We often ask for advice hoping it will protect us from bad decisions. But what if following advice—especially when it feels off—makes things worse?
Study Overview: When Advice Backfires Emotionally
In a set of five studies involving over 3,200 participants, researchers explored moments when people went against their own better judgment after receiving advice.
The surprising finding? People who followed bad advice ended up feeling more responsible for the poor outcome than those who made a bad decision on their own.
Why?
Because they couldn’t stop thinking,
“I could have ignored the advice and chosen better.”
The Psychological Mechanism
When individuals act against their own instincts, their regret tends to intensify. They replay alternative scenarios, imagining how things could’ve turned out if they had just trusted themselves. This psychological process — called counterfactual thinking — increases:
- Sense of control (ironically)
- Self-blame
- Emotional rumination
Even in trivial scenarios, such as choosing between two lotteries (where one was clearly better), participants who followed bad peer advice and lost felt more regret than those who independently chose the poor option.
Cultural Reflection: Why It Hits Harder in Collectivist Cultures
In cultures like Korea, where seeking group consensus or elder advice is a norm, this finding challenges an assumption:
That shared decisions diffuse blame.
But the research suggests otherwise.
Even when culturally supported, going against your gut leads to heightened internal blame if things go wrong.
This reveals a hidden emotional tax on collectivist advice-seeking: the deeper regret of not listening to oneself.
The Personal Takeaway
This isn’t about disregarding others’ wisdom. It’s about recognizing when advice feels misaligned—and respecting that signal.
| Advice Strategy | Emotional Outcome if It Goes Wrong |
|---|---|
| Trust your own better judgment | Standard regret, moderate self-blame |
| Follow bad advice against your instincts | Heightened regret, increased self-blame |
In a world full of opinions, learning to pause and ask:
- “Do I feel aligned with this advice?”
- “If this fails, will I blame myself more for not trusting my own judgment?”
…may be the most compassionate decision we can make.
Final Thought
We often ask for advice to avoid regret. But sometimes, advice creates a double regret—for the outcome and for not listening to ourselves.
In any culture, any career, any life transition—
self-trust is not arrogance.
It’s a form of emotional responsibility.
What do you think? Have you ever blamed yourself more after following someone else’s advice?
Share your thoughts in the comments or connect with me on LinkedIn.
–TK

