Barking Up The Wrong Tree October 10th, 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------
Before we commence with the festivities, I wanted to thank everyone for helping my new book become a bestseller! To check it out, click [here](. --------------------------------------------------------------- The *Secret* Way To An Awesome Life: 4 Insights Backed By Research ([Click here]( to read on the blog) Iâve got a secret. In fact, Iâve got 13 of them. So do you. Thatâs the average number of secrets people say they have when surveyed. Five of them are âcomplete secretsâ â youâve never told anybody. And eight more are âconfided secretsâ â youâve told at least one other person but wonât be going public with it anytime soon. A study of 2000 people in the US revealed the most common types of secrets. 92% of the time secrets fit into these categories:
- Hurt another person (emotionally or physically)
- Illegal drug use, or abuse of a legal drug
- Habit or addiction (but not involving drugs)
- Theft
- Something illegal (other than drugs or theft).
- Physical self-harm
- Abortion
- A traumatic experience (other than the above)
- A lie
- A violation of someoneâs trust (other than by a lie)
- Romantic desire (while single)
- Romantic discontent
- Extra-relational thoughts
- Emotional infidelity
- Infidelity
- A relationship with someone who is cheating on someone else to be with you
- Social discontent (unhappy with a friend, or unhappy with current social life)
- Physical discontent (dislike of appearance or something physical about yourself)
- Mental health struggles
- Inappropriate behavior at work or school (or lying to get hired or accepted)
- Poor performance at work or school
- Profession/work discontent (unhappy with your situation at work or school)
- A planned marriage proposal
- A planned surprise for someone (other than a marriage proposal)
- A hidden hobby or possession
- A hidden current (or past) relationship
- A family secret
- Pregnancy
- Orientation or gender identity
- Not having sex
- A hidden preference (or non-preference) for something
- A hidden belief (e.g., political, religious, views about social groups, prejudices)
- Finances (e.g., spending, amount of money you have)
- A hidden current (or past) employment or school activity
- An ambition, plan, or goal for yourself
- A specific story you keep secret (unrelated to the above)
Can you relate to any of the above? Iâm guessing you can. (With apologies to Nietzsche, âWhen you stare into the internet, the internet stares also into you.â) Hereâs the thing: often, keeping secrets isnât good for us. Especially the ones that nag at you. We donât need to announce them on an LCD billboard in Times Square but weâd be better off if we opened up to someone. Thatâs not always an easy thing to do â so letâs find a way to make it easier. Weâre going to dive into the hidden world of secrets and get a better idea of how they work, how they make us feel, how we can cope and who we should talk to. Weâre going to get some help from the work of Michael Slepian. Heâs a professor of leadership and ethics at Columbia University. Heâs done an enormous amount of research on secrets (a Starbucks employee once confided in him that she gives decaf to customers that are rude to her.) His book is â[The Secret Life of Secrets]( Letâs get to it... The Downside Of Not Opening Up More than a hundred studies have shown a consistent pattern: if your go-to way of dealing with issues is bottling them up, youâre gonna have problems. Not talking about your difficulties is correlated with health issues and lower life satisfaction. But thatâs not all... Keeping secrets harms your relationships. Study subjects who kept secrets from their spouse reported being less comfortable accepting kindness from their partner, got less enjoyment out of social activities and were more interested in self-punishing activities like isolation, receiving criticism and even lab tasks that caused physical pain. Yeesh. And if thatâs not enough, keeping secrets makes you dumber. Monitoring what you say so you donât spill the beans is cognitively draining. Researcher Clayton Critcher told subjects not to use the words âbreakfastâ or âthereforeâ and then asked them a series of questions. Cognitive performance on a series of subsequent tasks plummeted. It was like playing a mental version of âthe floor is lava.â When we have to choose every word we say with a pair of tweezers, we get stupid real fast. But the worst part wasnât talking with others â it was how secret-keepers felt when they were alone. Conversations are a limited part of your day, but guilty rumination can be limitless. The more unresolved an issue was, the more shame, guilt and anxiety we feel. Meanwhile, opening up helps. Michael found, in general, the more people disclose, the healthier and happier their relationships were. Now Iâm not saying all secrets will be well received but research shows that those close to you are much more charitable than youâd expect. Rarely does one fact overturn everything they feel about you. Theyâre probably not going to hate you and theyâre probably not going to double up on the floor and laugh like a hyena. Theyâre much more likely to say, âIâve had an experience like that too.â As I talked about in [my book,]( vulnerability often makes people like us more. Through a complicated system of emotional ropes and pulleys, it makes people feel closer to us and builds trust. When deciding whether or not to open up, treat the issue of âWhat will people think?â as a real question, rather than a scary rhetorical one. But what if this is something you really, really, really canât tell anyone? If You Must Keep It A Secret I donât want to come off as naïve. Some secrets, if shared, could be devastating. (Itâs more than a little disconcerting to realize you could blow your life up in less than 5 text messages.) Some secrets may feel shameful and embarrassing but donât really impact anyone other than you (âI wet myself in front of my fourth-grade class and still have nightmares about itâ) but other secrets directly impact others and could deeply hurt them. Michael found that the more immoral a secret is, the more shame you feel. The more solitary and personal it is, the more isolated a secret makes you. And the more a secret is emotional vs logical, the less insight you have into it. This points to the three ways that secrets often hurt us: shame, loneliness and lack of insight. But that also points to three angles that can help us cope. Ask yourself: - Is anyone harmed by this secret? If no one is harmed by your secret, remember that past mistakes are in the past. You just need to give yourself permission to move on.
- Does the secret protect anyone you know? If the secret protects or benefits someone else, you can find solace in knowing that however bad it may be, this action isnât purely selfish.
- Do you have any insight into it? Just understanding why you are keeping a secret can help you feel more in control of the issue and better able to deal with it.
Studies show that considering these things notably increases peopleâs ability to cope and improves their well-being when the secret was something they couldnât share. But there is another solution⦠maybe you can talk to someone about it. However, this raises yet another question â who? Who To Talk To Michael surveyed thousands of people and found that most of us would prefer to share our secrets with someone compassionate. No surprise there. But we also like the idea of talking to someone who is assertive and decisive â someone who will push us to explore solutions and do something about it. He also learned what we do not want in confidantes: blabbermouths and moral judgment. (Michael also found people who are morally judgmental are more likely to blab your secret, so make sure to open up to someone who has a similar moral code.) More often than not, sharing secrets doesnât burden the other person. In a study of 200 subjects, Michael found that listeners were happy to learn the other personâs secret. It conveyed trust and intimacy. And the big question â do the people we talk to keep our secrets confidential? 70% of the time, they do. You know what? That number doesnât exactly thrill me. Probably doesnât thrill you either. So thereâs another alternative to explore â opening up to someone unconnected to you. If youâre afraid that someone spreading your secret would absolutely kill you to death, telling a stranger, a therapist, or a wise Uber driver can be a good way to have your cake and eat it too. You get the secret off your chest, but the risks are minimized. And opening up really did help people. Michaelâs work showed the more someone was worried about a secret, the better they felt after discussing it. On our own we often dwell on the most catastrophic result. Talking to someone else can give us a more positive and realistic perspective as opposed to just cycling the doom loop faster. But what if there is absolutely no one you would feel comfortable talking to? Well, thereâs a solution for that too... If You Can't Talk To Anyone If you feel that opening up to anyone would put bullet holes in your soul, then write about your secret. University of Texas at Austin professor James Pennebaker has found that writing about our problems can have effects similar to therapy. And it can help you avoid those negative health issues associated with bottling things up. (More details about Pennebakerâs writing method [here]( This a good option and very safe â but you donât get all the benefits of opening up to a real person. If youâre the type who catastrophizes issues into some apocalyptic End of Days scenario, writing isnât the best way to soothe yourself. It doesnât give the emotional support a friend can. Other people can challenge your negative assumptions in ways that Microsoft Word cannot. But if talking to someone doesnât seem like a realistic option, writing can be a helpful mental disinfectant. Okay, weâve covered a lot. Letâs round it all up â and weâll find out the best way to deal with the good secrets we might be keeping... Sum Up Hereâs how to deal with secrets:
- The Downside Of Not Opening Up: Not opening up hurts your health, your relationships and makes you dumber. No bueno. For most secrets, talking to someone is the best way to go and others rarely judge us as much as we think they will.
- If You Must Keep It A Secret: Asking yourself if anyone is harmed, if the secret protects someone, and knowing why youâre keeping the secret can help you cope.
- Who To Talk To: Pick someone compassionate and decisive who is not a morally judgmental blabbermouth. If youâre afraid they wonât keep things confidential, you can open up to someone unconnected to the situation.
- If You Canât Talk To Anyone: Write about it. Writing can act like therapy. (This may say a lot more about my career choice than Iâm comfortable sharing.)
So what should you do with your good secrets? The opposite: keep them to yourself, at least for now. Uncertainty magnifies emotions -- bad and good. So donât ruin Aunt Margeâs surprise party by blabbing. Youâll enjoy it more and sheâll enjoy it more if you keep it to yourself. We think that stopping to smell the roses is a good thing because positive events are rare. But thatâs not true. Studies show positive things are more common than negative. The issue is that positive events are more predictable -- so we take them for granted. Negative events are less predictable, so they hit harder. This makes it a very good idea to keep positive things a surprise. It makes them less predictable for others and gives them the greater impact usually reserved for the bad. Make the great moments as unique as the sad moments usually are and you have a prescription for joy. We need to hold on to those good secrets just like we need to open up about the negative ones. The times Iâve spent dwelling on my own negative secrets have been some of the most painful and pointless moments of my life. (Which is really saying something.) There are some good things in store for you. And they will feel all that much better when they happen because you donât know what they are yet. So stay optimistic. The world keeps secrets from you... And some of them will turn out to be very, very good. ***If you are one of those lovely people who bought "Plays Well With Others" please leave a review on Amazon [here](. Thanks!*** Email Extras Findings from around the internet... + Want to know the healthiest way to reduce your social media use? Click [here](. + Want to know if that midnight snack is a good idea? Click [here](. + Want to know whether coffee or tea is healthier? Click [here](. + Miss my prior post? Here you go: [This Is The #1 Ritual You Need To Do Every Day](. + Want to know how to be more persuasive when discussing politics? Click [here](. + You read to the end of the email. Your secret is safe with me. (And I thank you.) Okay, Crackerjack time: if you've had enough reading for the day but want to keep learning, I've been on a number of fantastic podcasts lately discussing my [new book](. You can pump useful info into your earholes by listening to these episodes of [The Psychology Podcast]( [Finding Mastery]( and [Lewis Howes](.
Thanks for reading!
Eric PS: If a friend forwarded this to you, you can sign up to get the weekly email yourself [here](. This email was sent to {EMAIL}
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