Inside Mental Health

Antisocial Myth: The Case for Leaving Early

Sep 18, 2025
Jodi Wellman, a positive psychology expert and TEDx speaker, shares insights on why we might crave an early exit from social events. She explores 'experience efficiency' and 'memory optimization', revealing that both introverts and extroverts can feel overstimulated. Jodi encourages reframing early departures as a savvy way to manage energy and joy without guilt. Plus, she offers practical tips for confidently setting boundaries, transforming the fear of leaving early into a mindful choice.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Experience Efficiency Explains Early Exits

  • Jodi Wellman calls “experience efficiency” the ability to extract the essence of an event quickly and be satisfied.
  • This explains why both introverts and extroverts can leave early while still enjoying themselves.
INSIGHT

Anticipation Can Deliver The Value

  • Some people absorb value from anticipation and early parts of an event, so the remaining time feels unnecessary.
  • Sunk-cost thinking doesn’t always compel them to stay because they already feel they earned the experience.
INSIGHT

Peak-End Rule And Memory Optimization

  • People manage memories by favoring peak moments and how events end, known as the peak-end rule.
  • Leaving on a high can preserve a positive memory and avoid a bad ending that tarnishes the whole event.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app