When my children were small, I decided that I would never lie to them. No matter how painful the truth, I would always be the one to tell it to them. (This was before they caught me scoffing the last of the cooking chocolate, and asked me what I was eating. And I said, “Broccoli, of course. What else would I be snacking on?â€)
Anyway. From the very beginning, I told them the truth about Father Christmas, the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunny. And they were mostly fine with that. Father Christmas is actually Daddy, leaving floury footprints around the lounge to trick us? Fine. The Tooth Fairy is Mommy? Whatever. As long as the cash is where it’s supposed to be.
But when it came to the Easter Bunny … well. There was no way that my children were not believing in that.
“Can I come outside with you and hide the eggs?†the smaller child asked me, one inclement Easter morning. “I might see the Easter Bunny.â€
“But … you know the Bunny doesn’t exist, right?â€
“Yes.â€
“So why do you want to come with me?â€
“Because I might see the Easter Bunny.â€
I was reminded of this conversation recently, when I was reading psychologist Drew Westen’s book, The Political Brain. In it, he describes a study in which people with strong political beliefs were presented with two contradictory statements, both made by their party. They didn’t even seem to notice the inconsistencies, let alone be bothered by them (although they definitely saw the contradictions made by the party they didn’t support).
How is this even possible? How could you hear someone say, “I would never do X. I think X is a terrible thing to do,†then actually see them do X, and … I don’t know, somehow … by some mental voodoo … just be fine with it?
I suppose that if you really, really like that person, you’ll find a way to rationalise it. Westen’s study suggests that the subjects didn’t actually spend much time on this part. Instead, their brains “seemed to recruit beliefs†that quickly soothed them back into their happy state of certainty.
But it also seems that, for a brief moment, the clash between what someone in this position wants to believe and what they actually see, makes them uncomfortable. So their brain works really hard to make them feel good again.
As Westen explains, “Once partisans had found a way to reason to false conclusions, not only did neural circuits involved in negative emotions turn off, but circuits involved in positive emotions turned on.â€
So, people believe what they want to. And the more wrong they are, the better they feel, because their brains reward them for it. For some people, that may mean a nice big dose of dopamine. And for others – some small, animal-loving, sweet-toothed others – the reward for their wholehearted belief in something that they know isn’t true, is the possibility of a giant cuddly bunny heading their way, carrying a basketful of chocolate.
Who can argue with that?
Robyn Goss is a South African writer, recently moved to Switzerland. You can read her blogs at www.robyngoss.com
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