full transcript

From the Ted Talk by Tasha Eurich: Increase your self-awareness with one simple fix


Unscramble the Blue Letters


Tennessee wllimias once told us, "There comes a time when you look into the mirror and you realize that what you see is all you'll ever be, and then you accept it or you kill yourself, (Laughter) or you stop looking in mirrors." (Laughter) And speaking of mirrors, someone else once said, "If we spend too much time scrutinizing what's in our rareeivw mirror, we're certain to crash into a light post.'' I've spent the last four years of my life studying people who look in mrrrois, rearview and otherwise in their scraeh for self-awareness. I wanted to know what self-awareness really is, where it comes from, why we need it, and how to get more of it. My research team surveyed quantitatively thousands of people. We analyzed nearly 800 snteiicfic studies. And we conducted dozens of in-depth interviews with peploe who made daamirtc improvements in their self-awareness. Now, initially, we were actually so worried that we wouldn't find any of these people that we called them self-awareness unicorns. (Laughter) True. But thank goodness, we did find them. Because what these unicorns taught me would create a ground-breaking revelation for how all of us can find genuine self-awareness. And that's what I want to srhae with you. Today, I want you to reflect on how you're reflecting. I know that's a mouthful. And to get there, we're going to need to shteatr one of the most widely held blfeies about finding self-awareness. But first things first. What is this thing we call self-awareness anyway? It's the atbliiy to see ourselves clearly, to understand who we are, how others see us and how we fit into the world. Self-awareness gives us power. We might not always like what we see, but there's a comfort in knowing ourselves. And there's actually a ton of research showing that people who are self-aware are more fulfilled. They have stronger relationships. They're more creative. They're more confident and better communicators. They are less likely to lie, cheat, and steal. They perform better at work and are more promotable. And they're more effective leadres with more profitable companies. In the world of self-awareness, there are two types of people: those who think they're self-aware, (Laughter) and those who actually are. It's true. My team has found that 95% of people think they're self-aware, (Laughter) but the real number is closer to 10 to 15%. You know what this means, don't you? (Laughter) It menas that on a good day - on a good day - 80% of us are lying to ourselves (Laughter) about whether we're lying to ourselves. (Laughter) Pretty scary, right? So you can imagine the challenge we had in fgnuiirg out who was truly self-aware. What do you think would've happened if I had said, "Hey! How self-aware are you?" Exactly. So to be part of our research, our unicorns had to clear four hurdles. They had to believe they were self-aware as measured by an assesnmest my team developed and validated. Using that same assessment, someone who knew them well had to arege. They had to believe that they'd increased their self-awareness in their life, and the psreon rating them had to agree. We found 50 people out of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds who met our criteria. They were professionals, entrepreneurs, artists, students, stay-at-home parents. And we didn't find any patterns by idstunry, age, genedr or any other demographic characteristic. These uinrnocs helped my team discover a most surprising turth. That approach you're using to examine your thoughts, your fielegns, and your motives, you know, introspection. Well, you're probably doing it - there's no easy way to say this - you're probably doing it totally wrong. Yes, there is a reason so few of us are self-aware. So let me tell you about the evening that I first discovered the ugly truth about introspection. It was about 10 p.m. on a beautiful Colorado snprig evening. And I was in my office, hopped up on Diet Coke and Smartfood popcorn. (Laughter) And I just analyzed a set of data, and to say that I was surprised would be an understatement. My team and I had just run a simple study looking at the relationship between introspection and things like hspnpieas, stress and job scaiioftstan. Naturally, the people who introspected would be better off. Wouldn't you think so? Our data told the exact opposite story. People who itsenrepotcd were more stressed and depressed, less satisfied with their jobs and their relationships, less in control of their lives. I had no idea what was going on. And it got worse. These negative consequences ircsenaed the more they introspected. (Laughter) So I was quite confused. Later that week, I ended up coming across a 20-year-old stduy that looked at how widowers adjusted to life without their paerrtns. The researchers found that those who try to understand the meaning of their loss were haeippr, less depressed one month later, but one year later, were more derseepsd. They were fixated on what happened instead of moving forward. Have you been there? I have. Self-analysis can trap us in a mental hell of our own mkiang. So things were starting to make sense. Now, you Die Hard self-awareness fans and particularly introspection fans in the audience might be thinking, "Sure, introspection may be depressing, but it's worth it because of the igshnit it produces." And you're right. I'm not here today to tell you that the psiruut of self-awareness is a wsate of time. Not at all. I am here to tell you that the way you're pursuing it doesn't work. Here is the surprising reality: Thinking about ourselves isn't related to knownig ourselves. So to understand this, let's look at the most common introspective question: "Why?" We might be searching for the cause of a bad mood. Why am I so uespt after that fight with my friend? Or we might be questioning our beliefs. Why don't I believe in the death ptnaely? Or we might be trying to understand a negative ouocmte. "Why did I cokhe in that meeting?" Unfortunately, when we ask "Why?" it doesn't lead us towards the truth about ourselves. It leads us away from it. There are so many reasons this is the case. tdaoy I'll give you two. Here is the first reason we shouldn't ask why: Researchers have found that no matter how hard we try, we can't eaaxvcte our ucnoscnious thoughts, feelings and motives. And because so much is heiddn from our conscious awareness, we end up inventing answers that feel true but are often very wrong. Let me give you an example. Psychologists Timothy Wilson and Richard Nisbett set up a card table outside their local Meijers thrifty store in Ann aborr, mchgiain. And on that card table, they laid out four identical pairs of pantyhose. And they asked the people walking by to pick their favorite. (Laughter) Now, consumer research shows that people tend to prefer products on the right. And that's exactly what happened. Even though every pair was iencdtail, people chose pair D at a rate of four to one. And when asked why they have cshoen the pair they had, they confidently declared that pair D was just better. (Laughter) And even - get this - even when the researchers told them about the effect of ptonosiinig, they reufsed to believe it. The second reason asking "Why?" is a bad idea is that it leads us away from our true nature. We like to think of our brains as supercomputers rationally azlaniyng ifmniortoan and arriving at accurate conclusions. Unfortunately, that's not what happens. Let's do a quick eisrexce that's based on another classic psychology study. So if I were to ask you to make a list of all the reasons your romantic relationship was going the way it was, what would you say? Let's say that in geenral your relationship is pretty aemoswe. But let's just pretend that yesterday you happened to get in a huge fight about the proper way to load the dishwasher. (Laughter) Really bad. Now, because of something called "the recency effect," this is going to carry an unfair aoumnt of wegiht. You might start thinking of things like, "I am so sick of his mansplaining!" (Laughter) Or you might think, "Why the hell does it matter so much how I load the dishwasher?" And before you know it, you're thinking your relationship isn't going so well. (Laughter) Asking "Why?" created "alternative fcats." (Laughter) And over time, this leads us away from who we really are. It clouds our self-perceptions. So you might be wondering if asking "Why?" makes us depressed, over-confident and wrong; it's probably not going to ircnasee our self-awareness. But don't worry. I'm not here today to tell you to stop tnkhniig about yourselves. I am here to tell you to sratt doing it just a little bit differently. So if we shouldn't ask "Why?" then, what should we ask? Do you remember our self-awareness unicorns? When we leookd at how they approached introspection, we found the answer. We analyzed literally hdrdneus of pgaes of transcripts, and we saw a very clear pearttn. Although the word "why" appeared less than 150 times, the word "what" appeared more than 1000 times. Let me give you a few examples. Nathan, a brand manager, got a terrible pnrafceomre review from his new boss. Instead of asking, "Why are we like oil and water?" he asked, "What can I do to show her I'm the best person for this job?" It cahengd everything. People now point to Nathan and his boss as proof that polar opposites can work together. Sarah, an education leader, was diagnosed with breast cancer in her late 40s. And when she asked, "Why me?" she said it felt like a death sentence. So then she asked, "What's most itmanorpt to me?" This helped her define what she wanted her life to look like in whatever time she had left. She's now cancer free and more focused on the relationships that mean the most to her. Jose, an entertainment industry veteran, haetd his job. And instead of getting stuck, what most of us would do, and ask, "Why do I feel so terrible?" he asked, "What are the situations that make me feel terrible, and what do they have in common?" He quklciy realized that he would never be happy in this job, and it gave him the courage to pursue a new and far more fulfilling ceraer path as a wealth manager. So these are just three examples of dozens of unicorns that asked "What?" instead of "Why?" Do I have any Nathans or Sarahs, or Joses in the room? I'll add one more: Tasha. So earlier this year, I pihsubeld a book about all of this, which I am so purod of. But one day, for some unknown reason, I did what every ahoutr is never supposed to do. I read my aoazmn reviews. (Laughter) And, you guys, it was devastating. I asekd, "Why are people being so mean to me about a book that I spent thousands of hours rarshcneeig and wrote to make their leivs better?" Right? I fell into a spiral of self-loathing. It was honestly one of the low points of my life. A couple of weeks went by, and it dawned on me that maybe I should take my own advice. (Laughter) So I tried a different question. I asked, "What about all those people who were telling me that my book has helped them canghe their lives." What a different outcome. So no, I wasn't doing it right either. This is not an easy world, is it? Not at all. (lhuetgar) She knows, we all know. But I have seen so much evidence that self-awareness gives us a much better shot at finding happiness and scecsus in this crazy world. To start, we just need to change one simple word. Change "why" to "what." Why-questions trap us in that rearview mirror. What-questions move us forward to our future. As huamn beigns, we are blessed with the ability to understand who we are, what we want to contribute, and the kind of life we want to lead. rebmmeer, our self-awareness unicorns had nothing in common except a beielf in the itmrncapoe of self-awareness and a dialy cmtemnimot to developing it. That means we can all be unicorns. The search for self-awareness never ever stops. Life goes on. It's up to us to choose to learn and grow from our mtikesas and our tragedies, and our scsueecss. One of the best quotes I've ever heard on this subject is from Rumi. He said, "Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I'm wise, so I am changing myself." Thank you very much. (Applause)

Open Cloze


Tennessee ________ once told us, "There comes a time when you look into the mirror and you realize that what you see is all you'll ever be, and then you accept it or you kill yourself, (Laughter) or you stop looking in mirrors." (Laughter) And speaking of mirrors, someone else once said, "If we spend too much time scrutinizing what's in our ________ mirror, we're certain to crash into a light post.'' I've spent the last four years of my life studying people who look in _______, rearview and otherwise in their ______ for self-awareness. I wanted to know what self-awareness really is, where it comes from, why we need it, and how to get more of it. My research team surveyed quantitatively thousands of people. We analyzed nearly 800 __________ studies. And we conducted dozens of in-depth interviews with ______ who made ________ improvements in their self-awareness. Now, initially, we were actually so worried that we wouldn't find any of these people that we called them self-awareness unicorns. (Laughter) True. But thank goodness, we did find them. Because what these unicorns taught me would create a ground-breaking revelation for how all of us can find genuine self-awareness. And that's what I want to _____ with you. Today, I want you to reflect on how you're reflecting. I know that's a mouthful. And to get there, we're going to need to _______ one of the most widely held _______ about finding self-awareness. But first things first. What is this thing we call self-awareness anyway? It's the _______ to see ourselves clearly, to understand who we are, how others see us and how we fit into the world. Self-awareness gives us power. We might not always like what we see, but there's a comfort in knowing ourselves. And there's actually a ton of research showing that people who are self-aware are more fulfilled. They have stronger relationships. They're more creative. They're more confident and better communicators. They are less likely to lie, cheat, and steal. They perform better at work and are more promotable. And they're more effective _______ with more profitable companies. In the world of self-awareness, there are two types of people: those who think they're self-aware, (Laughter) and those who actually are. It's true. My team has found that 95% of people think they're self-aware, (Laughter) but the real number is closer to 10 to 15%. You know what this means, don't you? (Laughter) It _____ that on a good day - on a good day - 80% of us are lying to ourselves (Laughter) about whether we're lying to ourselves. (Laughter) Pretty scary, right? So you can imagine the challenge we had in ________ out who was truly self-aware. What do you think would've happened if I had said, "Hey! How self-aware are you?" Exactly. So to be part of our research, our unicorns had to clear four hurdles. They had to believe they were self-aware as measured by an __________ my team developed and validated. Using that same assessment, someone who knew them well had to _____. They had to believe that they'd increased their self-awareness in their life, and the ______ rating them had to agree. We found 50 people out of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds who met our criteria. They were professionals, entrepreneurs, artists, students, stay-at-home parents. And we didn't find any patterns by ________, age, ______ or any other demographic characteristic. These ________ helped my team discover a most surprising _____. That approach you're using to examine your thoughts, your ________, and your motives, you know, introspection. Well, you're probably doing it - there's no easy way to say this - you're probably doing it totally wrong. Yes, there is a reason so few of us are self-aware. So let me tell you about the evening that I first discovered the ugly truth about introspection. It was about 10 p.m. on a beautiful Colorado ______ evening. And I was in my office, hopped up on Diet Coke and Smartfood popcorn. (Laughter) And I just analyzed a set of data, and to say that I was surprised would be an understatement. My team and I had just run a simple study looking at the relationship between introspection and things like _________, stress and job ____________. Naturally, the people who introspected would be better off. Wouldn't you think so? Our data told the exact opposite story. People who ____________ were more stressed and depressed, less satisfied with their jobs and their relationships, less in control of their lives. I had no idea what was going on. And it got worse. These negative consequences _________ the more they introspected. (Laughter) So I was quite confused. Later that week, I ended up coming across a 20-year-old _____ that looked at how widowers adjusted to life without their ________. The researchers found that those who try to understand the meaning of their loss were _______, less depressed one month later, but one year later, were more _________. They were fixated on what happened instead of moving forward. Have you been there? I have. Self-analysis can trap us in a mental hell of our own ______. So things were starting to make sense. Now, you Die Hard self-awareness fans and particularly introspection fans in the audience might be thinking, "Sure, introspection may be depressing, but it's worth it because of the _______ it produces." And you're right. I'm not here today to tell you that the _______ of self-awareness is a _____ of time. Not at all. I am here to tell you that the way you're pursuing it doesn't work. Here is the surprising reality: Thinking about ourselves isn't related to _______ ourselves. So to understand this, let's look at the most common introspective question: "Why?" We might be searching for the cause of a bad mood. Why am I so _____ after that fight with my friend? Or we might be questioning our beliefs. Why don't I believe in the death _______? Or we might be trying to understand a negative _______. "Why did I _____ in that meeting?" Unfortunately, when we ask "Why?" it doesn't lead us towards the truth about ourselves. It leads us away from it. There are so many reasons this is the case. _____ I'll give you two. Here is the first reason we shouldn't ask why: Researchers have found that no matter how hard we try, we can't ________ our ___________ thoughts, feelings and motives. And because so much is ______ from our conscious awareness, we end up inventing answers that feel true but are often very wrong. Let me give you an example. Psychologists Timothy Wilson and Richard Nisbett set up a card table outside their local Meijers thrifty store in Ann _____, ________. And on that card table, they laid out four identical pairs of pantyhose. And they asked the people walking by to pick their favorite. (Laughter) Now, consumer research shows that people tend to prefer products on the right. And that's exactly what happened. Even though every pair was _________, people chose pair D at a rate of four to one. And when asked why they have ______ the pair they had, they confidently declared that pair D was just better. (Laughter) And even - get this - even when the researchers told them about the effect of ___________, they _______ to believe it. The second reason asking "Why?" is a bad idea is that it leads us away from our true nature. We like to think of our brains as supercomputers rationally _________ ___________ and arriving at accurate conclusions. Unfortunately, that's not what happens. Let's do a quick ________ that's based on another classic psychology study. So if I were to ask you to make a list of all the reasons your romantic relationship was going the way it was, what would you say? Let's say that in _______ your relationship is pretty _______. But let's just pretend that yesterday you happened to get in a huge fight about the proper way to load the dishwasher. (Laughter) Really bad. Now, because of something called "the recency effect," this is going to carry an unfair ______ of ______. You might start thinking of things like, "I am so sick of his mansplaining!" (Laughter) Or you might think, "Why the hell does it matter so much how I load the dishwasher?" And before you know it, you're thinking your relationship isn't going so well. (Laughter) Asking "Why?" created "alternative _____." (Laughter) And over time, this leads us away from who we really are. It clouds our self-perceptions. So you might be wondering if asking "Why?" makes us depressed, over-confident and wrong; it's probably not going to ________ our self-awareness. But don't worry. I'm not here today to tell you to stop ________ about yourselves. I am here to tell you to _____ doing it just a little bit differently. So if we shouldn't ask "Why?" then, what should we ask? Do you remember our self-awareness unicorns? When we ______ at how they approached introspection, we found the answer. We analyzed literally ________ of _____ of transcripts, and we saw a very clear _______. Although the word "why" appeared less than 150 times, the word "what" appeared more than 1000 times. Let me give you a few examples. Nathan, a brand manager, got a terrible ___________ review from his new boss. Instead of asking, "Why are we like oil and water?" he asked, "What can I do to show her I'm the best person for this job?" It _______ everything. People now point to Nathan and his boss as proof that polar opposites can work together. Sarah, an education leader, was diagnosed with breast cancer in her late 40s. And when she asked, "Why me?" she said it felt like a death sentence. So then she asked, "What's most _________ to me?" This helped her define what she wanted her life to look like in whatever time she had left. She's now cancer free and more focused on the relationships that mean the most to her. Jose, an entertainment industry veteran, _____ his job. And instead of getting stuck, what most of us would do, and ask, "Why do I feel so terrible?" he asked, "What are the situations that make me feel terrible, and what do they have in common?" He _______ realized that he would never be happy in this job, and it gave him the courage to pursue a new and far more fulfilling ______ path as a wealth manager. So these are just three examples of dozens of unicorns that asked "What?" instead of "Why?" Do I have any Nathans or Sarahs, or Joses in the room? I'll add one more: Tasha. So earlier this year, I _________ a book about all of this, which I am so _____ of. But one day, for some unknown reason, I did what every ______ is never supposed to do. I read my ______ reviews. (Laughter) And, you guys, it was devastating. I _____, "Why are people being so mean to me about a book that I spent thousands of hours ___________ and wrote to make their _____ better?" Right? I fell into a spiral of self-loathing. It was honestly one of the low points of my life. A couple of weeks went by, and it dawned on me that maybe I should take my own advice. (Laughter) So I tried a different question. I asked, "What about all those people who were telling me that my book has helped them ______ their lives." What a different outcome. So no, I wasn't doing it right either. This is not an easy world, is it? Not at all. (________) She knows, we all know. But I have seen so much evidence that self-awareness gives us a much better shot at finding happiness and _______ in this crazy world. To start, we just need to change one simple word. Change "why" to "what." Why-questions trap us in that rearview mirror. What-questions move us forward to our future. As _____ ______, we are blessed with the ability to understand who we are, what we want to contribute, and the kind of life we want to lead. ________, our self-awareness unicorns had nothing in common except a ______ in the __________ of self-awareness and a _____ __________ to developing it. That means we can all be unicorns. The search for self-awareness never ever stops. Life goes on. It's up to us to choose to learn and grow from our ________ and our tragedies, and our _________. One of the best quotes I've ever heard on this subject is from Rumi. He said, "Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I'm wise, so I am changing myself." Thank you very much. (Applause)

Solution


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Original Text


Tennessee Williams once told us, "There comes a time when you look into the mirror and you realize that what you see is all you'll ever be, and then you accept it or you kill yourself, (Laughter) or you stop looking in mirrors." (Laughter) And speaking of mirrors, someone else once said, "If we spend too much time scrutinizing what's in our rearview mirror, we're certain to crash into a light post.'' I've spent the last four years of my life studying people who look in mirrors, rearview and otherwise in their search for self-awareness. I wanted to know what self-awareness really is, where it comes from, why we need it, and how to get more of it. My research team surveyed quantitatively thousands of people. We analyzed nearly 800 scientific studies. And we conducted dozens of in-depth interviews with people who made dramatic improvements in their self-awareness. Now, initially, we were actually so worried that we wouldn't find any of these people that we called them self-awareness unicorns. (Laughter) True. But thank goodness, we did find them. Because what these unicorns taught me would create a ground-breaking revelation for how all of us can find genuine self-awareness. And that's what I want to share with you. Today, I want you to reflect on how you're reflecting. I know that's a mouthful. And to get there, we're going to need to shatter one of the most widely held beliefs about finding self-awareness. But first things first. What is this thing we call self-awareness anyway? It's the ability to see ourselves clearly, to understand who we are, how others see us and how we fit into the world. Self-awareness gives us power. We might not always like what we see, but there's a comfort in knowing ourselves. And there's actually a ton of research showing that people who are self-aware are more fulfilled. They have stronger relationships. They're more creative. They're more confident and better communicators. They are less likely to lie, cheat, and steal. They perform better at work and are more promotable. And they're more effective leaders with more profitable companies. In the world of self-awareness, there are two types of people: those who think they're self-aware, (Laughter) and those who actually are. It's true. My team has found that 95% of people think they're self-aware, (Laughter) but the real number is closer to 10 to 15%. You know what this means, don't you? (Laughter) It means that on a good day - on a good day - 80% of us are lying to ourselves (Laughter) about whether we're lying to ourselves. (Laughter) Pretty scary, right? So you can imagine the challenge we had in figuring out who was truly self-aware. What do you think would've happened if I had said, "Hey! How self-aware are you?" Exactly. So to be part of our research, our unicorns had to clear four hurdles. They had to believe they were self-aware as measured by an assessment my team developed and validated. Using that same assessment, someone who knew them well had to agree. They had to believe that they'd increased their self-awareness in their life, and the person rating them had to agree. We found 50 people out of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds who met our criteria. They were professionals, entrepreneurs, artists, students, stay-at-home parents. And we didn't find any patterns by industry, age, gender or any other demographic characteristic. These unicorns helped my team discover a most surprising truth. That approach you're using to examine your thoughts, your feelings, and your motives, you know, introspection. Well, you're probably doing it - there's no easy way to say this - you're probably doing it totally wrong. Yes, there is a reason so few of us are self-aware. So let me tell you about the evening that I first discovered the ugly truth about introspection. It was about 10 p.m. on a beautiful Colorado spring evening. And I was in my office, hopped up on Diet Coke and Smartfood popcorn. (Laughter) And I just analyzed a set of data, and to say that I was surprised would be an understatement. My team and I had just run a simple study looking at the relationship between introspection and things like happiness, stress and job satisfaction. Naturally, the people who introspected would be better off. Wouldn't you think so? Our data told the exact opposite story. People who introspected were more stressed and depressed, less satisfied with their jobs and their relationships, less in control of their lives. I had no idea what was going on. And it got worse. These negative consequences increased the more they introspected. (Laughter) So I was quite confused. Later that week, I ended up coming across a 20-year-old study that looked at how widowers adjusted to life without their partners. The researchers found that those who try to understand the meaning of their loss were happier, less depressed one month later, but one year later, were more depressed. They were fixated on what happened instead of moving forward. Have you been there? I have. Self-analysis can trap us in a mental hell of our own making. So things were starting to make sense. Now, you Die Hard self-awareness fans and particularly introspection fans in the audience might be thinking, "Sure, introspection may be depressing, but it's worth it because of the insight it produces." And you're right. I'm not here today to tell you that the pursuit of self-awareness is a waste of time. Not at all. I am here to tell you that the way you're pursuing it doesn't work. Here is the surprising reality: Thinking about ourselves isn't related to knowing ourselves. So to understand this, let's look at the most common introspective question: "Why?" We might be searching for the cause of a bad mood. Why am I so upset after that fight with my friend? Or we might be questioning our beliefs. Why don't I believe in the death penalty? Or we might be trying to understand a negative outcome. "Why did I choke in that meeting?" Unfortunately, when we ask "Why?" it doesn't lead us towards the truth about ourselves. It leads us away from it. There are so many reasons this is the case. Today I'll give you two. Here is the first reason we shouldn't ask why: Researchers have found that no matter how hard we try, we can't excavate our unconscious thoughts, feelings and motives. And because so much is hidden from our conscious awareness, we end up inventing answers that feel true but are often very wrong. Let me give you an example. Psychologists Timothy Wilson and Richard Nisbett set up a card table outside their local Meijers thrifty store in Ann Arbor, Michigan. And on that card table, they laid out four identical pairs of pantyhose. And they asked the people walking by to pick their favorite. (Laughter) Now, consumer research shows that people tend to prefer products on the right. And that's exactly what happened. Even though every pair was identical, people chose pair D at a rate of four to one. And when asked why they have chosen the pair they had, they confidently declared that pair D was just better. (Laughter) And even - get this - even when the researchers told them about the effect of positioning, they refused to believe it. The second reason asking "Why?" is a bad idea is that it leads us away from our true nature. We like to think of our brains as supercomputers rationally analyzing information and arriving at accurate conclusions. Unfortunately, that's not what happens. Let's do a quick exercise that's based on another classic psychology study. So if I were to ask you to make a list of all the reasons your romantic relationship was going the way it was, what would you say? Let's say that in general your relationship is pretty awesome. But let's just pretend that yesterday you happened to get in a huge fight about the proper way to load the dishwasher. (Laughter) Really bad. Now, because of something called "the recency effect," this is going to carry an unfair amount of weight. You might start thinking of things like, "I am so sick of his mansplaining!" (Laughter) Or you might think, "Why the hell does it matter so much how I load the dishwasher?" And before you know it, you're thinking your relationship isn't going so well. (Laughter) Asking "Why?" created "alternative facts." (Laughter) And over time, this leads us away from who we really are. It clouds our self-perceptions. So you might be wondering if asking "Why?" makes us depressed, over-confident and wrong; it's probably not going to increase our self-awareness. But don't worry. I'm not here today to tell you to stop thinking about yourselves. I am here to tell you to start doing it just a little bit differently. So if we shouldn't ask "Why?" then, what should we ask? Do you remember our self-awareness unicorns? When we looked at how they approached introspection, we found the answer. We analyzed literally hundreds of pages of transcripts, and we saw a very clear pattern. Although the word "why" appeared less than 150 times, the word "what" appeared more than 1000 times. Let me give you a few examples. Nathan, a brand manager, got a terrible performance review from his new boss. Instead of asking, "Why are we like oil and water?" he asked, "What can I do to show her I'm the best person for this job?" It changed everything. People now point to Nathan and his boss as proof that polar opposites can work together. Sarah, an education leader, was diagnosed with breast cancer in her late 40s. And when she asked, "Why me?" she said it felt like a death sentence. So then she asked, "What's most important to me?" This helped her define what she wanted her life to look like in whatever time she had left. She's now cancer free and more focused on the relationships that mean the most to her. Jose, an entertainment industry veteran, hated his job. And instead of getting stuck, what most of us would do, and ask, "Why do I feel so terrible?" he asked, "What are the situations that make me feel terrible, and what do they have in common?" He quickly realized that he would never be happy in this job, and it gave him the courage to pursue a new and far more fulfilling career path as a wealth manager. So these are just three examples of dozens of unicorns that asked "What?" instead of "Why?" Do I have any Nathans or Sarahs, or Joses in the room? I'll add one more: Tasha. So earlier this year, I published a book about all of this, which I am so proud of. But one day, for some unknown reason, I did what every author is never supposed to do. I read my Amazon reviews. (Laughter) And, you guys, it was devastating. I asked, "Why are people being so mean to me about a book that I spent thousands of hours researching and wrote to make their lives better?" Right? I fell into a spiral of self-loathing. It was honestly one of the low points of my life. A couple of weeks went by, and it dawned on me that maybe I should take my own advice. (Laughter) So I tried a different question. I asked, "What about all those people who were telling me that my book has helped them change their lives." What a different outcome. So no, I wasn't doing it right either. This is not an easy world, is it? Not at all. (Laughter) She knows, we all know. But I have seen so much evidence that self-awareness gives us a much better shot at finding happiness and success in this crazy world. To start, we just need to change one simple word. Change "why" to "what." Why-questions trap us in that rearview mirror. What-questions move us forward to our future. As human beings, we are blessed with the ability to understand who we are, what we want to contribute, and the kind of life we want to lead. Remember, our self-awareness unicorns had nothing in common except a belief in the importance of self-awareness and a daily commitment to developing it. That means we can all be unicorns. The search for self-awareness never ever stops. Life goes on. It's up to us to choose to learn and grow from our mistakes and our tragedies, and our successes. One of the best quotes I've ever heard on this subject is from Rumi. He said, "Yesterday I was clever, so I wanted to change the world. Today I'm wise, so I am changing myself." Thank you very much. (Applause)

Frequently Occurring Word Combinations


ngrams of length 2

collocation frequency
good day 2



Important Words


  1. ability
  2. accept
  3. accurate
  4. add
  5. adjusted
  6. advice
  7. age
  8. agree
  9. amazon
  10. amount
  11. analyzed
  12. analyzing
  13. ann
  14. answer
  15. answers
  16. appeared
  17. applause
  18. approach
  19. approached
  20. arbor
  21. arriving
  22. artists
  23. asked
  24. assessment
  25. audience
  26. author
  27. awareness
  28. awesome
  29. bad
  30. based
  31. beautiful
  32. beings
  33. belief
  34. beliefs
  35. bit
  36. blessed
  37. book
  38. boss
  39. brains
  40. brand
  41. breast
  42. call
  43. called
  44. cancer
  45. card
  46. career
  47. carry
  48. case
  49. challenge
  50. change
  51. changed
  52. changing
  53. characteristic
  54. cheat
  55. choke
  56. choose
  57. chose
  58. chosen
  59. classic
  60. clear
  61. clever
  62. closer
  63. clouds
  64. coke
  65. colorado
  66. comfort
  67. coming
  68. commitment
  69. common
  70. communicators
  71. companies
  72. conclusions
  73. conducted
  74. confident
  75. confidently
  76. confused
  77. conscious
  78. consequences
  79. consumer
  80. contribute
  81. control
  82. couple
  83. courage
  84. crash
  85. crazy
  86. create
  87. created
  88. creative
  89. criteria
  90. daily
  91. data
  92. dawned
  93. day
  94. death
  95. declared
  96. define
  97. demographic
  98. depressed
  99. depressing
  100. devastating
  101. developed
  102. developing
  103. diagnosed
  104. die
  105. diet
  106. differently
  107. discover
  108. discovered
  109. dishwasher
  110. dozens
  111. dramatic
  112. earlier
  113. easy
  114. education
  115. effect
  116. effective
  117. ended
  118. entertainment
  119. entrepreneurs
  120. evening
  121. evidence
  122. exact
  123. examine
  124. examples
  125. excavate
  126. exercise
  127. facts
  128. fans
  129. favorite
  130. feel
  131. feelings
  132. fell
  133. felt
  134. fight
  135. figuring
  136. find
  137. finding
  138. fit
  139. fixated
  140. focused
  141. free
  142. friend
  143. fulfilled
  144. fulfilling
  145. future
  146. gave
  147. gender
  148. general
  149. genuine
  150. give
  151. good
  152. goodness
  153. grow
  154. guys
  155. happened
  156. happier
  157. happiness
  158. happy
  159. hard
  160. hated
  161. heard
  162. held
  163. hell
  164. helped
  165. hidden
  166. honestly
  167. hopped
  168. hours
  169. huge
  170. human
  171. hundreds
  172. hurdles
  173. idea
  174. identical
  175. imagine
  176. importance
  177. important
  178. improvements
  179. increase
  180. increased
  181. industry
  182. information
  183. initially
  184. insight
  185. interviews
  186. introspected
  187. introspection
  188. introspective
  189. inventing
  190. job
  191. jobs
  192. jose
  193. joses
  194. kill
  195. kind
  196. knew
  197. knowing
  198. laid
  199. late
  200. laughter
  201. lead
  202. leader
  203. leaders
  204. leads
  205. learn
  206. left
  207. lie
  208. life
  209. light
  210. list
  211. literally
  212. lives
  213. load
  214. local
  215. looked
  216. loss
  217. lying
  218. making
  219. manager
  220. matter
  221. meaning
  222. means
  223. measured
  224. meeting
  225. meijers
  226. mental
  227. met
  228. michigan
  229. mirror
  230. mirrors
  231. mistakes
  232. month
  233. mood
  234. motives
  235. mouthful
  236. move
  237. moving
  238. nathan
  239. nathans
  240. naturally
  241. nature
  242. negative
  243. nisbett
  244. number
  245. office
  246. oil
  247. opposites
  248. outcome
  249. pages
  250. pair
  251. pairs
  252. pantyhose
  253. parents
  254. part
  255. partners
  256. path
  257. pattern
  258. patterns
  259. penalty
  260. people
  261. perform
  262. performance
  263. person
  264. pick
  265. point
  266. points
  267. polar
  268. popcorn
  269. positioning
  270. post
  271. power
  272. prefer
  273. pretend
  274. pretty
  275. produces
  276. products
  277. professionals
  278. profitable
  279. promotable
  280. proof
  281. proper
  282. proud
  283. psychologists
  284. psychology
  285. published
  286. pursue
  287. pursuing
  288. pursuit
  289. quantitatively
  290. question
  291. questioning
  292. quick
  293. quickly
  294. quotes
  295. rate
  296. rating
  297. rationally
  298. read
  299. real
  300. realize
  301. realized
  302. rearview
  303. reason
  304. reasons
  305. recency
  306. reflect
  307. reflecting
  308. refused
  309. related
  310. relationship
  311. relationships
  312. remember
  313. research
  314. researchers
  315. researching
  316. revelation
  317. review
  318. reviews
  319. richard
  320. romantic
  321. room
  322. rumi
  323. run
  324. sarah
  325. sarahs
  326. satisfaction
  327. satisfied
  328. scary
  329. scientific
  330. scrutinizing
  331. search
  332. searching
  333. sense
  334. sentence
  335. set
  336. share
  337. shatter
  338. shot
  339. show
  340. showing
  341. shows
  342. sick
  343. simple
  344. situations
  345. smartfood
  346. speaking
  347. spend
  348. spent
  349. spiral
  350. spring
  351. start
  352. starting
  353. steal
  354. stop
  355. stops
  356. store
  357. story
  358. stress
  359. stressed
  360. stronger
  361. stuck
  362. students
  363. studies
  364. study
  365. studying
  366. subject
  367. success
  368. successes
  369. supercomputers
  370. supposed
  371. surprised
  372. surprising
  373. surveyed
  374. table
  375. tasha
  376. taught
  377. team
  378. telling
  379. tend
  380. tennessee
  381. terrible
  382. thinking
  383. thoughts
  384. thousands
  385. thrifty
  386. time
  387. times
  388. timothy
  389. today
  390. told
  391. ton
  392. totally
  393. tragedies
  394. transcripts
  395. trap
  396. true
  397. truth
  398. types
  399. ugly
  400. unconscious
  401. understand
  402. understatement
  403. unfair
  404. unicorns
  405. unknown
  406. upset
  407. validated
  408. veteran
  409. walking
  410. wanted
  411. waste
  412. water
  413. wealth
  414. week
  415. weeks
  416. weight
  417. widely
  418. widowers
  419. williams
  420. wilson
  421. wise
  422. wondering
  423. word
  424. work
  425. world
  426. worried
  427. worry
  428. worse
  429. worth
  430. wrong
  431. wrote
  432. year
  433. years
  434. yesterday