Why you should talk to strangers | Kio Stark

656,892 views ・ 2016-09-23

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
There are things we say
0
12959
1277
00:14
when we catch the eye of a stranger
1
14261
2396
00:16
or a neighbor walking by.
2
16681
1722
00:19
We say, "Hello, how are you?
3
19530
2526
00:22
It's a beautiful day.
4
22080
1708
00:23
How do you feel?"
5
23812
1189
00:25
These sound kind of meaningless, right? And, in some ways, they are.
6
25552
3634
00:29
They have no semantic meaning.
7
29210
2359
00:32
It doesn't matter how you are or what the day is like.
8
32500
3008
00:35
They have something else.
9
35934
1467
00:37
They have social meaning.
10
37425
1887
00:40
What we mean when we say those things is:
11
40051
2479
00:42
I see you there.
12
42554
1261
00:45
I'm obsessed with talking to strangers.
13
45764
2797
00:49
I make eye contact, say hello,
14
49122
2353
00:51
I offer help, I listen.
15
51499
2565
00:54
I get all kinds of stories.
16
54699
1680
00:57
About seven years ago, I started documenting my experiences
17
57773
3267
01:01
to try to figure out why.
18
61064
1875
01:03
What I found was that something really beautiful was going on.
19
63900
4039
01:07
This is almost poetic.
20
67963
1794
01:10
These were really profound experiences.
21
70184
3270
01:13
They were unexpected pleasures.
22
73478
1880
01:15
They were genuine emotional connections.
23
75382
2465
01:18
They were liberating moments.
24
78370
1872
01:22
So one day, I was standing on a corner waiting for the light to change,
25
82098
4104
01:26
which, I'm a New Yorker,
26
86226
1309
01:27
so that means I was actually standing in the street on the storm drain,
27
87559
3507
01:31
as if that could get me across faster.
28
91667
2347
01:34
And there's an old man standing next to me.
29
94038
2001
01:36
So he's wearing, like, a long overcoat and sort of an old-man hat,
30
96063
4827
01:40
and he looked like somebody from a movie.
31
100914
2126
01:43
And he says to me,
32
103064
1198
01:44
"Don't stand there. You might disappear."
33
104286
2551
01:48
So this is absurd, right?
34
108095
1267
01:49
But I did what he said. I stepped back onto the sidewalk.
35
109386
2996
01:52
And he smiled, and he said,
36
112697
1892
01:54
"Good. You never know.
37
114613
1881
01:56
I might have turned around,
38
116518
1427
01:57
and zoop, you're gone."
39
117969
1507
02:01
This was weird,
40
121553
1300
02:03
and also really wonderful.
41
123638
2429
02:06
He was so warm, and he was so happy that he'd saved me.
42
126091
3317
02:09
We had this little bond.
43
129977
1497
02:11
For a minute, I felt like my existence as a person
44
131987
4163
02:16
had been noticed,
45
136174
1343
02:18
and I was worth saving.
46
138335
1935
02:23
The really sad thing is,
47
143058
1627
02:24
in many parts of the world,
48
144709
1673
02:26
we're raised to believe that strangers are dangerous by default,
49
146406
3930
02:30
that we can't trust them, that they might hurt us.
50
150360
3118
02:34
But most strangers aren't dangerous.
51
154389
2578
02:36
We're uneasy around them because we have no context.
52
156991
3288
02:40
We don't know what their intentions are.
53
160807
2197
02:43
So instead of using our perceptions and making choices,
54
163028
3783
02:46
we rely on this category of "stranger."
55
166835
2445
02:51
I have a four-year-old.
56
171012
1825
02:52
When I say hello to people on the street,
57
172862
1974
02:54
she asks me why.
58
174861
1308
02:56
She says, "Do we know them?"
59
176820
2576
03:00
I say, "No, they're our neighbor."
60
180324
1857
03:02
"Are they our friend?"
61
182895
1413
03:04
"No, it's just good to be friendly."
62
184941
2057
03:07
I think twice every time I say that to her,
63
187773
3329
03:11
because I mean it, but as a woman, particularly,
64
191126
3508
03:14
I know that not every stranger on the street has the best intentions.
65
194658
3770
03:18
It is good to be friendly, and it's good to learn when not to be,
66
198873
3854
03:22
but none of that means we have to be afraid.
67
202751
2356
03:26
There are two huge benefits
68
206451
2873
03:29
to using our senses instead of our fears.
69
209348
3095
03:33
The first one is that it liberates us.
70
213015
3000
03:37
When you think about it,
71
217970
1873
03:39
using perception instead of categories
72
219867
2212
03:42
is much easier said than done.
73
222103
1903
03:44
Categories are something our brains use.
74
224859
2215
03:47
When it comes to people,
75
227693
1637
03:49
it's sort of a shortcut for learning about them.
76
229354
2411
03:52
We see male, female, young, old,
77
232900
3638
03:56
black, brown, white, stranger, friend,
78
236562
4362
04:00
and we use the information in that box.
79
240948
2405
04:04
It's quick, it's easy
80
244112
1718
04:05
and it's a road to bias.
81
245854
1776
04:08
And it means we're not thinking about people as individuals.
82
248052
3869
04:13
I know an American researcher who travels frequently
83
253774
3337
04:17
in Central Asia and Africa, alone.
84
257135
2810
04:20
She's entering into towns and cities
85
260910
2539
04:23
as a complete stranger.
86
263473
2051
04:25
She has no bonds, no connections.
87
265937
2165
04:28
She's a foreigner.
88
268126
1349
04:29
Her survival strategy is this:
89
269957
2376
04:32
get one stranger to see you as a real, individual person.
90
272357
3977
04:36
If you can do that, it'll help other people see you that way, too.
91
276839
3400
04:40
The second benefit of using our senses has to do with intimacy.
92
280817
4408
04:46
I know it sounds a little counterintuitive,
93
286003
2395
04:48
intimacy and strangers,
94
288422
2097
04:50
but these quick interactions can lead to a feeling
95
290543
4052
04:54
that sociologists call "fleeting intimacy."
96
294619
3142
04:57
So, it's a brief experience that has emotional resonance and meaning.
97
297785
4350
05:03
It's the good feeling I got
98
303452
2008
05:05
from being saved from the death trap of the storm drain by the old man,
99
305484
4342
05:10
or how I feel like part of a community
100
310610
2500
05:13
when I talk to somebody on my train on the way to work.
101
313134
3419
05:17
Sometimes it goes further.
102
317665
2024
05:19
Researchers have found that people often feel more comfortable
103
319713
5113
05:24
being honest and open about their inner selves with strangers
104
324850
3244
05:28
than they do with their friends and their families --
105
328118
2683
05:32
that they often feel more understood by strangers.
106
332110
3617
05:37
This gets reported in the media with great lament.
107
337022
3531
05:41
"Strangers communicate better than spouses!"
108
341125
2801
05:44
It's a good headline, right?
109
344901
1533
05:47
I think it entirely misses the point.
110
347547
2280
05:51
The important thing about these studies
111
351240
1913
05:53
is just how significant these interactions can be;
112
353177
2793
05:56
how this special form of closeness
113
356795
3104
05:59
gives us something we need as much as we need our friends
114
359923
2778
06:02
and our families.
115
362725
1190
06:04
So how is it possible that we communicate so well with strangers?
116
364933
3910
06:10
There are two reasons.
117
370585
1636
06:12
The first one is that it's a quick interaction.
118
372245
2914
06:15
It has no consequences.
119
375183
1539
06:17
It's easy to be honest with someone you're never going to see again, right?
120
377034
3585
06:20
That makes sense.
121
380643
1150
06:22
The second reason is where it gets more interesting.
122
382177
2884
06:25
We have a bias when it comes to people we're close to.
123
385085
3417
06:29
We expect them to understand us.
124
389359
3167
06:32
We assume they do,
125
392550
1229
06:33
and we expect them to read our minds.
126
393803
2136
06:36
So imagine you're at a party,
127
396717
2304
06:39
and you can't believe that your friend or your spouse
128
399045
3602
06:42
isn't picking up on it that you want to leave early.
129
402671
2803
06:45
And you're thinking,
130
405498
1374
06:46
"I gave you the look."
131
406896
1522
06:50
With a stranger, we have to start from scratch.
132
410696
2515
06:53
We tell the whole story,
133
413235
1387
06:55
we explain who the people are, how we feel about them;
134
415376
3088
06:58
we spell out all the inside jokes.
135
418488
2168
07:00
And guess what?
136
420680
1476
07:02
Sometimes they do understand us a little better.
137
422180
2661
07:06
OK.
138
426087
1160
07:07
So now that we know that talking to strangers matters,
139
427271
3496
07:10
how does it work?
140
430791
1392
07:12
There are unwritten rules we tend to follow.
141
432721
2750
07:15
The rules are very different depending on what country you're in,
142
435495
3796
07:19
what culture you're in.
143
439315
1693
07:21
In most parts of the US,
144
441032
2129
07:23
the baseline expectation in public
145
443185
2254
07:25
is that we maintain a balance between civility and privacy.
146
445464
4124
07:30
This is known as civil inattention.
147
450180
2440
07:33
So, imagine two people are walking towards each other on the street.
148
453263
3760
07:37
They'll glance at each other from a distance.
149
457047
2298
07:39
That's the civility, the acknowledgment.
150
459369
1982
07:41
And then as they get closer, they'll look away,
151
461375
2207
07:43
to give each other some space.
152
463606
1586
07:47
In other cultures,
153
467151
1262
07:48
people go to extraordinary lengths not to interact at all.
154
468437
4907
07:54
People from Denmark tell me
155
474533
2234
07:56
that many Danes are so averse to talking to strangers,
156
476791
3608
08:00
that they would rather miss their stop on the bus
157
480423
3218
08:03
than say "excuse me" to someone that they need to get around.
158
483665
3351
08:07
Instead, there's this elaborate shuffling of bags
159
487040
3289
08:10
and using your body to say that you need to get past,
160
490353
3483
08:13
instead of using two words.
161
493860
1831
08:18
In Egypt, I'm told,
162
498178
1869
08:20
it's rude to ignore a stranger,
163
500731
2292
08:23
and there's a remarkable culture of hospitality.
164
503047
3233
08:27
Strangers might ask each other for a sip of water.
165
507312
3056
08:30
Or, if you ask someone for directions,
166
510392
2704
08:33
they're very likely to invite you home for coffee.
167
513120
3058
08:37
We see these unwritten rules most clearly when they're broken,
168
517441
3528
08:41
or when you're in a new place
169
521563
2083
08:43
and you're trying to figure out what the right thing to do is.
170
523670
3197
08:47
Sometimes breaking the rules a little bit is where the action is.
171
527332
5061
08:54
In case it's not clear, I really want you to do this. OK?
172
534551
4469
08:59
So here's how it's going to go.
173
539790
1889
09:01
Find somebody who is making eye contact.
174
541703
2026
09:03
That's a good signal.
175
543753
1689
09:05
The first thing is a simple smile.
176
545466
2143
09:08
If you're passing somebody on the street or in the hallway here, smile.
177
548402
3916
09:12
See what happens.
178
552342
1268
09:14
Another is triangulation.
179
554113
2037
09:16
There's you, there's a stranger,
180
556552
1679
09:18
there's some third thing that you both might see and comment on,
181
558255
4109
09:23
like a piece of public art
182
563134
1987
09:25
or somebody preaching in the street
183
565145
2125
09:27
or somebody wearing funny clothes.
184
567659
2223
09:30
Give it a try.
185
570689
1151
09:31
Make a comment about that third thing, and see if starts a conversation.
186
571864
3984
09:36
Another is what I call noticing.
187
576621
1724
09:38
This is usually giving a compliment.
188
578369
1959
09:41
I'm a big fan of noticing people's shoes.
189
581003
3256
09:44
I'm actually not wearing fabulous shoes right now,
190
584283
2756
09:47
but shoes are fabulous in general.
191
587063
2159
09:49
And they're pretty neutral as far as giving compliments goes.
192
589817
4126
09:53
People always want to tell you things about their awesome shoes.
193
593967
3608
09:57
You may have already experienced the dogs and babies principle.
194
597599
3897
10:01
It can be awkward to talk to someone on the street;
195
601520
2418
10:03
you don't know how they're going to respond.
196
603962
2071
10:06
But you can always talk to their dog or their baby.
197
606057
2542
10:08
The dog or the baby
198
608623
1349
10:09
is a social conduit to the person,
199
609996
2586
10:13
and you can tell by how they respond
200
613095
2037
10:15
whether they're open to talking more.
201
615156
1927
10:18
The last one I want to challenge you to
202
618156
2165
10:20
is disclosure.
203
620345
1496
10:22
This is a very vulnerable thing to do,
204
622548
2342
10:24
and it can be very rewarding.
205
624914
1516
10:27
So next time you're talking to a stranger
206
627068
2092
10:29
and you feel comfortable,
207
629726
1494
10:31
tell them something true about yourself,
208
631966
2350
10:34
something really personal.
209
634340
1340
10:36
You might have that experience I talked about of feeling understood.
210
636103
3791
10:41
Sometimes in conversation, it comes up,
211
641854
1946
10:43
people ask me, "What does your dad do?" or, "Where does he live?"
212
643824
3357
10:47
And sometimes I tell them the whole truth,
213
647205
2222
10:49
which is that he died when I was a kid.
214
649451
2157
10:53
Always in those moments,
215
653386
2017
10:55
they share their own experiences of loss.
216
655427
2472
10:58
We tend to meet disclosure with disclosure,
217
658407
3136
11:01
even with strangers.
218
661567
1401
11:04
So, here it is.
219
664453
1652
11:07
When you talk to strangers, you're making beautiful interruptions
220
667425
3854
11:11
into the expected narrative of your daily life
221
671303
3486
11:14
and theirs.
222
674813
1219
11:16
You're making unexpected connections.
223
676790
2143
11:19
If you don't talk to strangers, you're missing out on all of that.
224
679420
3563
11:25
We spend a lot of time
225
685544
2278
11:27
teaching our children about strangers.
226
687846
2577
11:30
What would happen if we spent more time teaching ourselves?
227
690764
3893
11:35
We could reject all the ideas that make us so suspicious of each other.
228
695441
4343
11:40
We could make a space for change.
229
700649
2635
11:44
Thank you.
230
704141
1151
11:45
(Applause)
231
705316
5906
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7