"Don’t Get Mad, Get Curious"

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/n4tdM7xopQoAQDFjJ/don-t-get-mad-get-curious

*Crossposted from *https://​​e-m-morningstar.dreamwidth.org/​​1066.html When I was a kid, my mother once found me in the kitchen, swearing at the dishwasher and shoving its filter around. She had me step aside and showed me a better way of finding out what was wrong with the filter: looking for objects stuck in it, moving it from side to side, taking it out and inspecting it and its seating more closely, and so on.At the time, this looked like magic. The filter wasn’t working, and I was angry—when I got mad, it felt impossible to do anything other than fight the target of my anger. But my mom was capable of doing otherwise. When faced with the same situation, she calmed down almost immediately and got systematic.When I said this seemed magical, she told me that she used to fight inoperative appliances too, until she was shown enough times that a systematic approach works better on complicated, broken inanimate objects. From repeated exposure, she learned a mental motion which she called "Don’t get mad, get curious."I think there are three broad categories of response to problems (situations where trying what’s worked before isn’t producing good results):