Reading Time: 4 minutes
“The waves in the ocean seem different today,” I think, as I walk along the beach shore, noticing the size of the waves and hearing them crashing down on the sand.
“Would the ferry be on time? Would I make it on time to the airport?”
I keep walking towards the small local beach coffee shop that has 8 white tables.
“I’m ready to sip a cold green juice in this hot weather,” I think, after seeing that the temperature was 91F at that moment.
A waitress, wearing black shorts and a white t-shirt takes my order and listens to my question: “Do you think the ferry is on time today?”
He looks at the ocean, trying to read the impact of the waves on the ferry schedule, and says, “I don’t know.”
I softly smiled, “I see.”
He smiles back and goes to prepare my green juice.
As I’m staring at the ocean, I hear a voice that says, “The ferry is on time, there are no rains or storms …. the waves are different right now, but just on the shore. Nothing to worry about.”
I look in the direction that the voice comes from, and then see three gentleman, wearing beach suits and sitting around a table while having their meal.
– I heard you asking the waitress about the ferry.
– Do you think the ferry will be on time?
– The water is calm in the ocean, it’s just the shore.
– Where are you from?
– We are from Australia and come here every year to visit our family.
– Oh wow, which part of Australia?
– Do you want to join us?
For the next three hours, as the waitress brought burgers, french fries, cold iced lemonade with no sugar, and cold beer, the conversation unfolded about childhood friends, politics, managerial problems, cultural roots, trust, religion, architecture, relationships, love, construction, workouts, health, and traveling.
That afternoon, these three gentlemen taught me a new word “parea”
I have always been fond of rich conversations, the ones that unfold into the many areas of our lives, the ones that capture the tapestry of our lives, the ones that make us forget the time passing by.
Table of Contents
- What does Parea have to do with playing-it-safe?
- Curiosity
- Interesting benefits of curious behaviors
- How to practice curiosity in your day-to-day life
- You're in! Please check your mailbox!
- The Power of Openness: How to Live a More Fulfilling Life
- You need psychological flexibility in your everyday life
- Table for one, the ultimate exposure
What does Parea have to do with playing-it-safe?
When we play-it-safe, we are quickly in our heads.
We doubt, anticipate, dwell on the past, and rely on 10 – thinking strategies that while necessary and useful at times, they can also be the beginning path of stuckness in our head and narrowness in our behavior.
Those playing-it-safe moves, as I usually refer to safety-seeking behaviors, can also take us away from exploring the world, connecting with others, facing the unknown and adapting to day-to-day situations as they happen.
So today, I want to remind you of a psychological principle:
Curiosity
- Why do you go to the bathroom?
- Why is it yellow?
- How many friends do you have?
- Are you blue?
- Why do we sleep?
Kids have fascinating inquisitive minds. They keep asking and asking for no other reason except that they just want to learn about the world around them. Researchers tried to figure out how often kids ask questions. Turns out, they ask on average 107 questions per hour.
“Episodes of curiosity,” as psychologist Susan Engel calls them, decrease as kids grow. For example, asking direct questions, manipulating objects, or direct gazing occurs 2.36 in a period of hours in kindergarten, and then only 0.48 in fifth grade.
Curiosity has been described as the “wick in the candle of learning,” but what about adults? Well, as we get older somehow, we get less curious. Some studies suggest that a decrease in curiosity in adults could be caused by our increase in knowledge. It’s like the more we know, the less curious we are .. oh boy!!!
Interesting benefits of curious behaviors
- Curiosity keeps you mentally young: nourishing a sense of wonder throughout life as well as novelty-seeking behaviors.
- Curiosity helps you to make better decisions: when acting curiously, you’re less likely to have a fixed-mindset or fall prey to confirmation bias (looking for information that supports your beliefs rather than exploring other data that suggests your beliefs are not the absolute truth).You’re more likely to consider more options when facing a dilemma than looking at things as black and white.
- Curiosity helps you learn: curious behaviors and openness to the new help you better remember new information.The more curious you’re about a topic, the more likely you’re going to remember it.
- Curiosity helps you to have better relationships because curious and genuine questions about others’ passions, hurts, struggles, work, and so on, help you to really get to know someone. The more curious you’re about the person in front of you, the more meaningful relationships you have.
How to practice curiosity in your day-to-day life
What are your go-to playing-it-safe moves?
Do you play-it-safe by:
-
Criticizing and negatively judging yourself?
-
Taking your mind too seriously?
- Disengaging and using safety crutches?
- Anticipating doom and gloom in future scenarios and rumination?
- Discounting and ignoring what’s important to you?
- Postponing, delaying, and procrastinating things?
- Searching for reassurance and certainty?
- Assuming over-responsibility for others’ well-being and important matters?
- Second-guessing and believing negative stories about yourself?
- Doing things right and perfectly?
When noticing this urge to play-it-safe, try this:
- Ask yourself, what’s my mind trying to protect me right now?
- What’s so hard about this situation, that my mind wants me to play-it-safe sooo badly?
- What do I need to experience, if I don’t go along with that playing-it-safe move?
Do you want to get unstuck from wrestling with worries, fears, anxieties, obsessions, and ineffective playing-it-safe actions?
Learn research-based skills and actionable steps to make better decisions, adjust to uncertain situations, make bold moves, and do more of what matters to you.
Related posts
The Power of Openness: How to Live a More Fulfilling Life
Nikko steps...
You need psychological flexibility in your everyday life
It was finally...
Table for one, the ultimate exposure
As I strolled...