Self-portrait of nice cheery big full family brother sister grandparents grandson granddaughter sitting around served festal table embracing reunion at modern loft industrial brick interior house

(ยฉ deagreez - stock.adobe.com)

GAINESVILLE, Fla. โ€” Imagine skipping Thanksgiving dinner with your family or passing up a chance to write a heartfelt thank-you note, believing these moments arenโ€™t worth your time. Think again. A researcher from the University of Florida finds that people consistently underestimate the profound emotional impact of lifeโ€™s seemingly mundane experiences.

Dr. Erin Westgate, an assistant professor of psychology leading the research, has uncovered a curious human tendency: weโ€™re remarkably bad at predicting how meaningful our experiences will be.

โ€œWe donโ€™t make sense of events until they actually happen,โ€ Westgate explains in a university release. โ€œWe donโ€™t process events until we need to, when they actually happen and not before.โ€

Holiday and Christmas dinner with family
Research shows people consistently underestimate the profound emotional impact of lifeโ€™s seemingly small experiences. (ยฉ Monkey Business โ€“ stock.adobe.com)

The research began with a simple yet provocative question during Westgateโ€™s graduate school days: Do people accurately anticipate the emotional significance of future events? Her initial study with University of Virginia undergraduates provided a surprising answer. Students consistently misjudged how meaningful their Thanksgiving holiday would be, underestimating the emotional depth of the experience.

Intrigued by these initial findings, Westgate expanded her research during the pandemic, replicating the study with a larger group of University of Florida students. The results were consistent: people systematically fail to recognize the potential meaning in upcoming experiences.

This isnโ€™t just about holiday gatherings. The three-year National Science Foundation-funded study will explore how this psychological blind spot affects major life decisions โ€” from career choices and volunteer work to personal milestones like starting a family. Perhaps most intriguingly, the research will examine how people might avoid potentially transformative experiences that involve discomfort, missing out on opportunities for personal growth and resilience.

โ€œWe want to live meaningful lives, we want to do meaningful things,โ€ Westgate notes. โ€œIf we are not realizing that an experience is going to be meaningful, we may be less likely to do it and miss out on these potential sources of meaning in our own lives.โ€

The ultimate goal of the research is not just to understand this phenomenon, but to develop strategies to help people better recognize and embrace potentially meaningful experiences.

โ€œSometimes we go into a project, and we know what we are going to find,โ€ Westgate says. โ€œThis is one of those projects that surprised us.โ€

So, if youโ€™re thinking about skipping this Thanksgiving or your familyโ€™s annual holiday get-together this year, stop for a second and reconsider. That seemingly insignificant moment might just be the source of unexpected meaning youโ€™ve been overlooking.

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StudyFinds sets out to find new research that speaks to mass audiences โ€” without all the scientific jargon. The stories we publish are digestible, summarized versions of research that are intended to inform the reader as well as stir civil, educated debate. StudyFinds Staff articles are AI assisted, but always thoroughly reviewed and edited by a Study Finds staff member. Read our AI Policy for more information.

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3 Comments

  1. Marshall Cypress says:

    after 30 years of forced โ€œthanksgivingโ€ we are finally free. had our first guilt free, no family thanksgiving yesterday. quiet, and peaceful. bliss.

  2. stimp says:

    prove it

    1. Ed G says:

      Ujh, stimpy, thatโ€s what the study is for. Please read articles before commenting. TIA!!