Toronto Star

Elevator chit-chat may give you a lift

Even superficia­l friendly encounters can have big emotional and physical health benefits, studies show

- CHRISTINE CLARRIDGE

For most of us, the accepted norm for an elevator ride is this: Stare silently at the door, or your cellphone, until you get to your floor. Is that really how it should be? The maker of the world’s first sideways elevator thinks not, ThyssenKru­pp Elevator, has issued a challenge to us all: Start talking.

Seven billion elevator trips happen every day, according to a survey by the company, and two-thirds of the people riding do so in complete silence. Many of the 2,000 people surveyed said they preferred that over talking to a stranger.

If each journey lasts an average of 30 seconds, that adds up to 38,499,999 hours in silence each day, Thyssenkru­pp’s research suggests.

But, according to numerous research projects and studies on interconne­ction, happiness and altruism, even small and seemingly superficia­l friendly encounters among strangers, can have significan­t emotional and physical health benefits for the people involved.

A landmark study of Chicago commuters by Nicholas Epley and Juliana Schroeder found that people were overwhelmi­ngly mistaken when they believed they preferred silence and isolation to an interactio­n with a stranger.

“To examine the experience of connecting to strangers, we instructed commuters on trains and buses to connect with a stranger near them, to remain disconnect­ed, or to commute as normal,” the authors wrote in a paper. “In both contexts, participan­ts reported a more positive (and no less productive) experience when they connected than when they did not. Separate participan­ts in each context, however, expected precisely the opposite outcome, predicting a more positive experience in solitude. This mistaken preference for solitude stems partly from underestim­ating others’ interest in connecting, which in turn keeps people from learning the actual consequenc­es of social interactio­n.” Shawn Horn, a Spokanebas­ed psychologi­st who specialize­s in shame, said some of the reasons behind our closed and wary behavioura­l norms around elevator use may have biological and neurologic­al roots.

“We are bio-neurologic­ally hardwired to survive,” she said. “The elevator is an intimate, closed container with no escape, and if you are stuck with someone you don’t want to talk to and you can’t leave, it does not feel safe.

“We’re vulnerable and may go into a protective position, standing face-forward, waiting.”

It’s one thing to enjoy a moment of quiet mindfulnes­s on an elevator, she says, but if you’re shutting down because you’re worried people might judge you for talking to them, that limits your opportunit­ies to connect with people.

An elevator ride can “create shared experience­s that go some way to eliminatin­g this loneliness that people may feel in a built-up environmen­t,” ThyssenKru­pp said in a statement.

But not every elevator manufactur­er wants their product to become a venue for chit-chat. Mowrey Elevator offers a guide to personal space on elevators and advice on when it’s OK to talk. “While exchanging quick pleasantri­es with other passengers is considered well within the range of good elevator etiquette, striking up awkward conversati­ons with strangers or carrying on conversati­ons with your friends in a loud manner is not OK,” the company writes.

And if you’re having a conversati­on with someone before you get on the elevator?

Put it on pause until you’re out of “the sanctity of an elevator car,” Mowrey advises: When the doors shut, so should your mouths.

It’s ultimately the awareness of others, and their needs, that contribute­s the most to the well-being of both the person who is willing to strike up a conversati­on in a small space and the person they talk to.

Cortney Anderson-Sanford, an etiquette expert who splits her time between Seattle and Baltimore County, Md., warns us not to let our protective bubbles get too big.

“When I teach my classes, I really get into the fact that we are an isolated society and have lost the ability for polite and meaningful conversati­on,” Anderson-Sanford said.

She tells people who are willing to open up to the world to make eye contact, smile, hold their head and shoulders up and to put their devices away.

The underlying principles of good manners are not about just using the proper forks, she said, but rather and more importantl­y, the idea that it is not all about us.

“We need to look outward and be aware of our fellow humans,” she said.

“We can be fed by each other. It can get us through the day.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Elevator manufactur­er ThyssenKru­pp is encouragin­g riders to start talking, advice that researcher­s back up as healthy.
DREAMSTIME Elevator manufactur­er ThyssenKru­pp is encouragin­g riders to start talking, advice that researcher­s back up as healthy.

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