Do You Talk to Yourself? Here’s How to Harness Your Inner Voice | Ethan Kross | TED

275,108 views

2025-02-19 ・ TED


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Do You Talk to Yourself? Here’s How to Harness Your Inner Voice | Ethan Kross | TED

275,108 views ・ 2025-02-19

TED


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

00:04
So today, what I want to do
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is talk to you about the most important conversations you have each day:
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the conversations you have with yourselves.
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My name is Ethan Kross.
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I’m the director of the Emotion and Self Control Lab
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at the University of Michigan,
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and for the past 25 years,
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I've been studying how people can manage their emotions.
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And one of the things that I've learned during that time -- (Object drops)
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See? I'm managing my emotions right now.
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(Laughter)
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One of the things that I've learned during that time
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is that a key to managing one's emotions effectively
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involves understanding how to harness this mysterious force
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called the voices inside our head.
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Now I realize some of you may be asking yourself right now,
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“What is a purported serious scientist doing
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talking about a squishy topic like the voices inside our head?"
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But I want to point out the elephant in the room --
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that, you know, if you've just asked yourself that question,
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you are talking to yourself.
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And that's totally OK,
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because the vast majority of us have a voice inside our head.
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Here's a scientific fact that I absolutely love.
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We spend between one half and one-third of our waking hours
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not focused on the present.
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Between one half and one-third of the time,
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our minds, they are drifting away.
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We are thinking about other things.
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Some of you are doing that right now.
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Please stop.
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(Laughter)
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Once we find ourselves drifting away,
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one of the things that we're doing is talking to ourselves
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and listening to what we say.
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Now when scientists like myself use the term “inner voice,”
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what we're talking about is our ability to silently use language
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to reflect on our lives.
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And it turns out this is one of your superpowers,
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because your inner voice lets you keep information active in your head
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for short periods of time,
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like when you go to the grocery store.
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And if you're like me, 15 seconds into the expedition,
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you forget what you’re supposed to buy, and you repeat that list in your head.
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"Apples, cheese. Pepto Bismol."
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TMI.
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We also use our inner voice to simulate and plan,
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like when we silently rehearse what we're going to say
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before an important presentation or an interview.
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And of course, we use our inner voice to control and motivate ourselves,
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as I did just before I came on stage.
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It's right around the corner, over there.
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I silently said to myself, "Come on, man, you've got this. Deep breath.
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45 minutes, and you are done.”
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(Laughter)
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And of course, all of you just said to yourself,
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"This guy thinks he's talking for 45 minutes. He's nuts."
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(Laughter)
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Finally, perhaps most magically,
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we use our inner voice to make sense of this messy world that we often live in.
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When we experience challenges, we turn our attention inward,
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and we try to work through them.
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And our inner voice helps us create those stories
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that shape our sense of self,
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stories that really craft our identity.
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So your inner voice, this is a remarkable tool.
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The problem is it is a tool that often jams up on us when we need it most.
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We don't come up with clear solutions to our problems.
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We get stuck in negative thought loops, instead.
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We worry. We ruminate.
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We experience what I call the dark side of our inner voice: chatter.
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How do you know if you're experiencing chatter?
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If you ever find yourself trying to work through a problem
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but not making any progress,
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or if you find yourself berating yourself incessantly --
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"I'm an idiot, such an idiot."
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Those are two telltale signs.
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Now if this description of chatter resonates with any of you here --
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I'm sure it does not.
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But if it does,
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my response to you is welcome to the human condition, my friends.
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Chatter is a feature of it.
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We all have the capacity to experience it at times.
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It also happens to be
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one of the big problems we face as a species.
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And I say this because, if you look at what chatter does to us,
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it sinks us in three domains of life
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that I would argue everyone here cares a great deal about.
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One thing that chatter does,
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it makes it really hard for us to think and perform.
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If you've ever had the experience
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of sitting down to read a few pages in a book,
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and under oath, you would swear to a judge
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that you have read the words on the screen or page,
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but you get to the end of the section, the chapter,
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and you don't remember a damn thing that you've read,
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you've experienced one way that chatter undermines us.
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It consumes our attention, leaving very little left over
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to do the things that we often want and need to do.
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Chatter also creates friction in our relationships with other people,
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because when we experience chatter,
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we're often highly motivated to share its glory with those around us.
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What I mean by that is we often want to talk about our chatter,
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so we find someone to talk to,
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and then, we keep on talking, over and over again.
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This can have a really sad consequence
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of pushing away people who genuinely care about us,
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because there's only so much that they can endure
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before we start to bring them down.
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Then there's our health.
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So chatter helps explain how stress gets under our skin
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to impact our physical health,
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because what it does is it prolongs our stress response.
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And that creates a wear and tear in our body that is physically damaging,
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predicts things like problems of cardiovascular disease, inflammation,
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even certain forms of cancer.
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Now when people hear about these findings,
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the question they often ask me is: “How can I silence this inner voice?
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Just shut it up."
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And I don’t think this is the best question to be asking.
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Because your inner voice is a remarkable tool.
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We don't want to get rid of that tool.
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What we want to figure out is how to harness it.
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And this is where the really, really good news comes into play.
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This is precisely the question that scientists like myself
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have been trying to answer for a few decades now,
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and we have learned a lot about the science-based tools
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that exist to do precisely this.
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Now there are many tools out there.
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I'm not going to tell you about each one, because then we would go for 45 minutes.
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But I do want to share with you three of my favorites.
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And we're going to start with language.
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Right before Malala Yousafzai
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became the youngest person to ever win the Nobel Peace Prize,
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for advocating for the rights of young girls to receive an education,
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She was invited onto "The Daily Show" with Jon Stewart
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to talk about her experience.
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At one point during the interview,
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she begins to explain what went through her head
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when she first discovered that the Taliban were plotting to kill her.
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I want to present to you a quote right here,
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of how she starts to talk about this experience.
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“I used to think that the Talib would come and he would just kill me ...”
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Nothing particularly out of the ordinary here.
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She's talking to herself in the first person,
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the way we typically think about our lives.
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But the moment she gets to this part of the experience,
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"The Taliban, they're on my doorstep," "they're coming to get me."
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It's what is arguably the climax,
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the most stressful, chatter-provoking event you can imagine.
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Once she gets to that part, she does something kind of strange.
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I'm going to show you another quote,
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and I want you to look at what she says.
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"I asked myself, 'What would you do, Malala?'
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Then I would reply to myself, 'Malala, just take a shoe and hit him.'
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But then I said, 'If you hit a Talib with your shoe,
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then there would be no difference between you and the Talib.’”
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So she starts off in the first person, but then she switches.
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She's coaching herself.
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She's giving herself advice like she would someone else,
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using her name and the word "you."
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In this instance, what Malala is doing, she's using a tool that we have studied.
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It is called "distanced self-talk,"
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and it is useful because we human beings are much, much better
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at giving advice to other people than we are taking our own advice.
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So if you've ever felt like a giant hypocrite,
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once again, welcome to the human condition.
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There's even a name for this phenomenon.
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It's called Solomon's paradox, named after the Bible's King Solomon,
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who was famous for being able to give great advice to other people,
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but when it came to his own affairs, he stumbled mightily.
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Using your own name and "you" shifts your perspective.
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It gets you to relate to yourself
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like you were giving advice to someone else,
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and that makes it much, much easier for us to wisely work through our problems.
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Another tool you can use to manage your chatter is other people.
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But you have to be really careful about who you go to for chatter support.
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Many people think that the best way to help someone else
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is to let them vent their emotions,
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but venting doesn't help us work through our chatter.
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I want to repeat that again, because it's a really important take-home.
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Venting doesn't help us work through our chatter.
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Venting is really useful
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for strengthening the friendship and relational bonds between people.
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It is good to know that someone's there,
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they're willing to take the time to listen and empathize with you.
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But if all you do is vent about a problem, you leave that conversation,
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you feel great about the person you just spoke to,
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but the chatter is still churning
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because you haven't done anything to actually address it.
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The best kinds of conversations with other people do two things.
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One, the person you're talking to does let you express your emotions.
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It is important for them to empathize with you
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and validate what you're going through.
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But then, once you've had an opportunity to share your feelings,
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they ideally start working with you to broaden your perspective.
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They're in an ideal position to help you do that,
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because the problem isn't happening to them.
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So think really carefully about who your chatter advisors are.
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They should be people who both listen and advise.
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That brings me to my third and final tool that I want to share with you.
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It's my favorite.
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It's experiencing awe.
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About 10 years ago,
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scientists at Berkeley tracked a group of military veterans and first responders
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as they paddled down Utah's majestic Green River.
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They measured participants' levels of PTSD and stress,
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mental states that are infused with chatter,
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both before and after the rafting trip.
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Not surprisingly, they found that most of the participants,
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their stress and PTSD levels declined
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from the beginning to the end of the experiment.
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But what was surprising was the factor
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that predicted those declines in PTSD and stress.
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It was participants' experience of awe.
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Awe is an emotion we experience
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when we are in the presence of something vast and indescribable.
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Lots of people get it from an amazing sunset.
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I'm a science geek,
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so I get it when I contemplate outer space and interplanetary travel.
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We have an SUV on Mars right now, sending us footage back of that terrain --
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that is awe-inspiring to me.
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When we experience this emotion of awe,
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it leads to what we call a shrinking of the self.
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We feel smaller when we're contemplating something vast and indescribable,
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and when we feel smaller, so does our chatter.
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I want to wrap things up by sharing with you
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a set of observations about our, at times, messy emotional lives
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that I find myself thinking about quite a bit.
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And every time I do, it fills me with both dread, and I find it inspiring.
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Between 8,000-10,000 years ago,
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our ancestors invented the first surgical technique.
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Its name was trepanation,
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and what it involved doing was drilling holes in people's skulls.
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One of the reasons why this technique was believed to be used
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was to help people manage their emotions --
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big, dysregulated emotional responses.
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Let the evil spirits out.
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Fast-forward to 1949.
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A Portuguese physician wins the Nobel Prize
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for another emotion regulation intervention.
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This one's name?
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The frontal lobotomy.
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We have come a long way, thankfully, from carving holes in people's heads
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and sticking ice picks in our frontal cortices
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to provide people with emotional relief.
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Our toolbox of science-based skills is vastly improved.
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What we need to do a better job doing is using these tools in our lives
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and sharing them with other people.
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We spend enormous amounts of resources
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teaching ourselves how to communicate more effectively with other people.
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What we need to do is devote an equivalent amount of resources
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to teaching ourselves how to communicate more effectively
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with ourselves.
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Thank you.
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(Cheers and applause)
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