The Boston Globe

Study: Keeping a positive secret to yourself may heighten joy

- By Catherine Pearson NEW YORK TIMES

If your partner gets down on one knee to propose, or you get a call with the job offer you’ve been coveting, your inclinatio­n might be to shout it from the rooftops. But new research suggests that keeping positive secrets to yourself can have an “energizing” effect.

The study, published in the November issue of The Journal of Personalit­y and Social Psychology: Attitudes and Social Cognition, included five experiment­s with a total of 2,800 participan­ts between the ages of 18 and 78.

In one experiment, participan­ts were given a list of 38 types of positive personal news, such as a new romance, an upcoming trip, or being in a position to pay down some debt. On average, people reported they were experienci­ng about 15 things on that list, five to six of which they hadn’t told anyone about.

Participan­ts were then randomly assigned to reflect on an experience they had talked about with others or one they were currently keeping secret. Those who reflected on secret good news reported they felt much more “energized” than those who reflected on good news they had already shared.

“It’s not energy in the sense of, you know, ‘I just drank coffee,’” said Michael Slepian, an associate professor of business at Columbia University, the author of “The Secret Life of Secrets,” and a lead researcher on the study. Instead, he described it as a kind of “psychologi­cal energy,” more like the feeling you get when you are deeply engaged in something.

The research nuances our understand­ing of the science of secrets, which so far has focused on the detrimenta­l effects, said Andreas Wismeijer, a lecturer in psychology at Tilburg University in the Netherland­s who has also studied secrets (but did not work on the new paper).

“If you keep informatio­n secret simply because you want to,” he said, “and your choice reflects your personal values and conviction­s, this study shows it may actually be beneficial.”

Not all secrets are created equal

Many people hold on to secrets because they fear the negative consequenc­es of sharing them, Wismeijer and Slepian said, and the harm seems to come from ruminating on them.

Negative secrets — like a lie you are concealing or a time when you violated someone’s trust — tend to deplete us, Slepian said. In a prior study, he found that people who were preoccupie­d with an important secret judged hills to be steeper and believed physical tasks required more effort, as if the secret were weighing them down and sapping their energy. Negative secrets have also been linked to anxiety and relationsh­ip problems.

Positive secrets, however, don’t seem to have this effect. Rather, people seem enlivened by them. One factor could be that people often have different motivation­s for keeping good news to themselves.

In another part of Slepian’s most recent study, participan­ts were asked to think about a secret they felt good about, a secret they felt bad about, or simply a current secret. They were then asked if they were intrinsica­lly or extrinsica­lly motivated to keep the secret — that is, if they were compelled by personal reasons or by external forces or consequenc­es. Those with positive secrets were much more likely to report that they were keeping quiet for internal reasons, not because they felt any outside pressures. The study noted that “autonomous motivation” is known to contribute to feelings of vitality.

“You feel really in control over positive secrets,” Slepian said, “and that may be part of what makes them feel energizing.”

‘Savoring’ is important

Slepian said his new research shouldn’t inspire people to withhold positive news indefinite­ly, though participan­ts in the study said that keeping a positive secret made them feel energized regardless of whether they intended to share it. (He gave the example of a hobby or pastime that brings you happiness, but that you don’t necessaril­y want to discuss with others.)

Slepian believed the findings dovetailed nicely with research on “savoring,” which has shown that appreciati­ng everyday pleasures — like what the air smells like when you step out the front door — can help bring joy and improve your mind-set. Taking extra time to sit with a happy secret you plan to eventually reveal — like a desired pregnancy or an exciting life change — may have similar effects.

‘You feel really in control over positive secrets, and that may be part of what makes them feel energizing.’ MICHAEL SLEPIAN, associate professor of business at Columbia University, the author of “The Secret Life of Secrets,” and a lead researcher on the study

“Positive events tend to sort of blend together,” Slepian said. “One way to sort of break out of that, and to leverage the positive experience­s that we all have, is just to spend a little more time with them, thinking about them, reflecting on them, and enjoying them.”

Keeping a positive secret, he said, “is like turning the dial up to 11 on that process.”

 ?? KOTIN DMITRII/FILE ?? New research suggests that keeping positive news — like a wedding proposal — to yourself can have an “energizing” effect.
KOTIN DMITRII/FILE New research suggests that keeping positive news — like a wedding proposal — to yourself can have an “energizing” effect.

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