To (Not) Catch A Thief

This short article about Edward Skyler, Deputy Mayor of New York, mentions four times (headline, led, body, final quote) that he tackled a mugger. I have a similar story. Had I known it was so interesting . . .
I was in Paris — same trip that inspired the Shangri-La Diet. It had been raining, the streets were wet. I heard a shout: Stop that man! A man came running toward me. I tried to stop him but I slipped on the cobblestones and fell in front of him. Perfect tackle. Lying on the ground, he asked: Why did you do that? Nobody came. He got up and ran off.

As I walked away a woman came up to me. “Are you okay?’ she asked. A man said to me,”That was unusual what you did.” I felt really good for an hour or so.

I was stunned how good I felt. I had accomplished nothing — the thief wasn’t caught. Nor was there any obvious reason I should care what two bystanders thought of me.

The lesson I drew was this. Praise alone won’t make you happy. Accomplishment alone won’t make you happy. But their combination — praise for a genuine accomplishment, however small –is enormously potent. If I’m right, a teacher has enormous power to help his students by praising them for what they do right.

3 thoughts on “To (Not) Catch A Thief

  1. The corollary is true in both cases. Blame, ridicule, and judgment , even from strangers, can cause great suffering and teachers have enormous power to harm by criticizing them for what they do wrong.

  2. All the happiness research suggests that doing something that helps others causes happiness long after the activity; whereas doing something that gives you pleasure has a quick drop-off — the pleasure tends to end with the activity.

    I once had a wonderful, religious person, Huston Smith, say to me, “God bless you for that,” with great earnestness. Even though I am not religious, I was amazed at how good it made me feel. I think the feeling of well being that comes from praise from a religious figure must be powerful. Or in Catholicism, taking communion, which can only be done with a “cleansed soul” after confession, must be amazing…

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