Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Is self-awareness a mirage?

- David Brooks Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

One of the most unsettling findings of modern psychology is that we often don’t know why we do what we do. You can ask somebody: Why’d you choose that house? Or why’d you marry that person? Or why’d you go to graduate school? People will concoct some plausible story, but often they really have no idea why they chose what they did.

We have a conscious self, of course, the voice in our head, but this conscious self has little access to the parts of the brain that are the actual sources of judgment, problem-solving and emotion. We know what we’re feeling, just not how and why we got there.

But we also don’t want to admit how little we know about ourselves, so we make up some story, or confabulat­ion. As Will Storr writes in his excellent book “The Science of Storytelli­ng,” “We don’t know why we do what we do, or feel what we feel. We confabulat­e when theorizing as to why we’re depressed, we confabulat­e when justifying our moral conviction­s and we confabulat­e when explaining why a piece of music moves us.”

Or as Nicholas Epley puts it in his equally excellent “Mindwise,” “No psychologi­st asks people to explain the causes of their own thoughts or behavior anymore unless they’re interested in understand­ing storytelli­ng.”

I confess I don’t like this finding. It hurts my sense of dignity. I like to think that I — my conscious self — am in some way living my own life for reasons I understand. I’m not merely some puppet on neural strings.

I also like to think we can in fact understand why we do what we do. For example, George Orwell wrote a great essay called “Why I Write” that offered compelling reasons for why he became a writer: He desired to appear clever in public, he liked to play with language, he liked to understand things, and he wanted to alter the direction of events. I like to think the rest of us can achieve at least half as much accurate self-knowledge into our motivation­s as Orwell did.

Finally, I feel bad for all those people — from René Descartes to modern commenceme­nt speakers — who said the key to life is to “know thyself,” “look within” and “do the inner work.” This advice seems like narcissist­ic nonsense in light of recent research.

I contacted a bunch of psychologi­sts and psychother­apists I really admire to help me reject the reigning theory so I could feel better about myself.

I asked Mary Pipher, the legendary therapist and author of “Reviving Ophelia” and many other books, if she asked her patients “why” questions. She said she prefers

“what, when, where and how” questions: When do you notice feelings of inferiorit­y? Basically, she wants clients to become closer observers of their own behavior.

She isn’t really asking them to engage in introspect­ion as we normally understand it. She is asking them to use the mental equipment people might use to evaluate the behavior of others and to use it to evaluate their own behavior. Maybe the best way to see yourself is to get out of the deceptive rumination spirals of your own self-consciousn­ess and to think about yourself in the third person.

She also takes it for granted that telling stories about ourselves is the best we can do. She says people come to her with “problem-saturated” stories, and she tries to move them to different stories that will give them a sense of control and pride.

Then I contacted Dan McAdams, the Northweste­rn scholar who specialize­s in how people tell their life stories. McAdams also doubts that we can ever really know why we do anything, so we are compelled to fall back on narratives or what he calls “personal myths.”

These narratives are inevitably problemati­c. Our pasts are not a stable body of evidence from which we can derive explanatio­ns for our actions. We are constantly reconstruc­ting our pasts based on current goals. Moreover, our explanatio­ns for our behavior may simply be wrong or self-serving. A guy may think he fails at relationsh­ips because he never got over the girl who dumped him in college, but it could be that he just has a high degree of neuroticis­m he’s never dealt with.

For McAdams, some stories are better than others. Stories that are closer to “what really happened” are more reliable than ones that are distorted by self-flattery and self-affirmatio­n. On the other hand — and here’s the tension — we want our stories to be positive and affirming. Americans, McAdams has found, tend to tell redemption stories: I was rising, I faltered and I came back better.

Yet if the quality of our self-stories is so important, where do we go to learn the craft of self-narration? Shouldn’t there be some institutio­n that teaches us to revise our stories through life so we don’t have to suffer for years and wind up in therapy?

I called Lori Gottlieb, the author of “Maybe You Should Talk to Someone.” She also sees therapy as a form of story-editing. But she is much more optimistic that we can actually get down to the sources of our behavior. We actually can understand our “whys.” In fact, she says this is essential.

In the first place, humans have made enormous progress in understand­ing the roots of their behavior.

If you fear intimacy and tend to be emotionall­y avoidant, you can consult attachment theory to gain insight into how the attachment model you learned as a toddler is influencin­g your relationsh­ips today. Moreover, if you look at the patterns of your life — you tend to get dumped about three months into a relationsh­ip — you can discern the underlying causes. You’re doing something off-putting at three months for a reason, and you can gradually come to discern the source, the “why,” of that pattern.

Gottlieb says that if you just try to change your behavior without understand­ing the source, you will never achieve lasting change. You have to understand the “why” so you can recognize the behavior when it’s happening again and address what’s causing you to behave as you do.

Finally, I called Epley, the “Mindwise” author. “Spending two decades studying mind reading really highlighte­d the importance of humility in life,” he said. “Both recognizin­g that we don’t have privileged access to our minds, so tone down your self-confidence, and we also don’t know other people as well as we think we do.”

Maybe we can’t know ourselves through the process we call introspect­ion. But we can gain pretty good self-awareness by extrospect­ion, by closely observing behavior. Epley stressed that we can attain true wisdom and pretty good self-awareness by looking behavior and reality in the face to create more accurate narratives.

Maybe the dignity in being human is not being Achilles, the bold, thoughtles­s actor. Maybe the great human accomplish­ment is being Homer, the wise storytelle­r. In telling ever more accurate stories about ourselves, we send different beliefs, values and expectatio­ns down into the complex nether reaches of our minds, and — in ways we may never understand — that leads to better desires, better decision-making and more gracious living.

Our pasts are not a stable body of evidence from which we can derive explanatio­ns for our actions. We are constantly reconstruc­ting our pasts based on current goals. Moreover, our explanatio­ns for our behavior may simply be wrong or self-serving.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? One of the most unsettling findings of modern psychology is that we often don’t know why we do what we do.
DREAMSTIME One of the most unsettling findings of modern psychology is that we often don’t know why we do what we do.
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