How to Live with Kare

Kare

Honest growth for women in the messy middle of their 20s. Hosted by Kare Shriver. New episodes every Wednesday. Live with Kare.

Episodes

  1. 4d ago

    you're not a good judge of character, you're just judging

    You decided who she was before she finished handing you your coffee. One short reply, one bad text, one look, and you've got a stranger's whole character written. He's a jerk, she's fake, he's lazy, she's cold. Case closed. The problem is you were never actually reading people. You were casting them. This week we get into the fundamental attribution error: the quiet, flattering habit of explaining other people by their character and yourself by your circumstances. We start on Love Island (light spoilers, you've been warned), where one guy gets branded "lustful" for doing the exact thing a girl three couples over calls "just figuring it out," and we work down to the version you're running on the group chat, the interstate, and your own mother. Fritz Heider laid the groundwork in 1958, Lee Ross named it in 1977, and Jones and Harris proved back in 1967 that we'll judge you for a position we know you were assigned. Then we turn it around, because the real gut-punch isn't how you judge them. It's how much grace you hand yourself for the same thing. No shame, no "everyone's secretly an angel." Just one smaller, harder move: hold the scene open one beat longer before you issue the verdict. You leave with the word, a recast exercise, and one question to ask the next time someone does the annoying thing. The deeper dive on the history and the mechanism is over on YouTube: How to Live with Kare. New episodes every Wednesday. Available anywhere you stream. live with care 🤎

    20 min

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Honest growth for women in the messy middle of their 20s. Hosted by Kare Shriver. New episodes every Wednesday. Live with Kare.