The Secret to Your Unhappiness is in Your Toothpaste
I’m going to try a new kind of blog post, just to experiment with format. Let’s juxtapose snippets of information and come to a hypothesis. I’ll call it a 1 + 1 post.
Beyond the age of information is the age of choices. —Charles EamesplusIn one study, participants were asked to choose an art poster. One group was told that their decision was irreversible, while the other group was told that they could exchange the poster they chose for another one at any time.equals
Later, participants were asked to rank their satisfaction with the poster they chose. The people who couldn’t change their decision were more satisfied with their posters than the other group who were allowed to swap. — from a study by Dan Gilbert
We live in an age of options. We perceive having choices as something that is good. But, as much as we think options make us happy, they sometimes actually do the opposite. Having too many choices can be paralyzing and may turn us fickle. Worse yet, too many options may leave us unsatisfied and unhappy, the exact opposite of what we think they’ll do for us.
We’ll consider the opportunity cost of just about any decision. It’s why we’re paralyzed in front of the 47 different kinds of toothpaste in the aisle at Walgreen’s. Do I want my mouth to smell like a wintery mountain top or a citrusy rush? Tartar control or extra-whitening?
On the other hand, if you’re stuck with something, you’ll find a way to like it, even if it means changing how you think about it.
People talk about the new era we’ve entered and how it requires a completely new skill set to thrive. So, let’s add this to the list: we must prepare ourselves a way to approach not a scarcity of options, but rather an abundance of them. Our happiness depends on it.
The Secret to Your Unhappiness is in Your Toothpaste
I’m going to try a new kind of blog post, just to experiment with format. Let’s juxtapose snippets of information and come to a hypothesis. I’ll call it a 1 + 1 post.
Beyond the age of information is the age of choices. —Charles EamesplusIn one study, participants were asked to choose an art poster. One group was told that their decision was irreversible, while the other group was told that they could exchange the poster they chose for another one at any time.equals
Later, participants were asked to rank their satisfaction with the poster they chose. The people who couldn’t change their decision were more satisfied with their posters than the other group who were allowed to swap. — from a study by Dan Gilbert
We live in an age of options. We perceive having choices as something that is good. But, as much as we think options make us happy, they sometimes actually do the opposite. Having too many choices can be paralyzing and may turn us fickle. Worse yet, too many options may leave us unsatisfied and unhappy, the exact opposite of what we think they’ll do for us.
We’ll consider the opportunity cost of just about any decision. It’s why we’re paralyzed in front of the 47 different kinds of toothpaste in the aisle at Walgreen’s. Do I want my mouth to smell like a wintery mountain top or a citrusy rush? Tartar control or extra-whitening?
On the other hand, if you’re stuck with something, you’ll find a way to like it, even if it means changing how you think about it.
People talk about the new era we’ve entered and how it requires a completely new skill set to thrive. So, let’s add this to the list: we must prepare ourselves a way to approach not a scarcity of options, but rather an abundance of them. Our happiness depends on it.
Posted 2 years ago 33 notes
Notes:
-
couch liked this
-
fancytype liked this
-
gblakeman liked this
-
fumblies reblogged this from viafrank and added:
Fascinating read
-
rachelchew liked this
-
naufragar liked this
-
wesbaker liked this
-
gluebox reblogged this from viafrank
-
gluebox liked this
-
patdryburgh liked this
-
ashliej liked this
-
johncommoner liked this
-
kupferschrift liked this
-
blerg liked this
-
itssunnyoutalex liked this
-
lartuen liked this
-
stormytherabbit liked this
-
elliotstokes reblogged this from viafrank
-
jayrobinson liked this
-
austinkleon liked this
-
glass liked this
-
melissaanderson liked this
-
monkeyairplane liked this
-
jorgeferes reblogged this from viafrank
-
jorgeferes liked this
-
jamaicamakes liked this
-
duaneking liked this
-
tinyblip liked this
-
colinmford liked this
-
laureola liked this
-
murmurandshout liked this
-
petegibson liked this
-
viafrank posted this