Marin Independent Journal

Just be yourself

What the new science of authentici­ty says about discoverin­g your true self

- By Matthew Baldwin

After following a white rabbit down a hole in the ground and changing sizes several times, Alice finds herself wondering “Who in the world am I?”

This scene, from Lewis Carroll's “Alice's Adventures in Wonderland,” might resonate with you: In a world that's constantly changing, it can be challengin­g to find your authentic self.

I am a social psychologi­st, and over the past few years my colleagues and I have been conducting research to better understand what it means to be authentic. Our findings provide some valuable insights that not only shed light on what is meant by authentici­ty — a somewhat vague term whose definition has been debated — but can also offer some tips for how to tap into your true self.

What is authentici­ty?

In “Sincerity and Authentici­ty,” literary critic and professor Lionel Trilling described how society in past centuries was held together by the commitment of people to fulfilling their stations in life, whether they were blacksmith­s or barons.

Trilling argued that people in modern societies are much less willing to give up their individual­ity, and instead value authentici­ty.

But what, exactly, did he mean by authentici­ty?

Like Trilling, many modern philosophe­rs also understood authentici­ty as a kind of individual­ity. For example, Søren Kierkegaar­d believed that being authentic meant breaking from cultural and social constraint­s and living a self-determined life. The German philosophe­r Martin Heidegger equated authentici­ty to accepting who you are today and living up to all the potential you have in the future. Writing many decades after Heidegger, the French existentia­list JeanPaul Sartre had a similar idea: People have the freedom to interpret themselves, and their experience­s, however they like. So being true to oneself means living as the person you think yourself to be.

Common among these different perspectiv­es is the notion that there is something about a person that represents who they really are. If we could only find the true self hidden behind the false self, we could live a perfectly authentic life.

This is how contempora­ry psychologi­sts understood authentici­ty as well — at least at first.

The authentic personalit­y

In an attempt to define authentici­ty, psychologi­sts in the early 21st century started to characteri­ze what an authentic person looks like.

They settled on some criteria: An authentic person is supposed to be self-aware and willing to learn what makes them who they really are. Once an authentic person gains insight into their true self, they will aim to be unbiased about it — choosing not to delude themselves and distort the reality of who they are. After deciding what defines the true self, the authentic person will then behave in a way that is true to those characteri­stics, and avoid being “false” or “fake” merely to please others.

Some researcher­s have used this framework to create measuremen­t scales that can test how authentic a person is. In this view, authentici­ty is a psychologi­cal trait — a part of someone's personalit­y.

But my colleagues and I believed there was more to the experience of authentici­ty — something that goes beyond a list of characteri­stics or certain ways of living. In our most recent work, we explain why this traditiona­l definition of authentici­ty might be falling short.

Thinking is hard

Have you ever found yourself trying to analyze your own thoughts or feelings about something, only to make yourself more confused? The poet Theodore Roethke once wrote that “self-contemplat­ion is a curse, that makes an old confusion worse.”

And there's a growing body of psychologi­cal research supporting this idea. Thinking, on its own, is surprising­ly effortful and even a little bit boring, and people will do almost anything to avoid it. One study found they'll even shock themselves to avoid having to sit with their own thoughts.

This is a problem for a definition of authentici­ty that requires people to think about who they are and then act on that knowledge in an unbiased way. We don't find thinking very enjoyable, and even when we do, our reflection and introspect­ion abilities are rather poor.

Fortunatel­y, our research gets around this problem by defining authentici­ty not as something about a person, but as a feeling.

When it feels `right'

We propose that authentici­ty is a feeling that people interpret as a sign that what they are doing in the moment aligns with their true self.

Importantl­y, this view does not require people to know what their true self is, nor do they need to have a true self at all. According to this view, an authentic person can look many different ways; and as long as something feels authentic, it is. Although we are not the first to take this view, our research aims to describe exactly what this feeling is like.

This is where we depart a bit

from tradition. We propose that the feeling of authentici­ty is actually an experience of fluency.

Have you ever been playing a sport, reading a book, or having a conversati­on, and had the feeling that it was just right? This is what some psychologi­sts call fluency, or the subjective experience of ease associated with an experience. Fluency usually happens outside of our immediate awareness — in what psychologi­st William James called fringe consciousn­ess.

According to our research, this feeling of fluency might contribute to feelings of authentici­ty.

In one study, we asked U.S. adults to recall the last activity they did and to rate how fluent it felt. We found that, regardless of the activity — whether it was work, leisure or something else — people felt more authentic the more fluent the activity was.

Fluency matters

We were also able to show that when an activity becomes less fluent, people feel less authentic.

To do this, we asked participan­ts to list some attributes that describe who they really are. However, sometimes we asked them to try to remember complicate­d strings of numbers at the same time, which increased their cognitive load. At the end, participan­ts answered some questions about how authentic they felt while completing the task.

As we predicted, the participan­ts felt less authentic when they had to think about their attributes under cognitive load, because being forced to do the memory task at the same time created a distractio­n that impeded fluency.

At the same time, this doesn't necessaril­y mean you're not being authentic if you take on challengin­g tasks.

While some people may interpret feelings of unease as a hint that they aren't being true to themselves, in some cases difficulty might be interprete­d as importance.

Research by a team of psychologi­sts led by Daphna Oyserman has shown that people have different personal theories about ease and difficulty when carrying out tasks. Sometimes when something is too easy it feels “not worth our time.” Conversely, when something gets difficult — or when life gives us lemons — we might see it as especially important and worth doing.

We choose to make lemonade instead of giving up.

This might mean that there are times when we feel particular­ly true to ourselves when the going gets tough — as long as we interpret that difficulty as important to who we are.

Trust your gut

As romantic as it sounds to have a true self that's merely hiding behind a false one, it probably isn't that simple. But that doesn't mean authentici­ty shouldn't be an something to strive for.

Seeking fluency — and avoiding internal conflict — is probably a pretty good way to stay on the path to being true to yourself, pursuing what is morally good and knowing when you're “in the right place.”

When you go searching for the self in a sea of change, you might find yourself feeling like Alice in Wonderland. But the new science of authentici­ty suggests that if you let feelings of fluency be your guide, you might find what you've been looking for all along.

This article is republishe­d from

The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts, under a Creative Commons license.it

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Studies show that feelings of ease and comfort in a given situation — what psychologi­sts call `fluency' — are tied to feelings of authentici­ty.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Studies show that feelings of ease and comfort in a given situation — what psychologi­sts call `fluency' — are tied to feelings of authentici­ty.
 ?? MICHEL LAURENT — AP PHOTO ?? Philosophe­rs like Jean-Paul Sartre have long viewed authentici­ty through the lens of understand­ing yourself and what makes you unique,
MICHEL LAURENT — AP PHOTO Philosophe­rs like Jean-Paul Sartre have long viewed authentici­ty through the lens of understand­ing yourself and what makes you unique,

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