in ways that are good for us versus.
Bad for us? I think number one this more than any phenomenon that we talked about today. This is where knowledge is power is so unbelievably relevant. So I did a little bit of intervention a little bit earlier where I shared with all of you how your facial expressions can impact us up here. And some of you are have responded very nicely. Others I think there's still some room for improvement.
Maybe a lot smalling asleep. We're having this conversations a little early.
That's it's all good, So I'm joking, but knowing how this works can be really powerful. So as as someone who leads different groups and teams, I'm exceptionally sensitive to the kind of emotional displays in the group and the demeanor in the group. And if I find that one or two people are consistently showing up in a way that is cascading and impacting everyone else, I intervene right away.
I do it with compassion. I often explain how this works, and that is often enough, but it is really important to do it, because the entire spirit of the lab or the group can easily nose dive if I don't address this right away.
And I love the suggestion so much because I think sometimes when we hear about these effects of emotional contagion, we're like, oh my gosh, we're just totally at the mercy of the people around us, and I'm just like, my emotions are stuck. But what you have to understand when you hear those effects is like, that also means
you have agency. Right if you roll into your team and everybody's kind of feeling down, you have to remember, like, wait, I have the agency that if I place a seed of a little bit of optimism, a little bit of humor, a little bit of something, a little bit more positive energy, whatever you need, that seed is going to spread. And what's really cool about the fact that there are these
ripple effects, these so called affective spirals. Is like, if you plant that seed, and even if it's a little forced, even if you're kind of trying a little bit, if other people catch it, they're going to catch that a little bit authentically and then they'll feed it back to you. Right, So you can kind of be the seed that starts the spiral of something.
That's right, and you can leverage a lot of the other effects that we've been talking about. So I'll often purposefully overcorrect and positivity and happiness, Like don't I look ridiculous in.
A smiling He's smiling really jokingly. This evidents if you see their faces, they're like, why is he making that expression?
Yeah? Sure, yeah, but there we go. We got the laugh. So like, I'll often focus in on the one person who maybe isn't showing the right kind of attitude and either not directly by through these kind of chameleon effects, try to loosen them up, or maybe I'll ask them, hey, so you know what's going on, anything could happen this weekend? Try to shift their mood deliberately.
So that's sort of emotional contiion. We talked a little before about sort of venting this idea that sometimes we want to share our emotions with other people or share our troubles with other people, but often sometimes there are people out there that don't necessarily mirror back to us what we want to hear. They kind of can hype us up or get us even more upset or more frustrated. How do we do a better job picking people we should vent to more successfully than others?
So this, it turns out, is actually pretty simple to do. And when I think about, like all the science written about in this book, this is top five pieces of information that I use in my own life and really benefit from it quite a bit. So I think about, who are the people in my life that when I go to to talk to them about a problem, they don't just listen and demonstrate that they support me and have my back, but essentially egg me on, which is
what happens when you co ruminate with someone else. So here's the situation, like something bad has happened to you and you go to talk to someone else about it. So I have a difficult interaction let's say with a colleague, my call Laori Laurd Can you believe what this person did and you say.
Oh my god, I can't believe they did that. They suck. Why are you even in that university? It sucks like you need to get rid of all your Like you see what I'm doing. I'm just like feel in the fire right. I haven't gone into problem solving mode. I haven't tried to de escalate this.
And when you do that for me, I love it. I love it in the moment. It is indulgent, it is Yes, Laurie's on my side, she hears me, feels me. So that's really good for our relationship to do a little bit of that kind of back and forth expression and venting. Ideally, though, at some point in this conversation, Laurie says to me, oh.
Man, that sounds tough, but like, how are we gonna deal with the situation, Like, you know, like what we should what should we do to shift your emotion? Let's play Don't Stop Believing because that's a really fun song and you'll feel better. Like we just do whatever to.
Kind of get back to she's playing that is one of my favorites. Emotions shift for me.
She wanted to play that coming out, but we nip that in the button but uh, and that's important because, as you said, the venting, the co ruminating, as we've called it, it's really good for our relationship, but it's really bad for both of our emotions ultimately.
That's right.
If I leave the conversation, that terrible interaction with the colleague didn't even happen to me. But now I'm having a terrible day too, and I haven't helped what I think even probably wanted out of this conversation, which is a way to shift his emotions back.
I mean, I had a converse sometimes like I'm a you catch the emotion. A friend called me up and they just they didn't even give me a chance to help shift their perspective. They just rapid fire launched in and then I hung up. Okay, I gotta go, And for the next three hours, I'm just going over in my head what happened to them. Yeah, and I'm taking on all the emotional baggage. So those are not the best kinds of conversations to make you feel better. The
best conversations do two things. First, the person you're talking to, they listen, They empathize, They normalize what you're going If your lord, you're not alone like anyone would feel experience.
A lot of people have this bad day with colleagues. It doesn't mean every day is going to be bad with your colleagues.
And so you start broadening the perspective. That is the art of being a good emotional advisor. And so my advice to everyone here is to, like, when you're done, if you care about this, make a little table personal problems, school problems. List out all the people you talk to about those different kinds of problems. Some of you may have the same names of people on each column, like you talk to the same people about personal stuff and school stuff. Others may have different names. Some of you
may have no names. It doesn't matter. I'm just doing an audit here. Who is your emotional advisory board? Once you have those names, then I want you to think to yourself, Okay, who are the people on this list who do two things? When I go to them, First, they listen, they empathize with me. But then they help broaden my perspective. They help shift the way I think about That wasn't purposeful. That was just slipped in there.
His book is called.
Tas That was terrible, non intended. But who are the people who help you reframe how you're thinking about your circumstances to ultimately allow you to move on. Those are your emotional advisors. Circle those names for all the names you didn't circle, You've got two choices. Number one, go get a red sharp eiet and cross their names off your list. It's something kind of cathartic about doing that, satisfying. It's a legitimate option. There are some people who you
can be super close. You love them, talk to them about other stuff, but not the big problems in life. If they're not serving you well. There the other opportunity you have is to educate those people who aren't serving you well in this capacity by sharing with them what you've learned. And you know, I feel like it's important to give you a disclaimer. There's an art to doing that well. I would not advise you to pull those people aside and say, hey, I just went to this presentation.
You know what I learned. You suck as an advisor, like you really you make me feel bad. I know you love me, but it doesn't help, so quit it. Okay, can do this and said probably not the most elegant way of intervening. A better way is did you know that actually just sharing out stuff and just get me to rehearse things. And actually I had no idea that actually, if you really want to help someone, you need to
look at that bigger picture. Or if you don't want to do that, you could say I I just listened to this awesome live taping of a happiness lab.
It was at my schools.
At my school, and I think you'll find it really interesting. I learned all these things I never knew about. And then you hope they get to the end of the podcast. How many people get to the end of the podcast?
Everybody?
Everyone? Okay?
That's that wasn't even a joke.
I was just all right.
So that's kind of dealing with sort of fighting motion antgion. How we can sort of get people to help us vent better, vent more effectively. How do we deal with the social comparison? We talked a little bit before about kind of using it more productively, but what are our go to social hacks?
Then? So social comparison. So number one, if you do it, there's nothing wrong with you. I can't tell you how many people I encounter who they feel bad about themselves because they're making these social comparisons as though it's a sign of weakness that you're referencing other people. This is not a weakness. This is how you are wired. It is how we are built, and simply recognizing that should be liberating to some degree. It certainly is for me, like I do it. I can't help it. It's how
we function. So Number one, recognize that that will help Number two. If you find yourself making a comparison against someone who is outperforming you in some way, flip it right. It's no longer oh my god, they're doing so much better. They did it, So can I use it as a source of motivation, as fuel to propel you. It's showing you what is actually possible, what you are capable of achieving. We tend to feel worse about the comparisons we make to people who are like us. Right, so you're like
you'd be a great example for me. You are like me in many ways. If you are outperforming me in some way, that's really gonna sting. But the fact that you were like me also means that what you've achieved is something that I can do too. I think you will be amazed at how quickly this little reframe can totally reroute your emotional experience.
There's also an interesting way that you can use the sort of social benchmarking with that too, which I find can be really powerful. Right you think like, oh, that person's like me, I can achieve that too, But then you also then ask the further question of like, but what are they doing that? Like I'm not doing absolutely. I had this good friend of mine who is like,
I'm not a very fit person. She was also not a very fit person, but kind of she'd gotten a little bit sick and then just like really devoted herself to fitness and just started going to the gym all the time and so on. And I found myself doing the like, man, she's getting so fit, Like she's just like doing so well and feeling that social comparison that envy. But with this hack, I could do the fall. I was like, well, she was just like me before she
was also unfit. But then I asked myself the question, well what's she doing. I'm like, well, she's going to the gym every day, she really paying attention to what she eats, she's going really hardcore with it. And then I had this realization of like, well, I could do that too, but I also have to do all the other hard stuff that she's doing, and then you could ask the question reasonably, do I want to do that
hard stuff or not? Right? I think this can be powerful, right because you remember, like it's not just by you know, some accident. Often that people are doing better, especially if they've made a change, especially if they started like you. Often you know they're putting some work into this, They're making choices that maybe you are not making now, but you could so better.
I experienced the very similar phenomenon. It was not with someone who was like me, per se. It was with President Obama, okay and so not like me, and but I remember it was like I was just starting as an assistant professor, and you know, it was hard being assistant professor. I was grinding away and I wasn't exercising regularly. And I came across an article about how Obama exercised
every day, and immediately I come across this information. Now I'm really feeling bad about myself, like my pants aren't fitting to begin with, and now I'm finding out that the president of the free world right like, is able to do this Like not good? So what did I do? And back then it took me a while to reframe this because it wasn't top of mind as it is now.
But eventually I didn't. I thought to myself, you know what, if that guy who's a lot busier than me and a lot more important, can find time to exercise each morning, so can I. And to this day that is a guiding motivation I use to get me to the gym.
It's so funny because I have this similar thing when I'm at the gym and I have this trainer who is trying to help me, but you know, it's tough for him. But sometimes he'll make me do planks and
I hate doing clanks. But I remember hearing that the Ruth Bader Ginsburg over Supreme Cut Purt Justice, did like three minutes of planks every day and she was like eighty And so when I hate this, I'm like Ruth Bader Gibsburg who was so much older than me, and she could do this, and I feel like I should be able to do it too.
What we are talking about here is weaponizing these social comparisons to your benefit. Right we stumble into them, like, don't wait to stumble into it, jump in there and do it. And the quick flip side. I think we're winding down here. Is It works the other way too. If you find yourself coming across a case someone or a group of people, tragedy has befallen them, and you instantly interpret that as, oh my god, what if that happens to me. I was just recently in DC, for example,
when the plane crash occurred. I actually flew in like a half hour after that happened, and many people that I was around were constant, really overcome with negativity because they were thinking about, Oh my god, what if this had happened to me? You can flip it right if you don't want to feel that way. Oh my god, how lucky am I that this didn't happen to me. It's a very easy switch. So I'll say one more thing fifteen seconds, and I'll throw it back to you.
A lot of people think that managing your emotions is hard. It has to be hard. It sometimes is hard, but it doesn't always have to be. There are lots and lots of tools that we can use that make emotion regulation easy. And I think the more you can familiarize yourself with those easy to use, effortless shifts, and thank you to you for helping share these things with the world in your podcast. I think the happier we all will be.
So well, Ethan, thank you so much for helping us figure out how we can use these social hacks to shift our emotions. Speak for all the folks in the room and listening at home, and say you're really feeling like shifting is going to be a little bit easier. I would like to thank you for all of