In late August, Erin Alexander, who is 57, sat in the car park of a Target store in Fairfield, California, and wept. Her sister-in-law had recently died, and Alexander was having a hard day.
A barista working at the Starbucks inside the Target was too. The espresso machine had broken down and she was clearly stressed. Alexander — who had stopped crying and gone inside for some caffeine — smiled, ordered an iced green tea, and told her to hang in there. After picking up her order, she noticed a message on the cup: “Erin,” the barista had scrawled next to a heart, “your soul is golden”.
“I’m not sure I even necessarily know what ‘your soul is golden’ means,” says Alexander, who laughed and cried while recalling the incident.
But the warmth of that small and unexpected gesture, from a stranger who had no inkling of what she was going through, moved her deeply.
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“Of course, I was still really sad,” Alexander says. “But that little thing made the rest of my day.”
New findings, published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology in August, corroborate just how powerful experiences such as Alexander’s can be. Researchers found that people who perform a random act of kindness tend to underestimate how much the recipient will appreciate it. And they believe that miscalculation could hold many of us back from doing nice things for others more often.
Not knowing one’s positive impact can stand in the way of people engaging in these sorts of acts of kindness in daily life
“We have this negativity bias when it comes to social connection. We just don’t think the positive impact of our behaviours is as positive as it is,” says Marisa Franco, a psychologist and author of “Platonic: How the Science of Attachment Can Help You Make — and Keep — Friends,” who did not work on the recent research.
“With a study like this, I hope it will inspire more people to actually commit random acts of kindness,” she says.
Underestimating the power of small gestures
The recent study comprised eight small experiments that varied in design and participants. In one, for example, graduate students were asked to perform thoughtful acts of their own choosing, such as giving a classmate a lift home from campus, baking cookies or buying someone a cup of coffee.
[ Carrying out acts of kindness is a type of homework I can get behindOpens in new window ]
In another, researchers recruited 84 participants on two cold weekends at the ice skating rink at Maggie Daley Park in Chicago. They were given a hot chocolate from the snack kiosk and were told they could keep it or give it to a stranger as a deliberate act of kindness. The 75 participants who gave away their hot chocolate were asked to guess how “big” the act of kindness would feel to the recipient on a scale from 0 (very small) to 10 (very large), and to predict how the recipient would rate their mood (ranging from much more negative than normal to much more positive than normal) upon receiving the drink. The recipients were then asked to report how they actually felt using the same scales.
In that experiment — and across all others — the people doing the kind thing consistently underestimated how much it was actually appreciated, says one of the study’s authors, Amit Kumar, an assistant professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Texas at Austin.
[ So you want your child to be kind . . . 13 things to considerOpens in new window ]
“We believe these miscalibrated expectations matter for behaviour,” he says. “Not knowing one’s positive impact can stand in the way of people engaging in these sorts of acts of kindness in daily life.”
Another experiment in the study was devised to help researchers better understand this tendency to underestimate the power of our own kind acts. In it, Kumar and his team recruited 200 participants in Maggie Daley Park. A control group of 50 participants received a cupcake simply for participating in the study and rated their mood. Another 50 people who did not receive a cupcake rated how they thought the receivers would feel after getting a cupcake.
A third group of 50 people were told they could give a cupcake away to strangers, and were asked to rate their own mood as well as how they believed the recipients would feel. Once again, the researchers found that those who got a cupcake as a result of a random act of kindness felt better than the person on the giving end thought they would.
No small act goes unnoticed... It will help your own heart, maybe even more than the recipients
Also, people who got a cupcake because of an act of kindness rated themselves higher on a happiness scale than those who got one simply for participating in the study, suggesting they got an emotional boost from the gesture, in addition to the cupcake itself.
“People tend to think that what they are giving is kind of little, maybe it’s relatively inconsequential,” Kumar says. “But recipients are less likely to think along those lines. They consider the gesture to be significantly more meaningful because they are also thinking about the fact that someone did something nice for them.”
How to show others you care
The notion that kindness can boost wellbeing is hardly new. Studies have shown that pro-social behaviour — basically, voluntarily helping others — can help lower people’s daily stress levels, and that simple acts of connection, such as texting a friend, mean more than many of us realise. But researchers who study kindness and friendship say they hope the new findings strengthen the scientific case for making these types of gestures more often.
“I have found that kindness can be a really hard sell,” says Tara Cousineau, a clinical psychologist, meditation teacher and author of “The Kindness Cure: How The Science of Compassion Can Heal Your Heart and Your World.” “People desire kindness yet often feel inconvenienced by the thought of being kind.”
Stress can also keep people from being kind to others, she says, as can the “little judgy voice” in people’s heads that causes them to question whether their gesture or gift will be misinterpreted, or whether it will make the recipient feel pressured to pay it back.
“When the kindness impulse arises,” Cousineau says, “we totally overthink it.”
An act of kindness is unlikely to backfire, she says, and in some instances, it can beget even more kindness. Jennifer Oldham, who lost her nine-year-old daughter, Hallie, in July after a tree fell on the car she was in during a storm, recently created a Facebook group — Keeping Kindness for Hallie — that encourages participants to engage in random acts of kindness. People have bought groceries and baby formula for others in Hallie’s honour. They’ve donated school supplies and given hydrangeas to strangers.
“No small act goes unnoticed,” Oldham, who is 36, says. “It will help your own heart, maybe even more than the recipients.”
Sometimes, it is something much sillier. When Kimberly Britt, president of Phoenix College in Arizona, left for a week of vacation in July, her vice-president of student affairs hid 60 rubber chickens in her office.
“She did it so I wouldn’t find them all immediately, and it did take me a while,” she says. “But it was meant to bring a smile to my day when I returned.”
It did — and has since inspired Britt to begin a random-acts-of-kindness challenge on campus. They have recorded 200 acts of kindness so far, including a teacher who went above and beyond to spend time with a student who was struggling emotionally; a staff member who brought food to the office; and another who made coffee for all of their colleagues.
If you are not already in the habit of performing random kind acts — or if it does not come naturally to you — Franco says to start by thinking about what you like to do.
“It’s not about you being like, ‘Oh, man, now I have to learn how to bake cookies in order to be nice,’” she says. “It’s about: What skills and talents do you already have? And how can you turn that into an offering for other people?” — This article originally appeared in The New York Times