Your Future You

As we us embark on the new decade, most of us have undoubtedly set some resolutions. Lose weight. Read more. Save for retirement. Quit smoking. Volunteer in the community. Yet the vast majority of resolutions are anything but resolute. According to U.S. News & World Report, over 80% of resolutions fail (most of which within the first 30 days).

There are many reasons for our dismal results. We set targets that are unattainable, we get discouraged after a single slip and then quit altogether, or we lose track of the goal as daily life creeps into the picture. Yet researchers site the biggest pitfall as the lack of accountability.

 

The traditional way to establish accountability is through another person. If you agree to meet your buddy at the gym at 6:00am, you’re much more likely to show up than if no one were waiting. But some of our deepest life goals are too personal to share with others. Wouldn’t it be great if we could hold ourselves accountable?

I recently learned of a free website called FutureMe.Org. It allows you to send an email to your future self. Simply type your future self a note and then select the delivery date. Maybe you want to cheer your one-week-from-now self on for avoiding your favorite cookies. Why not schedule an email of your New Year’s resolutions to be delivered at the beginning of each month? Or it could be a note to your 20-year-from-now self, reminding you to focus on your calling.

Besides the nostalgic fun of receiving a note from your past self, this simple mechanism can help boost your accountability, and performance. Simply knowing that the note is scheduled to arrive, you’ll be less likely to let yourself down. In other words, the easy act of sending a note to yourself can be just the accountability hack you need to stay on target.

Thinking about your way-into-the-future self may also help you prioritize what really matters. The indulgences of today are far less appealing thinking about how you’ll be feeling the day you open up an email from your 30-years-ago self. You don’t need a time machine to connect with your future self and shape how your life will unfold.

What message do you have for your one-month-from-now self? What about the five-year-from-now version? Whether you share thoughts on health, work, family, or politics, having a direct line of communication to the you-of-the-future can inspire positive results today.

As you embrace the new decade, let your future self guide both your important decisions and daily habits. The perspective of the future can help you make the best choices, here and now.

Your future you will be proud.

Read More

AI In Your Industry: Real Estate

Signal vs. Noise, Major Shifts, and What Leaders Should Be Doing Right Now About the Author Josh Linkner is a five-time tech entrepreneur, New York ...

Open Collaboration: The Key to a Strong Culture of Innovation

Here’s a thought experiment. Imagine your company’s most valuable asset isn’t your product, your patents, your trademarks, or even your people. It's the connections between ...

How AI Will Shape the Physical World

Introduction Last year, I watched a video of Alex Conley, a man with a cervical spinal cord injury, controlling a robotic arm mounted to his ...

What Jazz Musicians and AI Researchers Have In Common

Introduction We have always built things in our own image. The ancient Greeks carved gods that looked like idealized humans. Renaissance architects designed buildings proportioned ...

How AI Will Make Corporate Conferences More Exciting

Introduction I have delivered keynote speeches at over 1,000 events. And I can tell you the single biggest factor that separates a forgettable conference from ...

The Innovator’s AI Dilemma

Here's a question that should keep every leader up at night: What is generative AI actually doing to our ability to think critically? Not "could ...

Are Your Meetings Killing Innovation? A Simple Reset That Gets Ideas Flowing Again

 If you’re a leader who’s ever led a brainstorm of any kind, you’ve probably had this experience. You open up the floor for ideas, and ...

New Thinking for the New Era of Business

Albert Einstein famously noted, “We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking that we used when we created them.” In our post-COVID world of ...

When an Astronaut Needs a Pen

Ever get stuck on a problem, only to realize you're solving for the wrong thing? That's exactly what happened when the rocket scientists at NASA ...