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Authors: A. J. Jacobs

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My ideal? A world of Spocks, but Spocks who are joyful and compassionate and life-loving. Spocks who brush with apricot toothpaste because it tastes delicious.

But I may have overestimated my ability to control System 1.

A week after my even-tempered stroller reaction, as my month comes to an end, I’m at a restaurant with my son Jasper, waiting to play foosball. Two European teenagers are playing. They’re accomplished foosballers, I can tell. They spin the rods expertly, scoring quickly, zipping the game along. Until they get to the last ball.

At which point they decide it’d be fun to draw the game out as long as possible. They pass the foosball back and forth slowly and carefully between their offensive lines.

“When will it be our turn?” asks my son.

“Soon.”

Two minutes go by. Five minutes. My son has asked the above question a half-dozen times by now.

“What’s going on here?” I ask the teens.

“Vee are trying.” They snicker—actually snicker. Then talk in German.

Ten minutes go by.

I know exactly what’s happening in my brain as it’s happening,
and yet I feel like I can’t stop it. My limbic system kicks in. My pulse triples.

“You are not trying. You are stalling.”

“No, really. Vee are trying.” More snickers.

My emotions have hijacked my cerebral cortex.

“You are bad people. Very bad people. What did your parents teach you?”

They ignore me. I flash to memories of being bullied as a kid. And now they’re messing with my kid. The monkey is losing control of the elephant. The caveman is ascendant.

“You’re nasty teenagers, and you’re going to grow up into nasty adults. And let me tell you, with its history, your country doesn’t need any more nasty people.”

Did I just play the Nazi card? I did. And I’m not even 100 percent sure they’re German. They sounded sort of German. But maybe they’re Belgian.

My brother-in-law, Eric, was right. I suffer from the Lake Wobegon Effect. I overestimate my ability to be rational.

But you know what? I need it. I need the Lake Wobegon Effect. I need self-delusion. Otherwise I’d be so depressed about irrationality—and the general apocalyptic state of the world— that I couldn’t function.

I have learned this much about myself and my deeply flawed brain: I have to believe, irrationally, against all evidence, that humans can be rational.

CODA

It’s been several months since this experiment ended, and I still do a lot of things differently. Tiny things and big things. I shop for air conditioners differently. I watch nature shows differently. I judge human beings differently. Not counting my year of living
biblically, the Rationality Project has had the most dramatic, long-lasting effect of all my experiments.

I’m still a highly irrational thinker. But at least I’m aware of it. And sometimes I can stop myself before my thoughts and actions spin out of control.

Here, a small sampling of what’s changed:

1. I make a note every time I’m in a fast-moving grocery line.

We all are predisposed to notice and remember the bad stuff. We notice when we’re stuck bumper-to-bumper on I-95. Or when we’re on a checkout line behind an eighty-two-year-old man paying with a sack of pennies and nickels. Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert talks about this in his book
Stumbling on Happiness.
Many of us—me included—have this notion that we always choose the slowest line. But that’s only because the frustrating episodes are more emotionally charged and we remember them better. We don’t recall all the times we were on a fast-moving, uneventful line. But I try. I say out loud: “Julie, look at that. We chose the airport security line that moved the fastest. We should remember that next time we’re on a slow line.” I choose to interpret Julie’s silence as gratitude.

2. I spend a few minutes each week reading Michelle Malkin’s conservative musings.
I almost typed “conservative rants.” But that’s just the kind of thing I’m trying to avoid.

My distant cousin Cass Sunstein—a frighteningly brilliant man who coauthored
Nudge
—tells me that he spends a lot of time reading things that he disagrees with. Even things that annoy him. It’s the best buffer
against sliding into extremism. He conducted an experiment in Colorado. He gathered a group of moderate liberals from Boulder to discuss politics among themselves for a day. And he got a group of moderate conservatives from Colorado Springs to do the same. The result? The liberals became more liberal, the conservatives more conservative. Diversity was squelched. Extremism flourished. The echo chamber is a dangerous thing.

So I willfully expose myself to the other points of view.

3. I sometimes eat spaghetti for breakfast.

I can’t believe just how many of our little daily habits are
not
based on rationality, just custom. Why is some pig meat acceptable in the morning (e.g., bacon, sausages) and other pig meat not (baby-backed ribs and pork chops). No rational reason. If you tried to explain it to Spock, he’d scratch his head. So if I feel like eating pasta for breakfast, I shall eat pasta! Societal norms be damned.

4. I’m more leery of conspiracy theories than ever.

I’ve never been a fan. I always accepted the idea, for instance, that a maladjusted loser with a bad haircut named Lee Harvey Oswald changed history with nothing more than his bolt-action rifle and some luck. To me, the interesting question is why the human brain finds conspiracies so attractive. I got one answer in a fascinating
Scientific American
article called “Patternicity.” Patternicity is the idea that humans are really talented at finding nonexistent patterns in random noise.

Why? Because in caveman times, it was evolution-arily beneficial to find meanings in random noise. The author Michael Shermer explains: If a caveman thought
the sound of rustling grass was caused by wind, he was probably right. But what about that 1 in 100 chance he was wrong? My goodness, the price was high. He became lunch for a tiger. So the safe bet was to assume the rustle of the grass was a predator—even if the chances of this being true are minuscule. The result is that our brains are predisposed to paranoia and pattern-seeking. We take all the random JFK assassination data and construct elaborate theories connecting the dots. We look for the tigers where there are none. We find faces in tortillas. We see villains behind grassy knolls.

5. I reserve judgment as long as possible.

First impressions are like South American dictators: overly powerful and unreliable. Thank God my wife, Julie, is compassionate enough to have ignored the first impression’s iron grip. As a single woman, Julie had the Three Date Rule. Even if the first date was a catastrophe, Julie had pledged she’d give all guys three dates. My first date with Julie was a catastrophe indeed. (For one thing, I thought I was being progressive and prowoman by suggesting we go Dutch. I’ve since learned that’s not the case. I was being cheap. I’ve offered to pay her back her twenty-five dollars for eleven years now. She won’t take it.) Anyway, thank you, Julie, for withholding judgment. I’m trying to follow your lead.

6. I read menus from the bottom up.

The brain places too much emphasis on the first few options in a list. Restaurateurs know this. But I’m not going to fall for their evil schemes. I’ll start at the last entrée and work my way up. (Hmm. It appears I’ve got a bit of that paranoia I was just talking about.)

7. I’m filled with hope and despair (not necessarily in that order).

Despair at how we’re all walking around with these defective machines inside our skulls. Hope because we can recognize that fact. And the study of decision making—or behavioral economics, as it’s known—offers one possible fix. Yes we can! Behavioral economics seems to be gaining influence daily. As author Dan Ariely points out, the year 2008—which saw the meltdown of the supposedly rational stock market—was a banner year for behavioral economics. Maybe I’m deluded, but I think it will be as powerful as Freudianism was in the 1950s. And hopefully more accurate. In fact, we’ve got an amateur behavioral economist in the White House now. Obama is a fan of this field. And some of his proposals—such as automatically enrolling people into 401(k)s to take advantage of mental inertia—reflect that.

8. I’m skeptical of behavioral economics.

And finally . . . one last thing: You know how I’m convinced that 90 percent of decisions are irrational? That’s probably an irrational notion. It’s the result of reading book after book about how flawed the brain is. I suffer from the Confirmation Bias. I’m only human.

N
IGEL
P
ARRY

Chapter Six
The Truth About Nakedness

It starts out innocently enough. My boss at
Esquire
tells me he’s asked the actress Mary-Louise Parker to write an article. This isn’t unusual. He often asks notable people to write for the magazine. We recently had Dan Rather write an essay on the importance of using colorful metaphors (a language device that Rather calls “as fun as Saturday night at the Stop ’n’ Fight”). So this time, our guest writer is Mary-Louise Parker, who had a role on
The West Wing
at the time.

My boss tells me that I’ll be her editor on the essay. The topic? Well, that’s not clear yet. It’s my job to talk to her and figure it out.

So I e-mail Ms. Parker (mentioning I’m a fan of her work, of course). She suggests she could write an essay about what it’s like to be an aunt. That doesn’t seem quite right for
Esquire.
She tosses out another couple of topics that sound like they’d put my boss into a stage 3 coma. I start to get worried.

Well, Mary-Louise says, what about this: She could write an essay about what it feels like to pose naked. Now we’re talking. I tell my boss—who asks the natural follow-up: will she pose nude for the magazine? The article would need art, after all. I call her back. She agrees.

I have to restrain myself from getting down on my knees and making a burnt offering to this woman. She has just guaranteed my holiday bonus.

I’m about to hang up and tell my boss the good news. But before I can, Mary-Louise has one little—by which I mean deeply disturbing—request.

“I was thinking,” she says, “that as the editor of the piece, it would make sense for
you
to appear naked as well.”

What now?

“I thought maybe I should choose the photo of you that runs,” Mary-Louise continues. “So you can really experience that loss of control and possible objectification.”

I can’t remember exactly how I reacted to this. But Mary-Louise—in the essay she wrote later—gives a description that sounds pretty accurate. She wrote:

I was met with some sputtering and somewhat choked, mortified laughter, the way people laugh when they feel suddenly light-headed, or when they view something both compelling and grotesque, like, say, two cats having sex, or a child vomiting into his Easter basket. [A.J.] said he would get back to me.

That rings mostly true. Though for the record, I’ve never seen a child vomiting into his Easter basket. And if I ever did see one, I don’t think I’d laugh. Or at least I’d try to suppress the laugh in case my wife was nearby.

When I get home, I tell Julie about Mary-Louise’s idea, and count on her to be equally disturbed. “Oh, you have to do it,” she says. “It’s only fair.” (Julie later confessed that she thought a nude photo in a national magazine would finally force me to start doing ab crunches.) I tell my boss, who is also unnervingly enthusiastic. I mention the possibility of subscription cancellations.
“Maybe we could shoot you the way we did Monica Bellucci on our cover,” he says. “With caviar on your chest.” He’s not joking.

I’m relatively new to
Esquire,
and don’t have the nerve to say no. So a few days later, I find myself in a cab on the way to the studio with the magazine’s design director, who keeps assuring me that there will be nothing edible on my solar plexus and no Mapplethorpian whips in my orifices. This would be very classy, an homage to a famous Yves Saint Laurent nude.
Classy.
An adjective I’m sure Linda Lovelace heard a few times.

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