Subtitles section Play video
-
One of the most basic facts about the human condition is that we know ourselves from the inside,
-
but we know others only from what they choose or are able to tell us, a far more limited and edited set of data.
-
We are continuously and intimately exposed to our own worries, hopes, desires and memories –
-
many of which feel overwhelmingly intense, strange, vulnerable or sad. Yet when it comes to other people,
-
we are tightly restricted to knowing them through their public pronouncements, to what they can or choose to reveal.
-
The hints and clues we are left to play with are hugely imperfect guides to the reality of another person's existence.
-
The result of what we termed this Psychological Asymmetry
-
is that we almost always think of ourselves as far more peculiar,
-
shameful and alarming than other people we run into.
-
Our experiences of anxiety, anger, envy, sex and distress
-
appear to be so much more intense and disturbing than those of anyone in the vicinity.
-
We aren't of course in truth really so odd. We just know a lot more about who we are
-
The results of Psychological Asymmetry are loneliness and shyness.
-
We are beset by loneliness because we cannot imagine that others long and desire,
-
envy and hate, crave and weep as we do. We feel ourselves cast out into a world of strangers,
-
inherently different from everyone we live alongside – and potentially fundamentally offensive to all those who might know us properly.
-
It appears, in dark moments, that no one could possibly both know and like us.
-
We also get shy, easily intimidated by people who we assume cannot share in our vulnerabilities
-
and whom we imagine would be entirely unable to relate to the petty,
-
grand, perverse or idealistic thoughts that pass moment by moment through our minds.
-
If we reach important positions,
-
we feel like impostors, beset by an impression that our quirks separate us from others who have occupied comparable roles in the past.
-
We grow boring and conventional, mimicking the externals of other people on the false assumption that this is what they might truly be like inside.
-
The solutions to Psychological Asymmetry lie in two places: Art and Love.
-
Art provides us with accurate portrayals of the inner lives of strangers and,
-
with grace and compelling charm, shows us how much they share in troubles and hopes we thought we might be alone in experiencing.
-
And Love gives us an occasional, deeply precious sense of security
-
to reveal who we really are to another person and the opportunity to learn about their reality from a position of extreme secure proximity.
-
To overcome the effects of Psychological Asymmetry, we must constantly trust – especially in the absence of any evidence –
-
that everyone is likely to be far closer to what we are (that is, far shyer, more scared, more worried and more incomplete)
-
than they are to resemble the personas they show to the world.
-
We are fortunately not, any of us, quite as odd, or quite as special, as we might assume or fear.
-
At the School of Life we believe in developing emotional intelligence.
-
To that end, we've also created a whole range of products to support that growth.
-
Find out more at the link on the screen now