WHY FICTION READING IS IMPORTANT
Health Wise Start ‘mentalising’ for more of an edge
I am in absolute awe of people who
don’t read fiction. Of late, I’ve been running into more than a few who boast
they don’t. It’s never said as an apology. They are proud that they stick to
hard facts, not flights of fancy. They are almost always high-achievers, with
heads crammed full of useful information and thinly veiled contempt for people
who read stuff that distracts them from the practical pursuits of acing exams
or scampering up the career ladder.
But research now shows that
fiction-shunners are missing out in real life. Reading fiction — even short stories
— apparently boosts your ability to get into other people’s heads, by
increasing empathy and the ability to ‘mentalise’, which helps you put aside
what you know or believe in to take on an alternative world view.
It improves decision-making and helps
you better cope with uncertainty. It boosts social intelligence by helping you
predict other people’s actions, spot deceit and even lie convincingly, all of
which are skills in the real world.
This ability to understand what
another person is feeling or going through is higher among frequent readers of
fiction, report two studies from the University of Toronto in Canada. The
benefits are immediate, with one study reporting that reading a short story
boosted empathy and social skills of even those closed to experience and ideas.
The second study, conducted by the
same group, found that reading fiction also lowers a person’s discomfort with
ambiguity and need for order, perhaps because fictional chaos doesn’t directly
affect us and is easier to accept.
Now, empathy is what makes us human,
as was shown using brain imaging technology. Psychopaths —defined as
self-centred, remorseless people who harm others without thought or guilt —
can’t show empathy toward anyone because their brains aren’t wired to do so,
reported researchers from the University of Chicago in journal JAMA Psychiatry
in April. This, I guess, makes psychopaths the one subset unaffected by
fiction, good or bad, but then they are not effected by anything other than
self-interest.
Researchers from the University of
Chicago used MRI scans of the brain and found that psychopaths have less
activation in parts of the brain, called the insula, that monitor emotional and
physical states and control empathising with others.
Dysfunction in this region makes
people oblivious or callous to other people’s pain or distress.
Apart from winning you friends,
empathy increases productivity at work by increasing understanding,
communication and relationships needed to develop solutions and diffuse
conflict. And if your workplace happens to be a hospital or clinic, it could
save lives.
Patients who had empathetic
physicians had better controlled diabetes with fewer complications, found a
study on the relationship between physician empathy and disease complications,
in northern Italy.
Published in Academic Medicine:
Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, the study included
20,961 people with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes from a population of 284,298 adult
patients registered with the Local Health Authority enrolled with one of 242
primary-care physicians, and found that patients of physicians with high
empathy scores had much fewer complications. They also needed to be
hospitalised less frequently.
It’s not easy to take time out for
fiction, or for getting inside other people’s heads, but perhaps you should, if
only to discover yourself. Most people — even those who think of themselves as
sensitive — are self-aware about what they need but, when it comes to other
people’s states of mind, as clueless as the unfriendly neighbourhood
psychopath.
- Sanchita SharmaHT130707
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