Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Theyve goneand what we need most of all to understand is why? What is striking

  • is that, despite what friends and well-meaning acquaintances tell us, we already know. It

  • is us. We firmly and naturally assume that the explanation is primarily to do with us

  • and our miserable failings. Theyve gone because we weren’t good enough. They got

  • to know us better than almost anyone has ever doneand then, inevitably, felt horrified

  • by the truth. It’s not the relationship that failed: we failed. Butcounterintuitively

  • what seems most obvious to us in our hearts might not actually be true in reality. There

  • is a famous experiment in the history of psychology which pinpoints our tendency to project: that

  • is, to read decisive, clear explanations drawn from our minds into what are in fact ambiguous

  • situations in the world. The Thematic Apperception test, as it’s technically known, was developed

  • in the 1930s by the American psychologist Henry Murray. It presents us with images of

  • peopleand asks us to say what’s going on in them.People tend to come to quite specific

  • conclusions. For example: She’d fed up with him; he’s weak and a

  • bit boring and she’s just told him that their relationship isn’t working and that

  • she’s leaving. He’s just told her they have to break up

  • and the reason has something to do with their sex lives. He’s not as fulfilled as he wants

  • to be. It seems to be about his parents. She wants

  • him to take more distance from them. If he doesn’t, she can’t be expected to stay

  • around foreverThe power of the experiment derives from the

  • fact that the image has, by design, no precise or definite significance: theyre just actors

  • asked to assume certain poses. The stories and the meanings come from us. This is often

  • exactly what happens around our own heartbreaks. We may never actually know precisely why the

  • other person left us. That shouldn’t be surprising. However well we know someone,

  • they are never fully transparent to us. What they say may only be a part of what’s really

  • in their minds. Their deeper motives will remain obscureperhaps even to them. Were

  • presented with a facttheyve left usand onto that we project a meaning. But

  • the meaning we give to that fact comes, in large part, from us. Holding onto the idea

  • that we don’t actually know something is an underused and powerful skill. At one of

  • the foundational moment of philosophy, in ancient Athens, Socrates argued that a huge

  • component of wisdom lies in our capacity to accept our ignorance in certain situations:

  • the wise are those who know that they don’t know’. This recognition of not-knowing,

  • and the reminder of our tendency to project, may be helpful in easing us away form the

  • more catastrophic and self-incriminating interpretations of a break up. The lover who furiously told

  • us they never wanted to see us again mayin the hidden recesses of their soulhave

  • been actually thinking: ‘I’m so sad this didn’t work out; I wish I could find a way

  • to make this work; you are so lovely in many ways, but there’s something desperate in

  • me that’s turning away from your offer of love’. The person who coldly texts us: ‘that‘s

  • it, I’m outmay behind the scenes be weeping at their own sense of loss and failure

  • rather than (as we imagine) gleefully celebrating the end of their over-extended encounter with

  • us. The person who says: ‘I wish this could work but just for now I’ve got to concentrate

  • on my careermight actually be quite sincere rather than (as we might darkly suppose) putting

  • a polite cover over their contempt for us. The acceptance of ambiguity is liberating:

  • were free to recognise that the ending wasn’t necessarily all our fault; that there

  • may have been forces at work other than our own inadequacy. Were still very sad, but

  • the target of our misery is a little more bearable: we can focus on the deep, sorrowful

  • strangeness of love and loss rather than suffering an extended excoriating confrontation with

  • our own inadequacies.

  • To learn more about love try our set of cards that help answer that essential question; "Who should I be with?"

Theyve goneand what we need most of all to understand is why? What is striking

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it