BOOK SUMMARY 239 Stumbling on Happiness
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Summary written by: Ingrid Urgolites
"To see is to experience the world as it is, to
remember is to experience the world as it was, but to imagine – ah, to imagine
is to experience the world as it isn’t and has never been, but as it might be.
The greatest achievement of the human brain is its ability to imagine objects
and episodes that do not exist in the realm of the real, and it is this ability
that allows us to think about the future."
- Stumbling on Happiness, page 5
In Stumbling
on Happiness, Daniel Gilbert uses engaging analogies and insightful research
in explaining what makes us stumble when we predict how we will feel in the
future. He supports his bold statement, “The human being is the only
animal that thinks about the future.” It took over two million years for
the one and a quarter pound brain of Homo habilis to evolve to the
nearly three-pound brain of Homo sapiens. The growth spurt that
super-sized our frontal lobe is responsible for anxiety and planning, both of
which involve predicting the future. Because of this remarkable adaptation he
says, “We think about the future in a way that no other animal can, does, or
ever has, and this simple, ubiquitous, ordinary act is a defining feature of
our humanity.”
The
pursuit of happiness – something which we all feel entitled to as human beings
– anchors on planning a satisfying future. We make decisions to maximize
satisfaction in life. Gilbert says, “Indeed, feelings don’t just matter – they
are what mattering means.” The stumbling block is thinking we can
guide our lives to a future that will make us happier than other futures. We
may not be able to plan our way to a happy future and worry away the pitfalls,
but there are ways we can avoid stumbling on happiness.
The Golden Egg
Use Surrogates to Increase Satisfaction with Choices
"This
trio of studies suggests that when people are deprived of the information that
imagination requires and are thus forced to use others as surrogates, they make
remarkably accurate predictions about their future feelings, which suggests
that the best way to predict our feelings tomorrow is to see how others are
feeling today."- Stumbling on Happiness, page 251
We
spend most of our time thinking about ourselves. We think of ourselves as
special because we can only experience our feelings. We have to infer what
other people feel. Gilbert notes, “This tendency to think of ourselves as
better than others is not necessarily a manifestation of our unfettered
narcissism but may instead be an instance of a more general tendency to think
of ourselves as different from others – often for better but
sometimes for worse.” Thinking of ourselves and others regarding differences
helps us distinguish ourselves and others, but we tend to overestimate our
unique qualities. Believing we are different is the main reason we reject using
others’ experiences to predict our happiness.
Imagining
the future involves combining our perception of our present and memory of the
past and making a prediction. Unfortunately, our perception and memory are
biased and inaccurate models of reality. Measuring other people’s experience
produces a better understanding of reality. Gilbert observes, “The irony, of
course, is that surrogation is a cheap and effective way to predict one’s
future emotions, but because we don’t realize just how similar we are, we
reject this reliable method and rely instead on our imaginations, as flawed and
fallible as they may be.”
Gem #1
Our Imagination has a Blind Spot
"The
point here is when we imagine the future, we often do so in the blind spot of
our mind’s eye, and this tendency can cause us to misimagine the future events
whose emotional consequences we are attempting to weigh."- Stumbling on
Happiness, page 102
We
have a tendency to misrepresent reality in our minds eye and create a blind
spot where the future is. Because we misremember the past and misperceive the
present, we also misimagine the future. Gilbert writes, “Because we naturally
use our present feelings as a starting point when we attempt to predict our
future feelings, we expect our future to be a bit more like our present than it
actually will.” Our memories are an inaccurate representation of an event; they
showcase rare occurrences. We also tend to compare our present to our imagined
future and predict bad things will be worse than they are once they happen.
Referencing a surrogate’s experience can illuminate the blind spot.
Another
type of blind spot is comparing the wrong things. We may see the value of
savings relative to the total purchase price and not the full amount of money
we have. We may drive across town to save five cents a gallon on gasoline but
not to save five hundred dollars on an automobile. As Gilbert writes, “your
bank account contains absolute dollars and not ‘percentages off.’” Our bank
account will still have fifty cents more money when we save on gas and five
hundred dollars more when we save on the automobile. We also may assess the
value of purchase based on what we spent before. As in Gilbert’s example, “it
really doesn’t matter what coffee cost the day before, the week before, or at
any time during the Hoover administration. Right now I have absolute dollars to
spend, and the only question I need to answer is how to spend them in order to
maximize my satisfaction.”
Gem #2
We Rationalize Courage More Than Cowardice
"Our
most consequential choices – whether to marry, have children, buy a house,
enter a profession, move abroad – are often shaped by how we imagine our future
regrets (‘Oh no, I forgot to have a baby!’). Regret is an emotion we feel when
we blame ourselves for unfortunate outcomes that might have been prevented had
we only behaved differently in the past, and because that emotion is decidedly
unpleasant, our behavior in the present is often designed to preclude
it."- Stumbling on Happiness, page 196
People
regret not having done things much more than things they did. If we have a bad
experience that we cannot change, we look for ways to change our viewpoint. We
can think of the things we learned from a mistake, but if there was no
experience we default to regret. Although eventually we rationalize courage
more than cowardice in the present, the risk may seem exaggerated. We usually
do not feel as bad about adverse events as we think we will.
Using
a surrogate’s experience can help evaluate options. It is very hard to make a
balanced comparison because we tend to focus on any attribute that
distinguishes one option from another and not on the attributes most important
to us. We also tend to make a biased evaluation, as Gilbert writes, “when we
are selecting, we consider the positive attributes of our alternatives, and
when we are rejecting, we consider the negative attributes. … Of course, the
logical way to select … is to consider both the presence and the absence of
positive and negative attributes, but that’s not what most of us do.”
Happiness
is about feeling satisfied with our lives. Gilbert writes, “In short, the
comparisons we make have a profound impact on our feelings, and when we fail to
recognize that the comparisons we are making today are not the comparisons we
will make tomorrow, we predictably underestimate how differently we will feel
in the future.”
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