cover of episode 201. Are You Dreaming Too Big?

201. Are You Dreaming Too Big?

2024/6/23
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The hosts discuss why people daydream about unrealistic dreams and the difference between harmless fantasies and unrealistic ambitions.

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I'm going to go do something completely crazy. I'm Angela Duckworth. I'm Mike Mahon. And you're listening to No Stupid Questions. Today on the show, is it unhealthy to have unrealistic dreams? I won the lottery. I got into every dental school I applied to. He likes me back. No.

Angela, I'm excited today. We have a really interesting question about dreams. I love dreams. So here is a listener question. He said, I was talking to a friend and they said we should all move to Bermuda and retire and how nice it would be and went on to make elaborate plans for us down there. It would be terrific, but it would never happen. Why do we daydream these things that we know could never happen? And that's from listener Daniel.

Now I'm like de-drinking about living in Bermuda. Wait, what was the question? Sorry. I have so many thoughts about this because I have collaborated with this psychologist named Gabrielle Edengen for like years. But before I share what I think...

What do you think? I mean, do you have these kind of daydreamy fantasies? Yes. So when I first read Daniel's question, for me, I almost broke it into two different pieces. One is we have these unrealistic dreams that are sort of fun to just fantasize about, like winning the lottery or getting all your best friends and living in the same cul-de-sac.

I also then thought about ambition and how sometimes we have unrealistic dreams, if you will, or expectations of our own lives and what we think we might be able to accomplish. I think there are maybe a few too many tech startup founders who think,

I'm the next Steve Jobs. And I hate to break it to them. Is this the expression unicorn? They want to be unicorns? Yes. Except for everyone's a unicorn now. Can you just like define the term unicorn for me? Like, is it like a billionaire? Is that what it is? Yeah. Unicorn was a startup valued at over a billion dollars, which used to be rare. Okay. And then valuations went crazy and everybody became a unicorn and it no longer became unicorn.

the distinction we thought it was. Oh, now unicorns just like a zebra. Yes. Zebras are very cool, though. So we like them a lot. They're very cool. But it's just not as mythical. Don't scoff at the billion-dollar zebra. I think you're right, though. We have these fantasies about things that could happen but are unlikely to happen, that we just know are fantasies. And then we have these

one could argue, outsized ambitions or these expectations. Here's what I'll say. Overall, I think it's a good thing. Overall, I think it's really fun to be able to fantasize. I know we've talked before about winning the lottery and playing the lottery. The odds are so infinitesimally small. Which you do. Yeah.

Right? Are you still doing it? I wouldn't say I do, but anytime the lottery goes over a billion dollars, I try to find someone in a different state to buy me a ticket. You want to be a lottery unicorn. Well, anyone who wins a lottery is a unicorn. It's so unrealistic. But I think it's fun. I think there's a fun element. So long as it doesn't become all-encompassing.

To be able to sit around for a minute with your friends or your family and just say, man, if we won $200 million, what would we do? But if it actually came to reality, I think we would find the moment of realization is a shock. Like if all your friends really moved to Bermuda and you're there, suddenly, does your life have meaning? Are you pursuing hard goals that help you grow?

Does it become weird because you just only hang out with each other and too much of a good thing is still too much? So I think part of it is we actually don't want to realize all of our dreams, but it's fun to think about them. It

I think the summary insight of Gabrielle Attengian, you know, who I mentioned. Wait, do you know Gabrielle? I don't think so. Love Gabrielle. Gabrielle is half of a research couple at NYU. And they really are a research couple because her husband is.

Peter Goitzer, and she are this dynamic duo, and they're like the world's leading researchers on goal setting and planning. And so what Gabrielle started asking herself is, why do we fantasize about things? Like, why do we, as she puts it, indulge in positive fantasies? You know, I won the lottery. I got into every dental school I applied to. He likes me back. Like, I think we all know what it's like. Okay, I'm going to share...

A slightly embarrassing but completely true one. When I was in high school, I had this mad crush on a boy. And I guess I can share his name because there's so many people who name this like Michael Johnson. He had...

blue eyes and he had, I don't even know what he had that I just was like, he's the one for me. And I think we were in ninth grade English class together. And so that meant every single weekday I got to, for 45 minutes, instead of paying attention to English language arts, like just- You just looked at him? Like fantasize about how like-

We were going steady, and it was so fun. So I think that Gabrielle would say, I would say, we fantasize about things because when we create this mental simulation of a world that doesn't exist, like a future that's not true, but we're perceiving,

pretending, we can experience it in a way. We can feel what it's like to have this crush reciprocated or for a moment, feel the warm breeze and the palm trees like, you know, on the sand. And so that's, I think, why we have these fantasies in the first place, because it brings us pleasure. It brings us pleasure. And I think it allows us to connect with

to each other in an interesting way. So I'll give you an example of a time that I would fantasize. I spent several different summers during college living in very resource-limited settings and developing economies. And one summer, for example, we were living up on the border of Burkina Faso and Ghana.

And we had very little food. I mean, we ate literally bread and water most days. Sometimes we had yams or beans as well, but it was mostly a diet of bread. And we would spend a lot of time

fantasizing about food. But what was beautiful about it wasn't just the fantasizing about, oh, eating this brown sugar flank steak or this lemon pine nut rice and the fruit salad, da-da-da-da-da. But it led to conversations then about what are your family traditions? Do you get together for Sunday dinner? What do you guys eat? So the fantasizing about something completely unrealistic is

also revealed some of our goals, some of our formative elements of our lives. And so it became an actual beautiful thing of connection, even though all of us knew we were about to eat yet one more piece of plain bread for breakfast. I think there is something about the vicarious pleasure or the simulated pleasure that

And you're right. It can also lead to like meaningful conversations. But just the indulging itself is really enjoyable. And I think that's why Gabrielle thinks it's so dangerous. She thinks it's so fun to imagine going on a date with Michael Johnson or eating lemon pie nut rice that you in a way have like

And you're sated in a way. Obviously, if you haven't really eaten, you're still going to be hungry and your body's going to tell you that. But with these positive fantasies, as she calls them, she worries that people stop at the end of the fantasy and then they stop at the end of the fantasy.

And then, you know, go off to do other things and they never take action. So what really motivates her and her husband Peter is this question of why people fail to take action toward these dreams that they have in their hearts. And I think she would argue that

not the only reason, but a big one is we just stop at the moment of visualization. I mean, we're talking about, and Daniel's question kind of came down to this idea of unrealistic dreams. It sounds like what maybe they're talking about and tell me if I'm off is

is that there's some realistic nature to the dream, which thus requires the next step. But I don't think Daniel and his friends are actually gonna go look for property in Bermuda, but it's different if it's realistic. There's a guy named Patrick Bet-David. He's an Iranian-American political commentator, entrepreneur, author, YouTuber. And he said a line that I love. He said, "'The most miserable people I know are ambitious and lazy. They think so big, but never take action.'"

And it sounds like that's more what she's talking. Is that fair or no? Yeah. I mean, if Daniel and his friends are just like, it's fun, you know, like when you scroll through Redfin and you sort the houses, obviously from most expensive to least expensive. Right. And then you go through the photos and you're like, oh, my gosh, two dishwashers, sunken living room.

plate glass windows everywhere. And you don't have this gap between what you want to do and then what you're taking action on because it's a $50 million home and you're just having fun. It's an unadulterated positive fantasy. But I think what is also true is that when we do this, it is sometimes for the things that we are actually thinking that we're going to take action on. And I think the failure to take the next step

which would be to complete the picture, because Gabrielle would say...

When we create these positive fantasies about the future, what we end up editing out is the negative obstacle that stands in the way. That's the next step that she wants people to take. And that's not as fun. Like, okay, so your wish is that Michael Johnson takes you to the dance, but what is the obstacle that stands in the way? Then I'd have to, like, sit there and think, and I'd be like, well, he doesn't really like me. Why?

He doesn't know my name. He's dating Robin Winitsky. I think like the editing out of the impediments in the way of our realistic dreams. Right. So I agree. Daniel and his friends just want to like scroll through Redfin and like pretend they're living in Bermuda and do whatever else. But I think it is different when you when you harbor a realistic dream, something that you actually do hope.

happens someday. I think that's fair. And I think going back to what she calls, you know, maybe this dangerous part. Have you heard of dream scrolling? Wait, is this like doom scrolling? Doom scrolling, but

I was going to say positive. I don't know that it's positive, but it's dream scrolling. And what it basically means is you're looking at dream purchases or things that you would one day like to own. Oh, this is like Redfin. Yeah, exactly. So let me share some stuff from a survey commissioned by Empower, and it was conducted by this market research company, OnePoll. So in 2024, published this survey of 2000 people from the United States. It said that in a year,

On average, people are spending 873 hours or nearly 36 days scrolling on their phone or computer on dream scrolling things. And more than half, 56% of people currently have things left open in tabs or windows or saved in shopping carts that they want to purchase or own in the future. And guess how much the average cost of those things are?

The total amount. Gosh, what I have in my Amazon cart is a bunch of Saran Wrap. So I'm trying to think like, what about people who are spending hours browsing for purchases? I'm amazed that people think this far ahead because I don't even have Saran Wrap in there. I just don't have Saran Wrap for three weeks. And then I'm finally like, ah. I know. I didn't have Saran Wrap for three weeks either. Then I had to like Google and find what the best Saran Wrap was. I'm going to guess that the average purchase price is $2.

Sorry, I'm saying the cumulative nature of all of their, like, dream scrolling purchases. Oh, like how much is it in total? This is like the price is right. I have...

I have no idea. Like, I have no idea. $86,000. I mean, that just seems so unrealistic. The average American, I think I remember reading this, doesn't have, I think 50-something percent don't even have $1,000 in savings to get through an emergency. Yes, I used to know that. Whatever it is, it's a shocking percentage of Americans who have the inability to pay like an unforeseen bill of...

several hundred dollars. But have $86,000. I'm not saying those are the same people. That's not part of the study. But $86,000. I mean, look, I absolutely understand why in those moments, if you're spending two and a half hours a day dream scrolling instead of actually working towards your goals, and you have all this stuff saved that you eventually want to purchase, but no way to

Do it. That appears very dangerous to me and unhelpful. Is it dangerous, though? Look, I'm asking you rhetorically, but they're not hurting anybody. I don't know that that's true. I would argue that you're hurting yourself. I think there's a value to, hey, I'm dreaming about something that's really fun. But I think there's a hurt to spending so much time living in an alternate reality that is not yours. Like two to three hours. I think that's the indictment. Yeah. Plus...

If they put it in your shopping cart, what is going through your head? It seems like...

there is a confusion between harmless fantasy and aspiration. That's what Gabrielle, I think, you know, would say is that like, hey, this may be getting in the way of you actually doing anything to make your life better. Right. So let me take you back to this paper that Gabrielle Ettingen did with collaborators on depression. And the question was, what's the relationship between having these positive fantasies, like using that feature of the human brain to imagine a world that

that isn't real, that could be possibly real, but it's not true. Like, what's the relationship between that

and depression. And what she found is that if you measure these things, depression and the extent to which somebody has these positive fantasies at a single moment in time, then in fact, the more somebody has these fantasies, the less they are experiencing symptoms of depression. So it's like, yay, fantasies make us feel good. Is that like a temporary solve though? Well, here's the thing in the study,

Gabrielle and her collaborators followed up with these individuals to see later what happened. And there, as you follow people over time, positive fantasies don't look so good because the more you tend to fantasize, actually, the more depressed you are in the future. And the argument that Gabrielle would make based on like lots of other research is that because you have indulged in this fantasy,

simulated reality that doesn't actually exist. And because it's given you some kind of like, you know, fake pleasure, you are no longer motivated to take action and do anything. And that leads you to actually have an objectively worse life. And that

It exacerbates depression. So in the moment, it feels good. But in the long run, positive fantasies on their own can be quite dangerous. But the thing is, there's nothing wrong with any fantasy, I think Gabrielle would say. It's just the incompleteness, the failure to take the next step, which is to ask, what is the obstacle that stands in the way of that fantasy? And if you don't ask that question, then you don't answer for yourself, how realistic is this? Do I really want this?

So I don't think that there are like good kinds of positive fantasies, bad kinds of positive fantasies. It's just that you have incomplete fantasies versus more fleshed out fantasies that include obstacles. I still think it's fun to have a few fantasies that you never expect to come to fruition so long as they're not.

almost addictive. Because what you talked about, in essence, daydreaming can become almost like a drug. You live in this world that is fake, and maybe your depression ends briefly, but you, you know, objectively, you have a worse life if that is your adaptive mechanism to maybe blunt your current pain.

You know, there is somebody who's not a psychologist, but he was a philosopher. Have you ever heard of Bob Nozick? No. I was reading about this thought experiment that he came up with. It was such an interesting hypothetical. It was called the experience machine. So Nozick asked, and I think this was 1974. And I remember noting the date around when he said this, because he didn't

say this in 2024, right, 50 years later, but I think he would have had a different answer to the puzzle if he had. So in 1974, Nozick says, imagine there's an experience machine.

And when you plug yourself into the experience machine, it's like you're kind of just like a brain floating in a liquid. And basically you experience pleasure, but not just like some blunt force pleasure. It's like you can have these like vivid experiences of having written the great American novel

having the perfect family, one could fill in the blank, being a triathlete, but also a unicorn billionaire or whatever. So that's the experience machine. You plug in, and it gives you this vicarious sensation that you are living your best life. And the puzzle or the question, the dilemma, whatever you want to call it, is do you choose to plug in or not?

And Nozick is like, that's pretty simple. Who would choose to plug into the experience machine? And then he goes on to say it's like, because what is courage if not like actually taking, you know, charge of your life and like taking real risks? It's like, what is love and what are relationships unless they're real and difficult and so forth?

And I think in 2024, we have a kind of stunning answer to his question, which is, oh, yeah, we choose to plug into the experience machine all the time. And I wish Bob Nozick were alive today to ask it again, because I think he would have to reckon with the reality that like, well, like, for example, Bob, people are on their screens like about as many hours as they're sleeping today. So this positive fantasy thing.

I mean, I agree. It's not always harmful. But I think because we have created ways for us to do it so much more easily today. Right. It was one thing, I guess, to like daydream in the past of like living in a palace and I'm the king and you're my queen or whatever. But like now you can scroll through on your phone and like see every possible person.

picture of the living room of the house that you'll never live in. And then if that gets boring, go look at the outfits that you're never going to buy. And if that gets boring, like look at the vacations, like, oh, here's this Verbo house I'm never going to

rent. Or the friends who hang out all the time that you're never going to be part of, but you feel some pseudo connection to these influencers or whatever. Yeah, I think that part is really the negative extreme. I mean, moderation and all things, right? But this is taking it to an extreme where I think it is a really dangerous thing. And look, I think Angela and I would love to hear about some of the big dreams that you dream about. How have those affected your motivation? How have they affected your mental health?

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Still to come on No Stupid Questions, where is the line between lofty goals and unrealistic dreams? I would love to be a professional tennis player. Hey there, Stephen Dubner from Freakonomics Radio, here to tell you the national sales event is on at your Toyota dealer. Now is the perfect time to get a great deal on a dependable new SUV, like an Adventure Ready RAV4.

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Now, back to Mike and Angela's conversation about positive fantasies.

You know, Mike, I was looking at what Gabrielle had recently done since I met her in graduate school. And we haven't actually done a study together in quite a few years. But she wrote one with a couple of other collaborators on soccer and positive fantasies in soccer fans. And whoever had to go and –

collect the data for this research, had to just go around from bar to bar and ask people to fill out questionnaires before they were going to watch some soccer match on the screen. And basically what the research concludes is that the more you, for example, fantasize that your team's going to win, the more disappointed and frustrated you are when they lose. Amen.

Hey, freaking men. Maybe this cuts a little close to the bone since you are constantly... Bombarded by sports. Yeah, right. You know, your world, not mine. But the conclusion of the paper is that if it's true that we're going to feel like crushed when our favorite team loses the NBA semifinal, whatever they're in, well, maybe

Maybe a lot of us would be like, well, I don't care, right? Like that's the cost of being a true fan. But the idea more generally, and I think this is the conclusion that would apply to all of us, is that, you know, unless it's just a frothy fun thing and you know it is, there are these like downsides essentially of the positive fantasy, including feeling really, really bummed

When your team doesn't win and you asked about high expectations, right? Like the founders. I'm the next Steve Jobs. Right. This study is starting to get at that, right? What about expectations of things being so lofty that when you come crashing down to earth, you hurt yourself? And I would even make the distinction between you're talking about cheering for this team. That's different, I think, than

I'm a startup founder who's trying to build a company where I think more of the success or failure, the opportunity rests on me exactly. I mean, why do you think that these founders do this? Like, why do you think they have unrealistic expectations? I actually think in some sense to be a founder, to start something, think about it, whether it's starting a tech company, writing a book.

whatever that is, you have to have a sort of unrealistic expectation and a maybe almost unfounded belief in what you can do, because that's the only thing that's going to make you crazy enough to take the risk and to try these things. So I actually don't know that it's always a bad thing, because I think there's this element of like, I'm going to go do something completely crazy.

I'm gonna dedicate the next decade of my life toward becoming an Olympic gold medalist. Well, that's crazy if you think about it statistically, but you have to believe in a really big way. And then to your point, you have to take the steps to start making it happen.

But I think there's actually benefits sometimes to being this delusional founder, because without that, you're never going to do it because it's way too hard if you don't believe you can do something completely unrealistic. I will say on behalf of all psychological scientists that nobody knows really why we are so optimistic, why we have these

unrealistic ambitions. And when I say we, I mean, it's all of us. Like Danny Kahneman coined the term in the 70s, the planning fallacy. Danny was asked to write a high school curriculum on how to make good decisions. And he had this team of psychologists and educators who were working. And at one point, they...

And he said,

The estimates, including my own, ranged from 18 to 30 months. Danny then turned to one of the team members who had extensive experience in curriculum development. How long, Danny asked, does it usually take teams to accomplish this sort of work? After a long silence, the curriculum expert replied, first, I should say that not all teams that I can think of in a comparable stage ever complete their task. About 40% of them eventually give up.

Of the remaining, I cannot think of any that was completed in less than seven years. Okay, but then time proceeds and Danny's working on this curriculum. Eight years later, they were finished. So this gave him the idea that when we make plans, and when we say we, we mean like all of us, smart people, people who

plan for a living, Nobel laureate economist. When we make plans, we paint these unrealistically rosy pictures of what's going to happen. And these aren't like, oh, I'm going to be friends with Taylor Swift. These are like, I'm working on this curriculum and like, you know, I'm going to finish this part and then I'm going to hand it to you and you're going to finish that part and then we're going to have to reformat it. I mean, this isn't like

Right.

So there are many possible futures, and we tend to dwell on the one positive one. Now, maybe we do that because it just makes us feel good in the moment, but maybe we also do that, as you point out, that, like, in a way, if you just sat there and you're like, okay, we have to do this curriculum on decision-making, let's just play out the 99 million scenarios where we fail,

where it takes us 15 years, where we all get into arguments. Like if you dwell on all the realities, then maybe you just never do anything. That's exactly what I'm saying though. Like if you knew how hard it was going to be to start this company, think about it in terms of parenting. If you knew all the stuff you have to go through and all the poopy diapers, like teenage years, whatever, whatever,

I don't know that most people are going to sign up to start a company, to be a parent, to run for office. Whatever those things are, I think that there's an element of self-delusion that's really beautiful that allows us to dream big and have these expectations and

that if we didn't have, we would never get started. Right. But those, okay, those founders like that you appreciate, right? The ones where you're like, oh, love your ambition. And I'm also going to give you some of my money, right? Like, I assume that they do take that next step that Gabrielle wants them to take, that they do spend some of their time thinking about the obstacles and like how they're going to get around them. Yeah. I mean, look, there's all these

examples from great VC funds that say the very best pitches when they come in, start with, this is why you should not invest in me. You then negate their objections and can overcome them. So yes, and I guess what I would say is that I think the very best

founders, the very best people to invest in, don't know how to lose. I may have shared with you before Barbara Corcoran, who's the Shark Tank star. I sort of slightly know her. She's very gritty. I don't know her at all, but we met one time and she told me, my best entrepreneurs are the dumbest because they don't know when they've been beaten. So they just keep going and eventually they figure out how to do it. And we talk about this concept of never get blocked.

If the goal is to follow this route, then yeah, you might get blocked. But if the goal is to get to that endpoint, you're going to find seven different routes that are going to get you there. It's a very different mindset. And I think that that's where sort of this daydreaming or quote unrealistic goals, you should have those if you're going to be successful in business, but not so unrealistic that

But here's where I disagree with you because you keep saying like, oh, well, there's some fantasies that are good and some fantasies that are unrealistic. And like, I just disagree. That's not the problem. Like, it's not that like some fantasies take it too far. The problem is their incompleteness, the failure to imagine the obstacles. And that's just different.

Of course, by the way, after you imagine all the obstacles, you might take it down a notch. And you're like, well, actually, I want to revise my fantasy. But I think it's the incompleteness that is the Achilles heel of fantasizing. And even when you think about, like, the planning fallacy, I was thinking about when I was in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and there was this tunnel. It was called the Big Dig because it was supposed to take six years to

and $3 billion, which at the time was like, oh, my God. Okay, it didn't take six years. It took 16 years, and it didn't take $3 billion. It took $22 billion. But you could argue that at the very beginning, if anybody said, hey, I think this thing is going to take a decade and a half and over $20 billion, like nobody would have started it, right? So there is this benefit, as you're saying, to the kind of

really ambitious, possibly too ambitious idea. But the point is that you have to furnish your fantasies with obstacles because whatever the size of your fantasy, as long as you start thinking about obstacles, there's no wrong answers. When you ask people like, what is it that stands in the way? I

I've never heard anyone, whether they're 10 or like 70 years old, who can't at some level figure out what the obstacle is. And then the next thing we ask them is,

How could you get around that obstacle? I don't know. I mean, I would say that I think it's really hard if someone thinks, let me tell you this brief story. So Kim Scott, who we both love, author of Radical Candor, Silicon Valley executive, wonderful, wonderful soul. She came to Qualtrics in our early days and was doing a Q&A with the employees. And I remember she said these exact words. She said, none of you are Steve Jobs.

And I'm really sorry if I'm the first one telling you that. And I love that she said that. And the point was, if you were Steve Jobs, you would not be in this room. You'd be creating your own company. So there is some element to being...

realistic about what your contributions are. But I'm also saying that I think it's really good to be completely unrealistic because you never get anything like the big dig if you know it's going to take a decade and a half. You never get a Qualtrics if people think it's going to be that hard. If I'd known how hard my role was there, I don't know that I would have signed up. I'm so grateful that I did it. But it's good that you don't know all those things. That's all I'm saying. I don't disagree with you about that.

I just think that the elemental insight from research is that

You are most well off if you allow yourself to fantasize in a way that isn't especially edited. Like, I don't think Gabrielle would have walked into that room and said, you're no Steve Jobs. So, like, I want you to dream what you're going to dream the next year. But I want you to keep in mind that you're here in this room because you're in the middle of a org chart. And if you were Steve Jobs, you'd be off doing something like I don't think she would have done that. To be clear, I don't want to characterize Kim as walking in and crapping on everybody. Yeah.

That was not the feeling of it at all. That was not the spirit, right? But really, when you want to do an exercise about the future, you would just take it in two steps. Fantasy first, obstacle next. And then all the work, all of the sort of like adjusting and all that, it happens automatically.

naturally to the person. And sometimes the fantasy is left untouched, but just gives you like, wow, a really long to-do list. And sometimes the fantasy does get revised, but there's nothing wrong, I think, with these fantasies except for the omission of the obstacles. I'll just, in closing, defend. Kim, I think there's something freeing about knowing what you're

So I would say to these entrepreneurs, like, what is it that you hope and dream for?

And then I would have them fully indulge. When Gabrielle does these workshops, she has people fully indulge in these positive fantasies for minutes, just imagining every vivid detail without any editing, with no censoring, with no criticism, with no reality. And then I would say, like, now let's do something different. Let's think about the obstacles that stand in the way. And then I would do the same exact exercise, and so would she, like this vivid, vivid,

clear imagining of what the obstacles are and then we would get to making plans. And like that to me is the difference. I think people often make the mistake of just doing it all in one step. They're like, well, you need to have realistic. It's like, no, no, no. Be unrealistic. Then think about

obstacles, you'll get there and you'll have this energy. You'll have this drive that comes from the contrast between this aspirational future and the negative obstacle that stands in front of it. That's totally different from like just this kind of like lukewarm, like, okay, well, I guess I could reach here.

I get that. And I think it's probably a great exercise. I'm also just thinking of the people who've tried 17 different startups, failed every single time, and their spouse is like, just go get a damn job. Yeah. And what do you think about that?

I think that at some point you have to be realistic that you don't have what it takes to do X, Y, or Z. And it's okay to just throw in the towel and say, maybe this wasn't my thing. Because I think that it's really unhealthy to go pursue something that's just never gonna happen. Like I would love to be a professional tennis player

Right. OK, so like what's the obstacle that stands in the way? I can't play tennis. How would you get around that obstacle? Like no amount of hard work or effort is going to get me there. That's, I think, what an entrepreneur who seriously sits and thinks about it and asks themselves, what is the obstacle that stands in the way? I think they would say something like you just said. You don't have to tell them that. That's the thing. People can self-

direct without anyone's help, actually, if they're willing to ask themselves the right questions in the right order. And look, I would just end by saying with Daniel, your question is unhealthy to have unrealistic dreams. In my most excited state, I love unrealistic dreams. I think there's a lot of beauty to it. And also, I think that if you and your friends want to pretend that one day you will all live in the Bahamas,

I think you should, because I think it's a really fun thing to think about. Bermuda. Excuse me. Wouldn't that be tragic if they they actually like it's like you get there and you're like, where is Daniel ends up in Bermuda and everyone else is in the Bahamas? Yeah, that would not be a fantasy. But I think it's a beautiful thing and I think it's fun to consider. So I would just say I'm all for it. Enjoy Bermuda in your Bahama shorts. Send us a postcard.

And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation. Angela says that she's been on a quest to find the very best Saran Wrap. Saran is actually the name of a specific brand of polyethylene food wrap, also known as plastic wrap or cling film, made by S.C. Johnson & Son. Saran is one of many trademarked names that are often used for an entire product category. You can find it on the web at www.saranrap.com.

You probably know that Kleenex and Xerox are brand names. But you might be surprised to learn that you're only dressing your baby in a onesie if you're using an infant bodysuit made by Gerber Children's Wear. You're only using rollerblades if you have inline skates from Technica Group. And you're only riding around in a jet ski if you have the brand of personal watercraft sold by Kawasaki Heavy Industries.

Later, Mike and Angela tried to recall a fact about the amount of emergency savings Americans have on hand. They were thinking of a 2022 survey by the consumer financial services company Bankrate, which found that 57% of U.S. adults can't afford a $1,000 emergency expense. In addition, 68% of those polled said that a sudden loss of employment would result in an inability to cover living expenses for even one month.

Finally, Angela credits the concept of the planning fallacy to the late great psychologist Daniel Kahneman. We should note that Kahneman developed the idea with his friend and long-term research partner, Amos Tversky. That's it for the Fact Check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some thoughts about last week's episode on the differences between sympathy and empathy.

I'm calling in response to the question about empathy and sympathy, and then how the conversation also included a discussion on pity. So I'm 39 years old now. I live in downtown Los Angeles, but I grew up in the South, in Oklahoma. And I can remember as a kid, as a Black little girl growing up poor, there were so many times when I realized that folks were being nice to me.

to me and to my siblings, not because of any genuine empathy or sympathy, but because they felt pity on us

And I agree with Mike that it's a horrible, horrible, disgusting feeling, especially as a child to realize where those feelings from particular adults were coming from. I remember it impacted me so much that one time I quit band. I was really good at playing the clarinet and I quit because I was feeling those feelings of pity from the band.

band director. And I was like, no, this has to go. And so I can really understand how folks might have those visceral reactions. It's a horrible, horrible feeling. Thanks for the discussion. And I look forward to these episodes every week. Your episode on empathy versus sympathy took me back nearly 20 years to medical school in London, where I got into arguments with the philosophy teachers about trying to be empathetic towards our patients and

I couldn't understand why they couldn't see that empathy was impossible in certain situations. I've never had a terminal diagnosis, I've never lost a child to a car crash, and yet those are things we deal with as doctors, especially in the emergency department where I now work.

What I have understood over those 20 years is that actually the most important thing is striving to try and be as empathetic as possible. Put yourself as close to the position that you can of the patient or parent or person in front of you and do that with sympathy so that you can attempt to be near to them and to understand their grief, their difficulty, their diagnosis and to give them the best care as possible as a result.

That was, respectively, Natalie Williams-Awodeja and Ed Sixsmith. Thanks to them and to everyone who shared their stories with us. And remember, we'd love to hear your thoughts on seemingly unrealistic dreams. Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com and you might hear your voice on the show. ♪

Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions, are people getting worse at experiencing discomfort? Oh my gosh, I'm already uncomfortable. This is so awkward. That's next week on No Stupid Questions. No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics Radio, People I Mostly Admire, and The Economics of Everyday Things.

All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Rembud Radio. The senior producer of the show is me, Rebecca Lee Douglas, and Lyric Bowditch is our production associate. This episode was mixed by Greg Rippin with help from Eleanor Osborne. We had research assistance from Daniel Moritz-Rapson. Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra.

You can follow us on Twitter at NSQ underscore show and on Facebook at NSQ show. If you have a question for a future episode, please email it to NSQ at Freakonomics.com. To learn more or to read episode transcripts, visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ. Thanks for listening. I don't think you would want somebody in a wheelie chair for recording a podcast. I have a wheelie chair. Oh, Mike. Hello.

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