An Open Letter to Your Thinking Brain
Hey, Thinking Brain.
How are things? How’s the family? How’d that tax situation work out?
Oh, wait. Never mind. I forgot—I don’t fucking care.
Look, I know there’s something the Feeling Brain is screwing up for you.
Maybe it’s an important relationship. Maybe it’s causing you to make
embarrassing phone calls at 3:00 a.m. Maybe it’s constantly medicating itself
with substances it probably shouldn’t be using. I know there’s something you
wish you could control about yourself but can’t. And I imagine, at times, this
problem causes you to lose hope.
But listen, Thinking Brain, those things you hate so much about your
Feeling Brain—the cravings, the impulses, the horrible decision making? You
need to find a way to empathize with them. Because that’s the only language
the Feeling Brain really understands: empathy. The Feeling Brain is a
sensitive creature; it’s made out of your damn feelings, after all. I wish it
weren’t true. I wish you could just show it a spreadsheet to make it
understand—you know, like we understand. But you can’t.
Instead of bombarding the Feeling Brain with facts and reason, start by
asking how it’s feeling. Say something like “Hey, Feeling Brain, how do you
feel about going to the gym today?” or “How do you feel about changing
careers?” or “How do you feel about selling everything and moving to
Tahiti?”
The Feeling Brain won’t respond with words. No, the Feeling Brain is too
quick for words. Instead, it will respond with feelings. Yeah, I know that’s
obvious, but sometimes you’re kind of a dumbass, Thinking Brain.
The Feeling Brain might respond with a feeling of laziness or a feeling of
anxiety. There might even be multiple emotions, a little bit of excitement with
a pinch of anger thrown into the mix. Whatever it is, you, as the Thinking
Brain (aka, the responsible one in this cranium), need to remain
nonjudgmental in the face of whatever feelings arise. Feeling lazy? That’s
okay; we all feel lazy sometimes. Feeling self-loathing? Perhaps that’s an
invitation to take the conversation further. The gym can wait.
It’s important to let the Feeling Brain air out all its icky, twisted feelings.
Just get them out into the open where they can breathe, because the more they
breathe, the weaker their grip is on the steering wheel of your Consciousness
Car.
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Then, once you feel you’ve reached a point of understanding with your
Feeling Brain, it’s time to appeal to it in a way it understands: through
feelings. Maybe think about all the benefits of some desired new behavior.
Maybe mention all the sexy, shiny, fun things at the desired destination.
Maybe remind the Feeling Brain how good it feels to have exercised, how
great it will feel to look good in a bathing suit this summer, how much you
respect yourself when you’ve followed through on your goals, how happy you
are when you live by your values, when you act as an example to the ones you
love.
Basically, you need to bargain with your Feeling Brain the way you’d
bargain with a Moroccan rug seller: it needs to believe it’s getting a good
deal, or else there’ll just be a lot of hand waving and shouting with no result.
Maybe you agree to do something the Feeling Brain likes, as long as it does
something it doesn’t like. Watch your favorite TV show, but only at the gym
while you’re on the treadmill. Go out with friends, but only if you’ve paid
your bills for the month.
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Start easy. Remember, the Feeling Brain is highly sensitive, and
completely unreasonable.
When you offer something easy with an emotional benefit (e.g., feeling
good after a workout; pursuing a career that feels significant; being admired
and respected by your kids), the Feeling Brain will respond with another
emotion, either positive or negative. If the emotion is positive, the Feeling
Brain will be willing to drive a little bit in that direction—but only a little bit!
Remember: feelings never last. That’s why you start small. Just put on your
gym shoes today, Feeling Brain. That’s all. Let’s just see what happens.
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If the Feeling Brain’s response is negative, you simply acknowledge that
negative emotion and offer another compromise. See how the Feeling Brain
responds. Then rinse and repeat.
But whatever you do, do not fight the Feeling Brain. That just makes
things worse. For one, you won’t win, ever. The Feeling Brain is always
driving. Second, fighting with the Feeling Brain about feeling bad will only
cause the Feeling Brain to feel even worse. So, why would you do that? You
were supposed to be the smart one, Thinking Brain.
This dialogue with your Feeling Brain will continue back and forth like
this, on and off, for days, weeks, or maybe even months. Hell, years. This
dialogue between the brains takes practice. For some, the practice will be
recognizing what emotion the Feeling Brain is putting out there. Some
people’s Thinking Brains have ignored their Feeling Brains for so long that it
takes them a while to learn how to listen again.
Others will have the opposite problem: They will have to train their
Thinking Brain to speak up, force it to propose an independent thought (a new
direction) that’s separate from the Feeling Brain’s feelings. They will have to
ask themselves, what if my Feeling Brain is wrong to feel this way? and then
consider the alternatives. This will be difficult for them at first. But the more
this dialogue occurs, the more the two brains will begin to listen to each other.
The Feeling Brain will start giving off different emotions, and the Thinking
Brain will have a better understanding of how to help the Feeling Brain
navigate the road of life.
This is what’s referred to in psychology as “emotional regulation,” and it’s
basically learning how to put a bunch of fucking guardrails and One Way
signs along your road of life to keep your Feeling Brain from careening off a
cliff.
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It’s hard work, but it’s arguably the only work.
Because you don’t get to control your feelings, Thinking Brain. Self-
control is an illusion. It’s an illusion that occurs when both brains are aligned
and pursuing the same course of action. It’s an illusion designed to give
people hope. And when the Thinking Brain isn’t aligned with the Feeling
Brain, people feel powerless, and the world around them begins to feel
hopeless. The only way you consistently nail that illusion is by consistently
communicating and aligning the brains around the same values. It’s a skill,
much the same as playing water polo or juggling knives is a skill. It takes
work. And there will be failures along the way. You might slice your arm
open and bleed everywhere. But that’s just the cost of admission.
But here’s what you do have, Thinking Brain. You may not have self-
control, but you do have meaning control. This is your superpower. This is
your gift. You get to control the meaning of your impulses and feelings. You
get to decipher them however you see fit. You get to draw the map. And this
is incredibly powerful, because it’s the meaning that we ascribe to our
feelings that can often alter how the Feeling Brain reacts to them.
And this is how you produce hope. This is how you produce a sense that
the future can be fruitful and pleasant: by interpreting the shit the Feeling
Brain slings at you in a profound and useful way. Instead of justifying and
enslaving yourself to the impulses, challenge them and analyze them. Change
their character and their shape.
This is basically what good therapy is, of course. Self-acceptance and
emotional intelligence and all that. Actually, this whole “teach your Thinking
Brain to decipher and cooperate with your Feeling Brain instead of judging
him and thinking he’s an evil piece of shit” is the basis for CBT (cognitive
behavioral therapy) and ACT (acceptance and commitment therapy) and a lot
of other fun acronyms that clinical psychologists invented to make our lives
better.
Our crises of hope often start with a basic sense that we do not have
control over ourselves or our destiny. We feel victims to the world around us
or, worse, to our own minds. We fight our Feeling Brain, trying to beat it into
submission. Or we do the opposite and follow it mindlessly. We ridicule
ourselves and hide from the world because of the Classic Assumption. And in
many ways, the affluence and connectivity of the modern world only make
the pain of the illusion of self-control that much worse.
But this is your mission, Thinking Brain, should you choose to accept it:
Engage the Feeling Brain on its own terms. Create an environment that can
bring about the Feeling Brain’s best impulses and intuition, rather than its
worst. Accept and work with, rather than against, whatever the Feeling Brain
spews at you.
Everything else (all the judgments and assumptions and self-
aggrandizement) is an illusion. It was always an illusion. You don’t have
control, Thinking Brain. You never did, and you never will. Yet, you needn’t
lose hope.
Antonio Damasio ended up writing a celebrated book called Descartes’ Error
about his experiences with “Elliot,” and much of his other research. In it, he
argues that the same way the Thinking Brain produces a logical, factual form
of knowledge, the Feeling Brain develops its own type of value-laden
knowledge.
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The Thinking Brain makes associations among facts, data, and
observations. Similarly, the Feeling Brain makes value judgments based on
those same facts, data, and observations. The Feeling Brain decides what is
good and what is bad; what is desirable and what is undesirable; and most
important, what we deserve and what we don’t deserve.
The Thinking Brain is objective and factual. The Feeling Brain is
subjective and relative. And no matter what we do, we can never translate one
form of knowledge into the other.
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This is the real problem of hope. It’s rare
that we don’t understand intellectually how to cut back on carbs, or wake up
earlier, or stop smoking. It’s that somewhere inside our Feeling Brain, we
have decided that we don’t deserve to do those things, that we are unworthy
of doing them. And that’s why we feel so bad about them.
This feeling of unworthiness is usually the result of some bad shit
happening to us at some point. We suffer through some terrible stuff, and our
Feeling Brain decides that we deserved those bad experiences. Therefore, it
sets out, despite the Thinking Brain’s better knowledge, to repeat and
reexperience that suffering.
This is the fundamental problem of self-control. This is the fundamental
problem of hope—not an uneducated Thinking Brain, but an uneducated
Feeling Brain, a Feeling Brain that has adopted and accepted poor value
judgments about itself and the world. And this is the real work of anything
that even resembles psychological healing: getting our values straight with
ourselves so that we can get our values straight with the world.
Put another way, the problem isn’t that we don’t know how not to get
punched in the face. The problem is that, at some point, likely a long time
ago, we got punched in face, and instead of punching back, we decided we
deserved it.
Chapter 3
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