Barking Up The Wrong Tree April 4th, 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------- This Is How To Make Emotionally Intelligent Friendships: 2 Secrets From Research ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Dale Carnegieâs âHow To Win Friends And Influence Peopleâ was wrong. Well, at least one of his principles was. But weâll get to that in a second... Like you, I spent the pandemic not seeing friends nearly as often â but I was actually writing about friendship at the time. Oh, irony. The second section of my new book [Plays Well With Others]( gives the Mythbusters treatment to the old maxim âIs a friend in need a friend indeed?â Post-pandemic, I want all our friendships to not only go back to normal, but to be awesome -- to give off a Strontium-90 glow. So this post is an excerpt from the friendship section of the [book]( with solid tips you can put to use immediately to not only revitalize and deepen your friendships, but to also start making new ones. This is just a taste. Thereâs much, much more in the book (and [awesome bonuses for preordering]( Grab a copy at [Amazon]( [Barnes and Noble]( [Books A Million]( [Indiebound]( or [Bookshop](. Alrighty, letâs get to it... Book Excerpt: Friendship Since it was first published in 1936, How to Win Friends and Influence People has sold over thirty million copies, and nearly a century later it still sells more than a quarter million copies each year. Carnegieâs text intersperses stories with information on how to be better with people and obviously bears no resemblance whatsoever to the book youâre reading right now. So what does Dale recommend? He encourages people to listen, to be interested in others, to speak to them from their point of view, to sincerely flatter others, to seek similarity, to avoid conflict, and many other things that seem obviousâbut that we all routinely forget to do. However, Carnegieâs book was written before the dawn of most formal research in the area and is largely anecdotal. Does his advice line up with modern social science? Surprisingly, yes. As ASUâs Daniel Hruschka notes, the majority of Carnegieâs fundamental techniques have been validated by numerous experiments. One of his methods is seeking similarity. Ever watch someone get physically hurt and you flinch sympathetically? MRI studies by neuroscientist David Eagleman show that sympathetic pain is increased when we perceive the victim as being similar to ourselves, even if the grouping is arbitrary. Social scientist Jonathan Haidt comments, âWe just donât feel as much empathy for those we see as âother.ââ That said, good olâ Dale did get one wrong. The eighth principle in his book says, âTry honestly to see things from the other personâs point of view.â Remember when we discussed just how terrible we are at reading other peopleâs minds? Yeah, exactly. Nicholas Epley tested Daleâs suggestion and doesnât mince words about it: âNever have we found any evidence that perspective takingâputting yourself in another personâs shoes and imagining the world through his or her eyesâincreased accuracy in these judgments.â Not only isnât it effective, but it actually makes you worse at relating to them. Sorry, Dale. But he was only wrong about that one issue. In his defense, millions have used his techniques with great success including famous people like, um⦠Charles Manson. And this leads us to the more relevant problem with Carnegieâs techniques: not that theyâre unscientific, but that they can be manipulative and lead to shallow friendships. (Countdown to lawsuit from the Carnegie estate: five, four, three...) Carnegieâs book is great for the early stages of relationships, itâs excellent for transactional relationships with business contacts⦠but itâs also a wonderful playbook for con men. Itâs not focused on developing long-term intimacy: itâs much more about tactically gaining benefit from people. Carnegie frequently uses phrases like âhuman engineeringâ and âmaking people glad to do what you want.â To be fair, Carnegie repeatedly says you should have good intentions, but this rings hollow. Sociologist Robert Bellah wrote, âFor Carnegie, friendship was an occupational tool for entrepreneurs, an instrument of the will in an inherently competitive society.â If youâre looking for a blood brother or sister from another mister, this isnât going to do it. Itâs the equivalent of using a âHow to Pick Up Girlsâ book to navigate the ups and downs of a multidecade marriage. So what does produce deep friendships? This leads us to an area of academic study called âsignaling theory.â Letâs say I tell you Iâm a tough guy. Do you believe me? On the other hand, letâs say you see the UFC heavyweight championship belt being wrapped around my waist at the end of a televised fight. Which would better convince you Iâm not the guy you want to mess with? A âcostlyâ signal is a more powerful signal. Saying Iâm a tough guy is easy. Me faking a live UFC event before a crowd of thousands is far harder. We operate based on signaling theory all the time; weâre just rarely aware of it. Carnegie teaches us friendship signals, but theyâre not costly. Thatâs why as a reader we like them; theyâre easy to do. Thatâs also why con men like them; theyâre easy to fake. Saying âIâll be there for youâ is one thing. Showing up for a full day of helping you move is a much more costly, and powerful, signal. Which would convince you Iâm a real friend? So which costly signals do we want to display (and look for) when it comes to true friends? The experts firmly agree on two, the first one being time. Why is time so powerful? Because itâs scarce, and scarce = costly. Want to make someone feel special? Do something for them you simply cannot do for others. If I give you an hour of my time every day, I cannot do that for more than twenty-four people. Cannot. End of discussion. Thank you for calling. As we discussed, friendship beats other relationships in terms of happiness, but what is it specifically that works that magic? MelikÅah Demır of Northern Arizona University says itâs companionshipâmerely spending time together. And, unsurprisingly, what does research say is the most common cause of conflict in friendships? Once again, time. Thereâs no getting around it: time is critical. (If youâre enjoying this, please preorder the [book]( So how do we make more time for friends as an adult? The key comes down to rituals. Think about the people you do keep up with, and youâll probably find a ritual, conscious or not, underneath it. âWe talk every Sunday,â or âwe exercise together.â Replicate that. It works. Find something to do together consistently. Research from Notre Dame that analyzed over eight million phone calls showed touching base in some form every two weeks is a good target to shoot for. Hit that minimum frequency, and friendships are more likely to persist. But making new friends can require even more time. That process can be slower than inflight internet, which is one reason weâre so bad at it as we age. How much time? Are you sitting down? Jeff Hallâs research found that it took as many as sixty hours to develop a light friendship, sometimes one hundred hours to get to full-fledged âfriendâ status, and two hundred or more hours to unlock the vaunted âbest friendâ achievement. Sometimes more, sometimes less, but either wayâyowzers, thatâs a lot of time. But thatâs only part of the equation. Hall also found that how people talked mattered. Weâve all hit that wall with a potential friend where the small talk starts to go in circles. You just canât seem to break through to the next level. And thatâs one problem with Carnegieâs work: the smiling and head bobbing get you only so far. Want to make good friends without dozens of hours? You can do itâbut Carnegie wonât get you there. Arthur Aron got strangers to feel like lifelong pals in just forty-five minutes. How? Well, that leads us to our second costly signal: vulnerability. Itâs ironic: when we meet new people, we often try to impress themâand this can be a terrible idea. Through a series of six studies, researchers found that signaling high status doesnât help new friendships, it hurts them. Again, might be good for sales calls or conveying leadership, but it makes creating deep friendships much more difficult. Thereâs been a lot of talk about vulnerability lately, but most of us just nod our heads and go right back to trying to seem perfect. Why? Cause itâs really frickinâ scary to put yourself out there. You could be mocked or rejected, or the information could be used against you. Vulnerability gives us flashbacks to worst-case scenarios from high school. (Among the Kunyi tribe of Congo, too much self-disclosure is said to make one more susceptible to witchcraft, so perhaps opening up is even more dangerous than you thought.) We know itâs risky. Large-scale studies by Harvard sociologist Mario Luis Small showed that weâre often more likely to tell very personal details to strangers than close friends. We donât want awful people to exploit our weaknesses, but the irony is that our weaknesses are where trust comes from. In a paper titled âCan We Trust Trust?â Diego Gambetta wrote, âThe concession of trust⦠can generate the very behavior which might logically seem to be its pre-condition.â In other words, trust creates trust. The danger of being exploited creates the value inherent in trust, giving it its power. How do you signal youâre trustworthy? By trusting someone else. And then, often, the trust in you creates the trust in them. Vulnerability tells people theyâre part of an exclusive club. Theyâre special to you. Aron found that self-disclosure directly aids in producing friends. And thatâs how he got people to become best buds in forty-five minutes. Not only is vulnerability effective, itâs also not quite as dangerous as you think. Psychology has documented the âbeautiful mess effectââthat we consistently overestimate how negatively our errors will be perceived. We think weâll be seen as a moron and exiled to a distant village, but when surveyed, most people see the occasional screw-up as a positive. You make an error and are terrified youâll be seen as inadequate. But when others make the same error, youâre rarely as judgmental, and it often warms you to that person. Whatâs the best way to dip your toe in the pool of vulnerability? Well, here goes: Iâm a man in his late forties who coos at puppy pictures on Instagram and occasionally speaks to them in babytalk. Yes, I write smarty-smart, self-important books about science and I babytalk to pictures of puppies on Instagram. Do you like me less or more? Trust me less or more? So next time youâre with someone you care about, or someone you want to deepen your friendship with, follow The Scary Ruleâ¢: If it scares you, say it. You donât need to go full bore just yet. Donât confess to any murders at Christmas dinner. Start slow and build. Stretch the bounds of the sensitive things youâre willing to admit about yourself, and, by the same token, ask more sensitive questions than youâre normally comfortable asking. And when your friend admits vulnerable things, do not recoil and scream, âYOU DID WHAT?!?!â Accept them. Then, Daniel Hruschka says, âraise the stakes.â As long as you feel emotionally safe and youâre getting a positive reception, share more. Thatâs how you build a deep friendship. Still hesitant about opening up? Then let me put the metaphorical gun to your head: not being vulnerable kills friendships. That same study on the number of hours required to make a friend showed more small talk in a friendship produced a drop in closeness. Oh, and not being open and vulnerable doesnât just kill friendships: it can also kill you. University of Pennsylvania professor Robert Garfield notes that not opening up prolongs minor illnesses, increases the likelihood of a first heart attack, and doubles the chance it will be lethal. Make the time, vulnerably share your thoughts, and raise the stakes. If all goes well, they do the same. This gets us away from transactional relationships. With trust established, we can ignore costs to a greater degree, as can they. You donât worry about how big the favor is or what theyâve done for you latelyâyouâre past that. Now you only have to ask one question: âAre they a friend?â And if they are, you help... Okay, thatâs enough excerpting for now. But the [book]( goes so much further. Weâll dive deep into the neuroscience of friendship and unlock the secrets of getting others to feel close to you. Weâll learn to detect the lies of narcissists -- and even figure out how to make them become better people in the process. And much, much more. There are [awesome bonuses for preordering](. (You literally get 25% more book.) Preorder [here](. Thanks! Eric This email was sent to {EMAIL}
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