Crina and Kirsten Get to Work

Feeling Embarrassed? Make It Work For You!


Listen Later

Embarrassing yourself is the key to success - well, not exactly, but there are benefits to embarrassment.  In this episode of Crina and Kirsten Get to Work, our hosts delve into this unusual emotion - embarrassment - hot head, panic, stomach upset, racing heart, sweating - and all of the things.  

 

SHOW NOTES

 

Science tells us embarrassment is a unique emotion - unlike an emotion such as fear, we need to think before we can feel this emotion.  Rowland Miller at Sam Houston University tells us, “we become embarrassed when we perceive that the social image we want to project has been undermined and that others are forming negative impressions of us.”  But there is more to embarrassment.  

 

John Sabini of the University of Pennsylvania and his colleagues found embarrassment is likely to arise when a person anticipates a disruption of smooth social interaction and/or faces a situation without clear social expectations . She is not worried about making a bad impression, but rather she does not know what to do next.

 

Sabini defined three kind of embarrassment:

  1. Faux-pas - food in your teeth when meeting your new boss
  • center-of-attention - being the guest of honor at a surprise party
  • sticky-situation embarrassment - having to fire someone or give hard feedback 
  •  

    Crina adds a fourth type, vicarious embarrassment, to this list - the feeling of being embarrassed for others.  

     

    Embarrassment serves a few important purposes.  Embarrassment signals others that we know we stepped in it and these negative feelings discourage us from doing it again and encourage us to make repairs with others.  It can also encourage us to prepare for a situation to avoid being embarrassed.

     

    Research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology found people who expressed more outward signs of embarrassment while describing their embarrassing moments (such as tripping) also reported a tendency to be more "prosocial" — that is, kinder and more generous.

     

    Researchers also found that when the study’s actor expressed embarrassment, study participants found the actor more trustworthy and wanted to affiliate with him more.  Embarrassment can humanize a leader because it helps break down the barriers between team members and the leader and ultimately allows for stronger connections to form.  Does the leader have some humor about her embarrassment or are they prickly and defensive about the embarrassment?  A leader’s response to embarrassment can set the tone for the team.  

     

    When we think about how to respond to embarrassment, research suggests most people tend to overestimate how much others notice our embarrassment. We can help put embarrassment in context by detaching ourselves and thinking about how we would react as an observer of our embarrassing situation.  It’s likely we will find grace, distance and context in that exercise.  

     

    We know embarrassment does not feel good, but it communicates we care and presents opportunities to consider our behavior and be more connected with those around us.

     

    The Surprising Perks of Being Embarrassed

    Oh no you didn't!

    Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,

    Countering embarrassment-avoidance by taking an observer's perspective | Motivation and Emotion



    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    Crina and Kirsten Get to WorkBy Crina Hoyer and Kirsten Barron

    • 5
    • 5
    • 5
    • 5
    • 5

    5

    67 ratings


    More shows like Crina and Kirsten Get to Work

    View all
    Fresh Air by NPR

    Fresh Air

    38,173 Listeners

    The Moth by The Moth

    The Moth

    27,275 Listeners

    Hidden Brain by Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam

    Hidden Brain

    43,409 Listeners

    Pod Save America by Crooked Media

    Pod Save America

    86,615 Listeners

    The Daily by The New York Times

    The Daily

    111,562 Listeners

    Up First from NPR by NPR

    Up First from NPR

    56,176 Listeners

    Stay Tuned with Preet by Preet Bharara

    Stay Tuned with Preet

    32,384 Listeners

    Lessons from a Quitter by Goli Kalkhoran

    Lessons from a Quitter

    324 Listeners

    Dateline NBC by NBC News

    Dateline NBC

    47,696 Listeners

    The Last Archive by Pushkin Industries

    The Last Archive

    1,831 Listeners

    SmartLess by Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes, Will Arnett

    SmartLess

    57,908 Listeners

    Main Justice by MSNBC

    Main Justice

    7,089 Listeners

    HBR On Leadership by Harvard Business Review

    HBR On Leadership

    151 Listeners

    Culture Study Podcast by Anne Helen Petersen

    Culture Study Podcast

    649 Listeners