The Big Idea: why you shouldn’t be afraid of being a mess
We fear others' judgment, but the evidence tells us that the things which cause us shame can make us more likable
We all carry some secrets thatwe would rather not share with the people around us. In much the same way that we mayonly invite visitors into the good rooms" of our house whilethe rest is an absolute tip, we often hide the chaosof our personal lives behind a polished facade. This may be a serious mistake, since it's precisely thosevulnerabilities that can offer rich opportunities to bond with the people around us.
This is sometimes known as the beautiful mess effect", and one striking example of it playing out in the public sphere is in the life of Diana, Princess of Wales. At the time, even her harshest critics would have admitted that she had an incredible capacity to connect with people. And the widespread admiration for her seems to have arisen because of her vulnerabilities, rather than in spite of them. In her controversial BBC Panorama interview in 1995, for example, she discussed her husband's infidelities, but also her struggles with mental health and her love affairs. Many of Diana's detractors believed that she had provided the material for her own character assassination, but Diana's popularity soared in the days after the interview, with the Daily Mirror reporting that an astonishing 92% of the public supported her appearance on the programme.
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