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Relationships

Being Vulnerable Is Just One of Many Ways to Connect

We can be intentional about what social moments will benefit from vulnerability.

Key points

  • Being vulnerable—or openly sharing deeply personal thoughts, feelings, or experiences—can be a powerful way to connect with others.
  • Vulnerability is not always appropriate or essential. Fortunately, research shows there are many ways to experience human connection.
  • If we think of vulnerability as one tool of many in our social toolkit, we can be intentional about when vulnerability will help us connect.

Lately, when I hear people discussing human connection—be it on social media, a podcast, a TV show, or even when overhearing a conversation on the street—the message tends to focus on the importance of being vulnerable.

Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI
Vulnerability is important to developing intimacy and trust in our close relationships.
Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI

On one hand, as a psychologist who studies how we connect, I find this wonderful—the capacity to open up and share our most vulnerable selves is a very useful tool in relationships.

On the other hand, it also strikes me that the concept of vulnerability has reached the point where it is being oversimplified into a buzzword, as well as moralized—being held up as the “right” way to have meaningful moments of social connection.

As I have written about previously, there are many ways to connect with the various people we encounter in different situations throughout our days. And deep vulnerability is not always a requirement—or advisable.

Less Vulnerable But Still Meaningful Connections

In my research, I interview and survey folks about moments of connection in their everyday life, and people tell me all kinds of stories about how they experience connection. Consider this one, shared with me by a research participant:

I was walking down the streets of downtown [East Coast City] wearing a hat of my favorite NFL team, the Dallas Cowboys, when suddenly a guy around my age is walking down the street coming towards me wearing the exact same hat and as soon as he walks by he says, “Nice hat!” to which I say, “Thanks man.” We then proceeded to talk about the upcoming season for about 15 minutes… the experience made my day and it is something I will remember for a while.

Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI
Sharing positive emotions and similarities can be an effective way to bond.
Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI

This is an instance of human connection around a personal identity that two people literally are advertising on the outside of their clothing—it would demean the sometimes extreme psychological discomfort of truly vulnerable moments, moments where we genuinely risk shame or psychological injury in opening up about ourselves, to call this interaction vulnerable. Yet for this participant, shared identity and shared excitement made a potent combination for connection.

This is not a surprising anecdote if you study social connection. Research shows that people bond in so many ways, including through engaging around their similar sense of reality and enjoying positive feelings together,

Other ways of connection that may or may not require vulnerability include being affectionate, celebrating one another’s successes, coordinating body and mind in shared activities like singing and dance, or supporting others who need help. Humor is also a particularly effective way to connect—laughing along with others even produces bonding hormones.

Discernment and Connection: Developing a Toolkit of Ways to Connect

Vulnerability is essential for cultivating emotional intimacy, useful for resolving interpersonal conflicts and for seeking support in challenging times—yet some folks in our social network might be great to connect with in some ways, but would still not be the person we want as our closest confidante.

Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI
Opening our heart to others is one of many tools in our social toolkit. We can be intentional about with whom we are vulnerable
Source: Dave Smallen/Generated with DALL-E/OpenAI

The intimacy that arises from opening up about our deepest selves is contingent on the response of the person we are sharing with. If we don’t feel like someone is understanding, validating, and caring in response to our vulnerability, then we may feel hurt or ashamed rather than connected. Internal struggles might exacerbate this risk, for example if we feel low about ourselves, we are more likely to perceive others as unsupportive, making it more difficult for people to effectively be seen as responsive. Different social contexts might also influence the impact of vulnerability—being radically open-hearted at home might be advantageous yet might backfire in certain workplace situations.

Even Brene Brown, whose powerful TED talks and books certainly were central to putting vulnerability into our mainstream psychological vernacular, is clear that despite the importance of being vulnerable to achieving the kinds of goals and relationships we value, “letting it all hang out”—being an open book with everyone and in all circumstances—is not advisable.

Discussing our struggles openly actually often makes us feel worse in the moment, but helps to build closeness in our relationships. So if we feel like we want to—or tell ourselves that we should—be vulnerable in a situation, we can ask ourselves, is this a person I can and want to build a closer relationship with? We take a risk when sharing personal and emotional information, so we are our own advocates when we consider whether there are decent odds that we will be received with respect and care.

This is an invitation for us all to practice discernment—considering when it is useful to go deep and open-hearted beyond the edge of comfort, and when it’s useful to joke around and laugh, or to initiate familiar and comfortable interactions.

Rather than focusing on the right or wrong way to experience human connection, I suggest we keep an eye towards broadening our social toolkit, and reflecting on the most useful tool for the moment we are in and the persons we are engaging with. Sharing our most vulnerable self is a vital tool for social connection, but it doesn’t fit all situations—and is certainly not required with all acquaintances, friends, or even family.

No one is a failure for not being vulnerable in a social interaction, but there is help if you feel you would benefit from better honing the vulnerability tool in your toolkit. Therapy is a great place to work on your capacity for experiencing vulnerability, as well as strategizing when and with whom your most tender self might be shared.

References

Rossignac-Milon, M., Bolger, N., Zee, K. S., Boothby, E. J., & Higgins, E. T. (2021). Merged minds: Generalized shared reality in dyadic relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 120(4), 882–911.

Brown, C. L., & Fredrickson, B. L. (2021). Characteristics and consequences of co-experienced positive affect: understanding the origins of social skills, social bonds, and caring, healthy communities. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences, 39, 58-63.

Floyd, K., Hess, J. A., Miczo, L. A., Halone, K. K., Mikkelson, A. C., & Tusing, K. J. (2005). Human affection exchange: VIII. Further evidence of the benefits of expressed affection. Communication Quarterly, 53(3), 285-303.

Gable, S. L., & Reis, H. T. (2010). Good news! Capitalizing on positive events in an interpersonal context. In Advances in experimental social psychology (Vol. 42, pp. 195-257). Academic Press.

Pearce, E., Launay, J., & Dunbar, R. I. (2015). The ice-breaker effect: Singing mediates fast social bonding. Royal Society open science, 2(10), 150221.

Tarr, B., Launay, J., & Dunbar, R. I. (2016). Silent disco: dancing in synchrony leads to elevated pain thresholds and social closeness. Evolution and Human Behavior, 37(5), 343-349.

Inagaki, T. K., & Orehek, E. (2017). On the benefits of giving social support: When, why, and how support providers gain by caring for others. Current directions in psychological science, 26(2), 109-113.

Dunbar, R. I. M., Frangou, A., Grainger, F., & Pearce, E. (2021). Laughter influences social bonding but not prosocial generosity to friends and strangers. Plos one, 16(8), e0256229.

Reis, H. T., & Shaver, P. (1988). Intimacy as an interpersonal process. In S. Duck, D. F. Hay, S. E. Hobfoll, W. Ickes, & B. M. Montgomery (Eds.), Handbook of personal relationships: Theory, research and interventions (pp. 367–389). John Wiley & Sons.

Cameron, J. J., Holmes, J. G., & Vorauer, J. D. (2009). When self-disclosure goes awry: Negative consequences of revealing personal failures for lower self-esteem individuals. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 45(1), 217-222.

Gibson, K. R., Harari, D., & Marr, J. C. (2018). When sharing hurts: How and why self-disclosing weakness undermines the task-oriented relationships of higher status disclosers. Organizational behavior and human decision processes, 144, 25-43.

Brown, B. (2012). Daring greatly: How the courage to be vulnerable transforms the way we live, love, parent, and lead. Penguin.

Rauers, A., & Riediger, M. (2022). Ease of mind or ties that bind? Costs and benefits of disclosing daily hassles in partnerships. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 19485506221112252.

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