Friday, May 22, 2020
Exclamation Points and the Female Brain
Exclamation Points and the Female Brain The exclamation point may have originated from a Latin exclamation of joy (io). According to Wikipedia, the modern exclamation point was introduced in the Middle Ages when copyists wrote the Latin word io at the end of a sentence to indicate joy. (An end of the sentence hurray.) Grammar manuals describe its function as âindicating strong feelings or high volume (shouting), or to show emphasis.â Most writers describe its function as annoying. F. Scott Fitzgerald once wrote: âCut out all these exclamation points. An exclamation point is like laughing at your own joke.â I personally have a strict quota on the maligned mark: one per week. Or, itâs possible Iâm just a mean person. It turns out that women in business need exclamation points to feel appreciated. Wall Street Journal editor Nikki Waller calls exclamation points âthe emotional fabric softener of workplace interactions.â She decided to spend a month communicating with zero exclamation points and wrote about the results. It wasnât easy to kick the habit; she writes that women bosses find âroutine emails can become complex calculations about warmth, likability and authority. Better to conclude an email with âThanks!â? Or will âThanks.â suffice? No human is that excited in real life, but it can be easier to write âLooking forward to getting that spreadsheet!â rather than risk sounding cold or unfriendly.â Waller had to work hard to fill the emotional gaps left by the lack of exclamation points. (She even resorted to a saccharine (she describes it as âheartbreakingâ) âGrazie x1000.â She writes about the challenges other women have had with under-punctuated emails. One reported that sheâd written an email to a female staff member that included âGood job.â With only a period at the end. The womanâs instant reply was: Are you mad at me? If youâre a man reading this, youâre probably thinking Iâm crazy. Men simply donât worry about punctuation; they have no idea itâs full of emotional landmines. A 2006 academic study of exclamation points (really!) found that women use them much more than men (no kidding!) and that they were generally considered as ââmarkers of excitability,â a phrase that implies instability and emotional randomness.â Ugh. The study also points out that âthe [use of exclamation points] might convey the writerâs lack of stature; that, in fact a confident person could âaffirm their views by simply asserting them.ââ Double ugh. The academic study actually categorizes the various meanings âmarkers of excitabilityâ can indicate. They include taking action (Working on it now!) implied or direct apology (Wish I hadnât done that!) camaraderie or support (Janeâs right!) issuing a challenge (Prove it!) or to indicate anger (I knew she wouldnât finish on time!) Nikki Waller writes that it was a relief to be able to use exclamation marks again. She says women actually have an advantage in being able to communicate and interpret such a variety of emotions with a single keystroke. Tone matters, she says, and âleaders can deflate or empower someone in a sentence or two.â So if youâre hoping to be perceived as a warmer or more empathetic leader, try using more exclamation marks. It works!
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