... . . . and a possible route to greater satisfaction. Why do our brains recall the things we havent done more than those we have accomplished? It seems our brains have a tendency constantly to remind us of what we could have done. According to the Zeigarnik Effect, you are much more likely to recall uncompleted tasks than one you completed. In a 1927 study, Russian psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik asked subjects to complete a set of tasks. During some of the tasks, the subjects were interrupted before they could finish. When asked later about the tasks, they recalled the tasks during which they were interrupted at a much higher rate than those they were able to complete. It turns out that the brain has a powerful need to finish what it starts. When it cant complete something, it gets stuck on it. Intrusive thoughts about what we could not finish may pop into our heads as a way to remind the cognitive system that something still needs to be completed. This can include getting closure to issues (James and Kendell, 1997). The Zeigarnik Effect may also explain why we regret things we didnt do even more than we regret things we did. In other words, we remember regrettable omissions more than we remember regrettable commissions (Savitsky, Medvec, and Gilovich, 1997). This may also explain why when we grieve, we focus more on the things we didnt say to or didnt do with someone weve lost more than we what we did experience with them.
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http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/here-there-and-everywhere/201403/why-we-hate-not-finishing-what-we-start
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