How To Motivate Ourselves Using Our Unconscious
Almost 50% of our life we live in the unconscious state. A trick of the unconscious is responsible for spurring us on to difficult goals.
It feels daunting when
we draw the bow across a violin for the first time or start learning to samba,
or pick up our first stuttering words in a foreign language. The ultimate goal
of being able to dance, speak French or play the violin seems a long way off.
Almost 50% of our life we live in the unconscious state. A trick of the unconscious is responsible for spurring us on to difficult goals.
There is a strong
temptation to give up and try other goals, perhaps less challenging ones. So
how do we motivate ourselves to keep going?
Collect 1,000 t-shirts
In the study
participants were told they were going to be involved in an ongoing effort to
collect 1,000 t-shirts to send to refugees in Haiti. They were told about the
desperate state of refugees there, including their lack of basic clothing.
Then they were split
into two experimental groups* by being shown two different pictures of the
project's progress so far:
·
Some were shown two
full boxes of t-shirts, suggesting there was lots more work to do and,
·
The others were shown
10 full boxes of t-shirts, suggesting they were much nearer their goal.
Crucially, each group
was asked to estimate how many t-shirts had already been collected in these
boxes.
The group that were
shown the two boxes simulated the feeling we get at the start of a big project,
i.e. that there is still a lot of work to do.
So how did the
participants cope with this? It turned out that they over-estimated the number
of t-shirts that had already been collected. In fact, in comparison to an
unmotivated control group who thought there were, on average, 92 in the box,
those who were committed to the task estimated there were 220 t-shirts.
This over-estimation
made them feel that the goal was more attainable.
The group that were
shown the 10 boxes were simulating the experience of being close to achieving
our goal.
So how did
participants keep themselves motivated when there was much less work to do? You
guessed it: they under-estimated the number of t-shirts in the box. The control
group guessed an average of 617, while the motivated participants guessed 424.
By under-estimating
their progress when they were near the end of the task, highly motivated people
are able to push themselves on harder towards the end when the temptation is to
slack off.
The experimenters
checked this finding using other tasks. They got the same types of results
again. When people are highly motivated to achieve a task, they over-estimate
their progress at the beginning and under-estimate it at the end. This helps
provide us with the psychological energy to keep us going through the task.
This effect has been
most noticeable to me towards the end of large projects. Even when I'm nearing
the finish line, it feels like I've still got a fair way to go. Then when I'm
finished it takes me by surprise.
This finding is
heartening because sometimes these subtle cognitive biases work against our
best interests. Although strictly speaking they were less accurate, it's all in
the service of achieving something more important: reaching that vital goal.
This is one great
example of the way our cognitive biases can be extremely handy for us.
This finding is
fascinating because it's demonstrating how sometimes getting precise
information about our progress can actually reduce motivation.
For example if you're
on the running machine at the gym and you've just started your workout, then
the fact that the display tells you exactly how far you've got to go leaves no
room for these helpful unconscious biases to operate.
Sometimes it really is
better not to know. Instead let your unconscious give you a helping hand on
towards your goal.
Image source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1005737
Image source: http://www.sxc.hu/photo/1005737
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