In Praise Of Hitting Repeat

Surprising benefits of ‘Been there, done that, love it’

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Surprising benefits of ‘Been there, done that, love it’

Scrolling through social media feeds can quickly convince you that everyone’s life is more interesting than yours is. During a particularly adventurous week on Instagram some months ago, I saw waterskiing in Maui, hiking in Yosemite and swimming with wild pigs in the Bahamas. Wild pigs!

Impulsively, I started googling flights to new places, imagining adventures. Then I ordered food from the place I eat at every week and ... felt bad about not trying somewhere new.

This ‘fear of missing out’, or FOMO, is rooted in a common tic: Evolutionarily, we’re disposed to find novel experiences more exciting and attention-grabbing than repeat experiences, according to research in the Journal of Experimental Biology. That’s our fight-or-flight psychology at work. Because our brains can’t process all the stimuli around us, we evolved to pay attention to potentially dangerous new things more intently than to familiar things, which we’ve already established won’t hurt us.

What’s more, words such as ‘repetition’ tend to be associated with more negative emotions than words like ‘novelty’, says Michael Norton, PhD, a professor at Harvard Business School.

“Classic research shows that when we think about upcoming experiences, we think about variety,” says Norton. “If I ask you right now to select a yoghurt for each day next week, you’ll pick your favourite flavour—say, blueberry—a few times, but you’ll mix in some strawberry and peach. Because who wants to eat that much blueberry yoghurt? Over the longer term, though, as the original experience fades in time and memory, repetition can become more pleasurable.”

He adds, “We’re simply more boring than we’d like to admit.” Yet because few of us have the time or money to regularly indulge in new experiences, we feel bad about our lives’...

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