In the toughest of times or during the most difficult conversations, the impulse is often to search for convenient expressions that make a situation feel more manageable. “It is what it is!” “It could be worse!” “Damned if you do, damned if you don’t!” These seemingly uplifting platitudes—which can bring even the most heated discussion to a dead stop—are called “thought-terminating clichés.” The term was popularized in 1961 by American psychiatrist and author Robert Jay Lifton. In Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism, Lifton wrote that, with thought-terminating clichés, “The most far-reaching and complex of human problems are compressed into brief, highly reductive, definitive-sounding phrases.” This story is from Kinfolk Issue Forty-Seven Buy Now Related Stories Arts & Culture Issue 45 Love That for You A lesson in the art of compersion. Arts & Culture Issue 45 The Whole Story The power of cradle-to-grave novels. Arts & Culture Issue 44 Gross Profit The hidden help of disgusting things. Arts & Culture Issue 41 Mixed Emoji Is a picture worth a thousand words? Arts & Culture Issue 40 Fellow Feeling The pleasure of a stranger’s touch. Arts & Culture Issue 38 Social Work Hettie O’Brien considers the cost of never logging off.