BOOK SUMMARY 236 No One Understands You and What to Do About It
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Summary written by: Ronni Hendel-Giller
"The uncomfortable truth is that most of us don’t
come across the way we intend. We can’t see ourselves truly objectively, and
neither can anyone else. Human beings have a strong tendency to distort other
people’s feedback to fit their own views. We know this intellectually, and yet
we rarely seem to recognize it as it’s happening."
- No One Understands You and What to Do About
It, page 4
Heidi
Grant Halvorson is a social psychologist, researcher and an entertaining
writer. Her first book, Succeed, is a favorite of mine. She offers fresh,
counter-intuitive, thought and action provoking insights into the science of
goal attainment.
While No
One Understands You and What to Do About It doesn’t rise to the level
of Succeed, there are plenty of gems in it as well—and Halvorson is
masterful at bringing research and studies to bear in an engaging and often
amusing way.
Halvorson’s
intent, here, is to help us understand why the way we’re seen by others is
often distorted—and how we can be seen the way we want to be seen. Admittedly,
one of the challenges that Halvorson addresses is that we don’t see ourselves
all that clearly either. Recognizing this is central to the challenge we face.
While
much of the research Halvorson shares isn’t new (Kahneman’s Thinking Fast
and Slow is oft-quoted), her way of organizing
and framing it is helpful. And, I’m finding this book most useful in helping me
to recognize when my assessments of others are biased—becoming more aware of my
actual and potential biases and thereby making more empathetic and fairer
assessments of others.
The Golden Egg
We’re Often Misunderstood
"Without
realizing it, you—like everyone else—are very likely operating under two very
flawed assumptions: first, that other people see you objectively as you are,
and, second that other people see you as you see yourself."- No One
Understands You and What to Do About It, page 10
Halvorson’s
claim is that it’s hard to be judged accurately—that we’re not open books—even
when we think we are. We don’t communicate as clearly as we think we do either
verbally or non-verbally. This is true, even with the people who know us well.
At the same time, the research tells us that being “judge-able”— allowing
others to see us fully leads to more happiness and better adjustment.
By
cataloguing a myriad of cognitive biases that influence what we see, the fact
that we are often misunderstood starts to make sense. We’re wired to make quick
judgments—because of both the evolutionary benefits (that no longer hold so
well in a modern world) of those judgments and the fact that slowing down and
making more measured assessments requires more energy—and we default to using
less energy.
Because
we’re most often unaware that our biases are coming into play, our
misunderstandings are unconscious—meaning that we believe we are right in our
assessments when we can be absolutely wrong. To see more clearly—and
accurately—requires slowing down and making more effort—hard cognitive work.
Halvorson
makes suggestions for managing the biases with which we are perceived and most
of them have to do with being more intentional in our communications and not
assuming that others see us the way we wish to be seen. And, perhaps the most
powerful tool we have for managing bias is understanding it.
Gem #1
We Are All Cognitive Misers
"Human
thought, like every other complex process, is subject to the
speed-versus-accuracy trade-off. Go fast, and you make mistakes. Be thorough
and diligent, and you take an eternity… Most of the time, just the gist will
do, so we choose speed."- No One Understands You and What to Do About It,
page 21
Being
a cognitive miser means that we use a slew of “shortcuts” to make quick
assessments of others based on a variety of heuristics (rules of thumb) and
assumptions. There are too many of these at play to cover, so I’ll mention a
couple of the big ones.
The
most common assumption that guides perception is that when people look at you,
they see what they expect to see. This is called confirmation bias.
If the perceiver expects you to be dishonest, whatever you say or do will be
filtered through that lens and will fit that perception. Similarly, if they
perceive you trustworthy. These expectations are based on, among other things—stereotypes,
first impressions (often too hastily made) or seeing you as being like someone
else the perceiver knows.
Other
biases, such as our tendency to assume good intentions for ourselves but not
for others, only increases the challenge we have in helping others see us more
clearly.
One
thing that can help us to overcome this and other biases is to recognize our
own tendency to think that others see and feel what we see and feel. The more
we recognize that this is not true, the more intentional we can become about
the impressions we make—and the less we will assume that others see and
experience what we see and experience. We will also work harder and more
diligently than we thought necessary to correct mistaken impressions.
Gem #2
The Trust Lens
"The
very first thing another person will seek to determine about you is whether he
or she can trust you—in broad strokes, whether you are friend or foe."- No
One Understands You and What to Do About It, page 84
Halvorson
suggests three major lenses of perception that shape the way that we are seen:
trust, power and ego. Trust comes first. Then, the power lens looks
to answer the question “how much influence do you have over me?” and the ego
lens asks “do you make me feel insecure?” I recommend looking at all the
lenses—and I’ll focus on the trust lens here.
Research
demonstrates that we make automatic assessments of people on two key
dimensions—warmth and competence. Warmth tells us whether someone’s intentions
are good and competence tell us whether we believe they can act on these
intentions. Again, this lens stems from a time when threats were
existential—today they operate at a more psychological level.
Research
tells us that the answer to “which is more important” is “both.” And, it also
tells us, somewhat surprisingly, that starting with warmth is best. This
awareness is critical (and sometimes challenging) for organizational leaders.
Strategies
for increasing warmth include paying attention, showing empathy and trusting
them first. To increase competence, one of the most powerful tools is eye
contact.
Getting
the balance between warmth and competence right can be a challenge. Halvorson
suggests that we can be perceived as warm AND competent by projecting strong
character, being fair and honest—which is available to people not “warm” by
nature.
One of
the conclusions I draw from this book and others I’ve been reading about
cognitive bias is that while we benefit from knowing about bias, we will never
be immune. We will continue to make biased assessments and to be judged based
on others’ biases. That’s how our minds work. I’m also convinced that just
knowing how deeply these biases operate helps us in our assessments of others
and in the way we manage ourselves.
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