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  • The marshmallow test.

  • You might know about this iconic social experiment

  • there are many references to it in pop culture.

  • But what if I told you that what you've been told is the point of the marshmallow test

  • is actually completely wrong?

  • So, here's the basics of how it works.

  • You sit a kid in front of a delicious marshmallow and tell them that you're gonna leave the

  • room, and if they can resist the marshmallow until you come back,

  • they will get two marshmallows instead of one.

  • It's a test of delayed gratification: controlling immediate desires

  • in the service of long-term interest.

  • A small test, seen as having huge implications.

  • "The kids who successfully delay gratification at this age do much better later in life.

  • They make more money, they are happier, they have better relationships, and they're less

  • likely to get into trouble."

  • So that idea caught fire.

  • The marshmallow test seemed to prove that we have these static personality traits deep

  • inside us, and those traits determine the rest of our lives.

  • There is only one tiny problem with this interpretation.

  • "That iconic story is upside-down wrong, that your future is in a marshmallow,

  • because it isn't."

  • That's Walter Mischel, the guy who actually created the marshmallow test, and he told

  • me that literally the point of the original marshmallow study was to demonstrate not how

  • fixed but how flexible people are, how easily changed, if they simply reinterpret the way

  • that they frame the situation around them.

  • "The same little girl who can't wait for even a half minute for two little Oreo cookies

  • if she tries it, and I tell her ahead of time, 'You can make believe that they're

  • not really there, it's just a picture in your head,' the same child waits fifteen minutes."

  • Though of course, that's not the moral that our culture drew.

  • " 'It's your destiny, your future's in a marshmallow!' And it's far from your destiny."

  • "People can use their wonderful brains to think differently about situations, to reframe

  • them, to reconstrue them, to even reconstrue themselves."

  • All that stuff in your mindyour beliefs, cultural expectations, family upbringing,

  • friendshipsthat stuff, Mischel explains, profoundly influences how you see the world.

  • Your brain uses it as a filter to interpret everything around you.

  • So when the stuff in someone's mind changes, they change.

  • This is why Mischel sees people as fundamentally flexible.

  • He tells me that is the single most important thing that he has stood for

  • in his whole professional life.

  • "What my life has been about is in showing the potential for human beings to not be the

  • victims of their biographiesnot their biological biographies, not their social biographies

  • and to show, in great detail, the many ways in which people can change

  • what they become and how they think."

The marshmallow test.

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