Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Your Future Is Now
Episode Date: August 14, 2023Have you ever set a goal and had a really difficult time sticking to it? Maybe you decide you want to save more money, or go to the gym more often. This week on the show, psychologist Hal Hershfield e...xplains why it can be difficult to set our "future selves" up for success. Plus, he shares tools to help us make commitments that will benefit us in the years to come. Do you know someone who would enjoy our You 2.0 series? Please tell them about this episode and last week's show about how to break out of a rut. And thanks for listening!Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
In Greek mythology, the sirens were alluring secretures who sang beautiful and beguiling
songs.
Sailors, lured by these sirens, found themselves running a ground on rocks and capsizing.
It's the origin of the phrase siren song to describe a temptation that conceals danger.
According to Greek mythology,
the warrior Eulaceus wanted to hear the song
of the sirens, but feared he would lose control
of his faculties and run his ship around.
So he had his men bind him to the mast of his own ship.
When he heard the song of the sirens, the ropes constrained him from giving into temptation.
In modern times, social scientists and lawyers design what are sometimes known as Eulicee Spacts or Eulicee's Contracts.
Exactly as in the myth, these are ways you can limit what you yourself can do in the future.
If you feel you are likely to make mistakes.
If you fear you are at risk
for dementia for example, you can sign over power of attorney to a relative to keep yourself
from making poor decisions in the years to come. States and nations sometimes pass laws
to constrain themselves from overspending future budgets. When you skip buying chips and soda at the grocery store,
because you worry you will give into temptation if you keep junk food at home,
you are crafting a soft version of a Eulacee's pact with yourself.
You are constraining what you will do in the future.
Today, in the next installment of our U2.0 series, we will explore new research into how
to become a better designer of your future self.
How to craft choices that will make for better tomorrow's, this week on Hidden Brain. In 2003, Washington Mutual Bank introduced a new ad campaign titled The Power of Yes.
The uncertainty of getting a home loan made Paul irritable.
Then he went to Washington, Mutual.
Thanks to their flexible lending rules, Paul got a quick approval.
Now he's always in a great mood.
The power of yes was more than just an advertising slogan.
It was an operating principle for the bank,
which began saying yes and giving loans to most everyone who applied.
Former employees at WAMU, as the bank was known, have said that higher-up started pushing agents
to grant loans regardless of customers' income or assets.
One would be borrower, told the bank he was making six figures
as a mariachi singer.
WAMU's loan officer could not verify the singer's income,
so he had the singer photographed while dressed
in his Mariathe outfit.
The picture became part of the customer's application,
and the bank gave his loan a thumbs up.
So these loan officers, they frequently knew
that they were making mortgages to people
who had no chance of paying them back at all.
That's Kirsten Grind, Wall Street Journal reporter and author of the book The Lost Bank. It is not an exaggeration when I say that literally dead people were getting mortgages.
A major reality check arrived in 2008 when Borowas started defaulting on their mortgages
and housing prices began to crash.
Washington Mutual Bank collapsed.
It's being called the biggest bank failure in U.S. history.
Seattle-based savings and loan Washington Mutual had suffered big losses selling risky
mortgages to home buyers.
In a Senate hearing, Michigan Senator Carl Levin criticized the bank's leadership.
Because volume and speed were king, loan quality fell by the wayside, and WAMU churned out
more and more loans that were high risk and poor quality.
The ill-considered loans approved by Washington Mutual and other banks played a big role in the financial crisis that rocked the global economy
and contributed to what has been called the Great Recession.
Looking back at this chapter in recent history, we might ask what prompted so many people to act
in such a short-sighted way. Was it stupidity? Greed?
At UCLA, psychologists had Herschfield agrees that those were factors.
But he says there was also a psychological factor at play, a psychological factor that
affects all of us all the time.
There's a problem on so many different levels.
Washington Mutual is answering to shareholders and to Wall Street to some degree.
And then, you know, that means that employees are answering to executives who are saying,
you know, push out more and more loans. We need to have more and more revenue. Part of the problem
here was almost a failure to see the end of this, right? There's just no way that it could be
sustainable to constantly be making these massive loans to people
who had no means to pay for them.
And I think there is this pervasive sense in this example, and it's an extreme one,
that these consequences are never going to come.
Can you talk a moment about how even though this might be an outlier, the larger principle
that play here, which is that we are under counting, under valuing what's going to happen
in the future, in order to get what we want in the present, this is really something of
a pervasive problem across all of human nature.
Yeah, that's right.
Economists and psychologists call this temporal discounting, which is a fancy term to basically say that we
discount the value of future rewards relative to present ones. So if I have an option for something
right now, and I can get it, but I may end up suffering later on, I'm maybe oriented to just say,
yeah, I'll go for it. You can see this when it comes to, you know, overspending versus saving or exercising versus
sitting on the couch and overeating versus eating, you know, a healthier, more modest portion,
these sorts of things.
And that being pervasive problems.
You see that many of our problems flow from a disjunction between our present cells and
our future cells.
And you experienced one version of this when you signed up for a very difficult, neural
anatomy class during grad school.
Tell me the story of what happened, how?
Sure.
So I was at this period of time where I had taken my required courses and I still had some
space in my schedule.
I could take whatever I wanted and I said,
you know what'd be really interesting
is to take this neuro anatomy class at the med school.
And I got there and realized quickly,
this is definitely far beyond the level that I need to know,
but I still thought, I'll sit in in it,
but let me just make sure that I take this
as a pass fail class.
make sure that I, you know, take this as a pass-fail class. All that Hal had to do was file a request with the registrar.
Instead of getting a letter grade, he would only aim for a passing grade.
He told himself he'd file the request soon, but each day he found he was busy and would
put off the chore to the following day.
I have to say I kept sort of pushing it off and then the end of the quarter came and there
was going to be this really intense final exam and I said, okay, well I'm taking the
class pass fail.
I will study for it because I want to pass but I'm not going to study for it to such
degree that I will necessarily get an A. I want it to be mindful of my time.
So I study, study, study, I take the exam and I have this distinct memory where it's
the day that I've taken the exam.
I think we might have gone out to dinner that night, I go to bed, I wake up in the middle
of the night and I have this sudden question hanging over me, which is, oh my gosh, did I remember to switch the past mail?
And I check the next morning, and sure enough,
I am still signed up for a letter grade.
Well, I didn't even know the grade I got,
but I emailed the professor and I said,
please, I meant to do this.
I meant to make a past fail.
And he said, there's nothing I can do but the registrar
isn't controlled here.
And I'll, I'll, Shankar, I'll never forget
the registrar's name because it was the most perfect name
is Roger printup, which, you know,
for someone who deals with paperwork all day.
And I, you know, send this desperate plea to him
and to his credit, he writes back and says,
this is a very difficult case,
but we have a hard and fast rule of not changing
the letter grade versus pass fail status after the deadline.
How's Crayp Through, but got a terrible grade?
His procrastination when it came to filing the request
with the registrar had cost him dearly.
the procrastination when it came to filing the request with the registrar had cost him dearly.
Looking back, how things this example illustrates one way in which we fail to do well by our
future selves.
We imagine our future selves will be different from our current selves in some convenient way.
How I told myself, I'm busy, so I'll put off this chore
until tomorrow.
Of course, when the next day rolled around,
Hal was just as busy.
Another way we do a disservice to our future selves
is that we prioritize the concerns of the present
and disregard the consequences.
Hal cites another example from his own life.
This was about 12 years ago or so.
My wife and I were living apart.
We knew it was going to be about two years.
She was in Chicago, I was in New York.
And the way that we worked things out was that, you know,
during the week we were in our separate jobs and cities
and then we would try our very best to see each other on weekends.
But what that meant was I was trying to work as efficiently and smartly as I could during the week.
So one of the things that I tried to save time on was cooking, or rather not cooking.
Now, where I lived in the city, there were lots of these little sort of convenience stores,
which also had sort of hot prepared food in the
back of the store.
And there was one right across my office, and I would go in there and sort of load up,
and it was, you know, by way, and I sort of said, ah, I'm just going to get as much as
I can to.
And I'm looking back, I can't say it was the healthiest stuff.
And this was my routine for a while.
And then I went in for my annual physical, and I was in my early 30s at the time,
I went in for my annual physical.
And my doctor said,
you know, I looked at your numbers
and I think it's time we put you on statins
for your very high cholesterol.
And I said, wait, what's?
But on each given day when you were busy,
it did make sense in some ways to basically say
I'm busy, I'm hungry, I'm just going to pick up some food and not going to think about
it.
And of course, what you're not doing in that moment is asking what's going to happen
six months from now when I'm in the doctor's office.
Yeah, in a way, it was as if I was separating out each present day from the days that
followed. Today I can do this.
Looking back, it was almost as if I didn't see how all those different meals and all those
different days could add up to create a much more problematic hole.
A third way in which we do a disservice to our future selves is through what you call
a failure of imagination.
We find it hard to imagine that our future selves will want different things than we
want.
You experienced this after you moved from New York to Los Angeles and went house hunting
with your wife.
Tell me the story of what happened.
Yeah, sure.
So, you know, we had been living in New York at the time and we were in a small
New York apartment and we got out to Los Angeles and we were looking for a place to live.
And when we looked for what mattered to us, we said we wanted to be walkable and I want to be
near coffee shops and I want to be, you know, near some bars. I was essentially trying to recreate
the exact experience we had in New York out in Los Angeles.
And we were really fortunate to find something.
And it was in, you know, a neighborhood that seemed fun to us.
The house seemed big.
In some ways, I think it was big compared to our small New York apartment.
And about a year later, my wife became pregnant with
our first kid. And quickly, those things that seem to be really important, the distance
to bars and coffee shops, weren't quite as relevant.
Yeah. And in some ways, the transition to parenthood is an extraordinary transition.
And perhaps it's especially hard for us to imagine
when we're single and childless, what it's like to be
married with children, that is a big transition.
But the same phenomenon plays out in lots of other ways,
which is it's very hard sometimes to imagine
that 10 years from now, 20 years from now,
we will want different things.
This research by Dan Gilbert and Tim Wilson and Jordy Quitebach that basically shows that
at every life stage, people believe that they are now baked, that they're not going to
change very much in the future.
And of course, they do change.
Yeah, it's one of my favorite sort of psychological effects they, you know, they call it the end of
history illusion.
And it's essentially suggesting that we recognize that we've changed from the past to the present.
And although we assume that we will change a little bit from now to the future, we think
that as they say the rate of progress somehow will slow down, that we are who we are now. And I find this to be a really interesting
mistake of sorts, because when making decisions, thinking about, say, you know, moving and,
you know, being childless and married to now having kids, we mistakenly think that our present-day
circumstances may end up being relatively similar and
stable from now until the end of time, and that's just not true.
From Greek mythology to modern-day Greek tragedies like Washington Mutual, human beings
struggle every day to make good choices for their future selves.
When we make bad decisions, we often
assume that we are being shot-sided or giving in too easily to temptations. When we come
back, Hal discovers a much more interesting reason why many of us fail to do right by
our future selves and how we can do better.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Hal Hirschfield is a psychologist at UCLA.
He studies our relationship to our future selves,
the people we are going to become. Hal, early in your career, you conducted research involving FMRI machines to scan the brains
of volunteers.
Tell me how that experiment was set up and what it revealed.
So what we were doing in this particular study was having people make judgments as they
thought about themselves now or themselves in the future,
or another person now or another person in the future.
And what we found was that the brain activity that arose when people thought about their future selves
on average looked more similar to the activity that arose when people thought about others.
to the activity that arose when people thought about others.
It's almost as if on a brain level, the future self looked like another person.
So that's interesting because of course at an intuitive level all of us imagine that the people were going to be in 30 years, we're still going to say I'm still going to be shunker and you're
still going to be how, but you're still going to be how.
But you're saying in the brain, they seem so distant
and so far away from us that they seem like literally
like different people.
Yeah, I think on the surface, if you were to ask people,
will you still be you and are you still the same you
as you were when you were eight or nine?
I think on the surface, yeah, yeah, I'm still how.
I still have my same first name.
I'm still have some of the same friends and so on. But then you start really getting down
to a deeper level and I'm not so sure that that answer is still true. You know, I, I've
moved, you know, your last name might change, your hair color might change, your preferences,
your likes, your dislikes, these things may change as well. And so on some level, it may be understandable that our future selves look almost as if
they are other people.
So other lines of research have confirmed this finding.
Tell me about the study conducted by Emily Prownan and Liraus.
So Emily Prownan and Liraus did this really interesting study where they went to college
students and they had them write about a meal that they were currently eating.
And when they did so, they were likely to sort of describe it as the meal was laid out
in front of them.
They were likely to use the first person perspective. Now, they had a different group of college students right about a meal
that they would eat in the very distant future, which to college students is like somewhere over
the age of 40, I believe. And this group of students was considerably more likely to adopt
the third person perspective that is they
would see their future self as if it was another person in the scene. It was almost as if
they were using an observer's perspective.
So it's almost as if when people act in short-sighted ways, when they fail to plan ahead, we conclude they are poor planners
or lack self-control,
but your research and this work by Emily and by Lee
almost seems to be hinting at a different conclusion.
Yeah, I think if we start to think about
how we relate to our future selves
as if they're other people,
then it can start to shed some light
while we sometimes act in these ways
that may seem short-sighted.
I mean, think about it this way.
How do we treat strangers in our lives, right?
If a stranger, or even if a coworker who I barely know,
if they came up to me and asked me
for help, I don't know, moving this weekend,
I'd probably come up with a lot of reasons
why I wouldn't be able to help them.
And it's not because I'm selfish,
but I do consider my own self-interest.
It doesn't really make sense for me to do that.
Well, if my future self is like that coworker,
I don't know, or like that complete stranger on the street,
in a way, it's almost rational to prioritize today over tomorrow.
It's like the consequences of my actions aren't really going to happen to me.
They're going to happen to some other guy, some guy barely know.
So in other words, why act in an ethical way?
Why follow the law when the punishment for any infractions will be endured by somebody
else?
Why pass up on the extra slice of chocolate when the pounds will show up on somebody else's
waistline?
Why say for retirement instead of spending it now?
You're basically giving away money to a stranger.
Exactly.
And I mean to some extent, this is an analogy, right? We don't turn into literally
another person when we become our future selves, but it's an analogy that's really powerful.
Because as you said, these decisions I'm making right now will have consequences, but it's easy
to write off those consequences if they're going to occur to somebody I barely
am connected to. So your research has found that the more our perception of
our future cells resembles our perception of strangers, the more likely we are to
engage in what you have called temporal discounting, prioritizing the
present over the future. Talk about that research, yeah.
Sure.
I think it's important to recognize that we're not always selfish.
We're not always self-interested, right?
If one of my best friends asked me for help this weekend, or if my kid did, or my spouse,
or my closest family members, I probably would figure out how to drop the things
I was going to do to help them. And the same can be said for our future selves. If we feel as if
they are strangers, if we feel as if we are not particularly connected to them on an emotional level, then we will probably be more likely to engage in these sort of
temporal discounting-like behaviors.
So, what I find really interesting about what you said, Hal,
is that it suggests that if we could build a warmer and closer relationship
with our future selves, if we come to think of our future selves
the way we think about, you know, a beloved child or a spouse or a close friend, we might have a very different relationship to what we're doing in the here and now.
That's right. It's really in some ways about injecting a sense of empathy into the relationships that we have with these distant versions of ourselves, right?
And, you know, we have found that people who have more of this sense of connection, more
of a feeling of overlap with their future selves are more likely to engage in these sorts
of behaviors that will benefit them over time, but both now and in the future.
One of the really interesting and practical ways that you have found that we can build a
warmer, closer relationship with our future self has to do with photography.
What is the idea, how?
So early on, my collaborators and I were trying to figure out, how do we get people to feel more of a sense of connection
to their own future selves?
It's not an easy thing to do.
It's almost like saying, how can I get you
to feel more of a sense of connection
to someone you don't really know?
Here's one thing we do know.
If I can make some sort of target person, more vivid and more emotional,
say the recipient of charity,
well then you're gonna be more likely to make a donation,
right?
And so, you know, we wanted to show people
what they might look like in the future.
And so, you know, one of our studies,
we put people into a virtual reality room, in fact, and they
had these goggles on, and they would walk around the room, and they would come face-to-face
with a virtual mirror, and then staring back at them in that virtual mirror was either a
digitally altered image of their future self, or a digital image of their current self. Now, in that first sort of
foray at this, we found that the people who were exposed to these age-progressed
images intended to save more for the long run. They said they wanted to save more.
So in some ways, making the future self more vivid, more clear, is one way to build a
closer relationship with the future self.
That's exactly right.
Part of what we're trying to do here is really sort of turn up the dial on identifiability
and vividness.
If I can get you to really vividly think about your future self, and I can get you to identify
with that person.
Well, now all of a sudden, it's much easier to start saying,
you know, the things that I'm doing right now
are gonna impact not just some sort of perfectly abstract
stranger, but somebody who may share things
with common in common with me,
somebody who may have some of the same feelings as me,
and that can then
in turn make it likely that will do things that will benefit them.
So you and other researchers have found that viewing age-progressed images can have other
salutary effects as well. The behavioral scientist Tamara Tamara Sims, showed age-progressed images to a group of community college students.
What was the result, how?
Sure, so Tamara Sims and her collaborators,
they did this really interesting study where they worked with community college students.
This was over a semester-long course.
And every few weeks, the students would be shown an image
while they were doing
sort of checking surveys and half of them got these digitally altered images.
It was just a picture of their current self that sort of digitized.
The other half got age-progressed images.
And what Tamra and her collaborators found was that by the end of the semester, the students who were shown the age
progressed images had a higher motivation to learn about finances. And they also showed
higher scores on financial knowledge or what researchers call financial literacy. They sort
of understanding the concepts of financial decisions a little bit better.
they sort of understand the concepts of financial decisions a little bit better. Hmm. I'm wondering if the same idea can be used to help people exercise more. So for example,
if I think of myself as being an older person and perhaps a little more frail, could that
motivate me to do a few more healthy things today so that I can have, you know, so that
I can be fitter as I get older.
Yeah, I mean, there is some other work. Sarah Raposo and Laura Carsonson have worked in
progress where they essentially show that when people are exposed to these age-progressed
images, again, they are more likely to have self-reported, exercising.
I think part of what's happening here is that you're making salient this future version
of yourself who will benefit from the exercise right now, sort of helps people step outside
of the current moment.
So far, we've looked at different ways in which you can make your future self more vivid.
The more we interact with our future self as an extension of ourselves, the better decisions
we can make.
Researchers have found another method for increasing our sense of closeness to our future
selves, writing letters.
Some work has found that if we engage in these sorts of conversations with our future selves
it can really enhance the bond that we have with them.
So Anne Wilson and Yudashishima for instance, had high school students write a letter to their
future selves but then also write a letter back from their future selves.
And they found that that exercise, that conversation,
really dialed up the sense of connection and, and, and quote unquote, continuity
that these students felt with their future selves.
I think part of what's happening here is the exercise forces you to really
step into the shoes of your future selves and see the world
through their eyes feel their feelings. So relative to just writing a letter to
their future selves, this sort of back and forth exercise made students feel more
willing to engage in career planning, more willing to delay gratification in order
to achieve more academic success and so on,
things that would, in theory, put them in a better place in the future.
It's one thing to feel a connection with your future self. Hal says it's even better if you can
feel a sense of responsibility for your future self. Chris Bryan and I ran this project where we worked with university employees
and we gave them different retirement saving appeals.
So one group got this message that said,
save for retirement, save for your future self.
It's in your best self interest to do so.
The other group got a message that said,
you have a sense of responsibility
toward your future self, save for retirement.
So everybody gets kind of the same message,
but the difference here is that one message
is framed as a sense of responsibility.
You know, the types of feelings
that we do have for our kids or our loved ones,
our close friends. Now, what types of feelings that we do have for our kids or our loved ones or close friends.
Now, what we found is that that responsibility appeal, where the future self is this other person,
but another person we have this sense of responsibility toward,
that one caused people to actually save more, but in particular, it worked particularly well for people who already
said they felt a sense of connection toward their future self.
So I think this is a really interesting wrinkle here.
If I just get you in a simple message to try to take care of your future self, but you
otherwise don't care about them, that message may fall on deaf ears.
It's sort of like asking you to donate to a charity
that you have no connection to. But if I can first understand your level of connection and maybe
even first dial it up, then that sense of responsibility message will matter.
I mean, I don't want to stretch this analogy too far, but in some ways what you're really
painting here is a picture of how we form connections with other people. I mean, think about how we make friends in general. You
know you get to know someone, and then you see their face, and maybe you write them a
letter, and maybe they write you back a letter, and then you do things together, and then
you have a sense of connection with them, and then maybe eventually a sense of responsibility
to them. And all of these things, in some way, stack one on top of the other. And when
you get all of those things,
that's when you have the very powerful bonds between parent and child,
or between romantic partners, or between friends who are very close to one another.
And what you're saying is that you can stack the same kind of relationship components
to build deep connections with our future selves.
I think that's exactly right.
And your right, the analogy can only go so far.
Once had somebody ask me, you know, well, can you marry your future self? Well, you can't do that.
The answer is no. The answer is no. But as an analogy, it's exactly right. And we can change
the level of connection that we have to be boy, essentially deepening that connection.
And I view a lot of this work in the space of current
and future selves is doing something similar,
trying to really dial up that connection
that people have to their future selves.
We've seen how making our future selves
seem less like strangers and more like friends can help us plan better.
When we come back, how to make it easier for our current cells to sacrifice for the people will become in the future.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam. UCLA psychologist Hal Hirschfield is the author of the book, Your Future Self, How to Make
Tomorrow Better Today.
He has studied the methods we can use to cultivate a closer, warmer relationship with our future
cells.
How one of the challenges of seeing our future cells as a friend, a friend that we should
care about, is that all the hard work only seems to go in one direction.
Our future friends don't make sacrifices for us, but we need to make a ton of sacrifices
for them.
Now of course this is simply because time runs forwards, not backwards. We grow into our future cells. Our future cells don't
grow into us. But one way to mitigate the sense that this is a one way
relationship is to reduce the pain we feel when we make sacrifices in the
present for our future cells. You say that we should pay attention to the
language we use by breaking sacrifices into smaller units.
Give me an example of how this works.
So you're absolutely right.
In some ways, this relationship, it's like a bad relationship where you're always sacrificing
for your partner and they're doing nothing for you.
So you're right.
Part of the job here is to figure out how do we make those present day sacrifices feel
psychologically easier to undertake.
And I think the framing of them matters here.
So in one project that I conducted with Shilmo Benarzi and Steve Shoe, we worked with a FinTech
company as a savings app, ACORNs, and everybody who signs up during this period of time
that we were running this project
are given the opportunity to sign up for an automatic savings account.
Now, for some of them, we ask,
you want to sign up for the savings account?
It's 150 bucks a month that you can save.
It'll come out every month.
You know, another group, we ask,
if you want to save five bucks a day.
Now, this is the same exact amount, right?
Right, five bucks a day, time's 30 days,
there's 150 bucks a month.
Exactly, exactly.
If anything, by the way, annually,
because there's different days in a month, annually,
it's five bucks a day, it's a little bit more.
But what's interesting about this from my perspective is that it's the same thing,'s five bucks a day, it's a little bit more. But what's interesting about this from my perspective
is that it's the same thing, but $5 a day,
it just feels a little bit easier.
It doesn't feel like such a big sacrifice.
So I know that it can be for some people,
but for a lot of people, it's relatively easy
to think about something I'll give up that's five bucks a day.
It's a lot harder to think about something that I spent $150 a month on and giving that up.
It's like, there's only a few things that fall into that category.
Now, what we found was that about seven percent of people sign up when it's $150 a month,
but 30 percent sign up when it's $5 a day.
Four times as many?
Four times as many.
I mean, these are big numbers.
And we got to remember, these are folks who already are in a savings app, so they're
already sort of warmly leads.
You wouldn't expect 7% even.
That's great.
But the difference was almost surprising to us.
That's a 4X difference there.
Why is it that $5 a day feels so much more manageable to us than $150 a month?
One possibility is that it's because we struggle to think about time and especially chunks
of time in a systematic way. The researchers Neil Lewis Jr. and Daphna Oysterman once explored this possibility in a study
that tried to get people to focus on retirement goals that were three decades into the future.
They ask people to think about retirement, it's coming in about 11,000 days, or think
about retirement, it's going to be in about 30 years, you have to get people relatively
the same age to do this. Now, it's interesting. It's the same framing, but you know, days feel short and
and years feel long. And what happened here is when the event in the future was framed in terms of days until the event,
it felt like it was happening sooner. It felt like it was closer. Those
days seemed to tick by faster compared to when it was framed as years in the future. And
that had an impact on people's motivation. Folks who got that sort of day framing said that they
would start planning for retirement. About four times sooner than the folks who got the year
framing.
Wow.
So, I mean, of course, at a mathematical level, you know, 10,950 days is the same as 30
years.
And you might actually think that the bigger number would dissuade people more, because
that seems like a bigger number, it's further away.
But in some ways, people pay more attention to the days and the years than they do to the number of preceding the days and the years.
I think that's exactly right.
I have a very good sense of how long a day feels.
It's pretty short relative to a year.
And 30 years that feels like a lot.
I mean, 10,950 days also feels like a lot, but it's a little more vivid.
I can picture those days faster, and that brings that event closer to me,
subjectively speaking.
There's another neat trick that the economist Shlomo Benarzi
and Richard Thaler have devised.
They call it automatic escalation.
The idea is that, let's say I'm saving at three
or four percent of my paycheck right now,
I will commit that my contribution level will automatically
increase in the future.
And not just in the future, but in conjunction with, say, raises that I'm going to get.
The brilliance here is that if I say, okay, let's bump up from four to four and a half
percent at the same time that I get a raise, it's not going to feel that painful to that
future version of me.
And also, there's something that's really smart about this because I'm committing some
future guy.
Right.
It's his problem, not my problem.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I mean, and part of what I think is really interesting about this is that we are often
not very mindful of what's going to happen in the future as we've been discussing, and in some ways this
is harnessing the fact that we're not very mindful about what's happening in the future
to actually pay more attention to our future self.
It's kind of genius.
Absolutely.
The genius of this is it almost takes one of our, quote unquote, time-traveling mistakes
so you know, not really pay attention to our future
selves, their interests, and rather than change it harness it to get people to do things that
will in fact help those future selves by increasing savings contributions.
Now, a stronger version of this kind of, you know, future contract is to add some accountability
to the mix, to become accountable to someone else, to keep our commitments.
I understand that a friend of yours has a clever way of keeping himself accountable for
what he eats.
What does he do?
One of my friends, I remember this really well because he's not one of those folks who
takes pictures of his food.
I'm sure everybody has those people in their lives and my friend Craig is like just not
that guy. And one day I was at lunch with, and my friend Craig is just not that guy.
And one day I was at lunch with him, and I noticed him taking pictures of his food,
and I thought, what's going on here?
By the way, it wasn't like a particularly beautiful meal.
It was just like a sandwich from the work,
you know, the little cafe here.
And he said, oh, you know, I'm working with this nutritionist.
And she has me sending photos of everything that I'm eating.
And one of the things that he had said to me is really funny, he felt like he didn't want to
sort of mess up and eat something unhealthy because he didn't want to let down this person.
By the way, she didn't even live in the US. It's not like she could hold any sweat.
Probably wasn't even looking at the US. It's not like she could hold any sleep. I probably wasn't even looking at the pictures.
Exactly, right?
But I do remember that one day, I said,
there's a bag of peanuts on your lap there.
You know, he's like, oh, oh, oh, I forgot.
I meant to put that.
So some cheating might actually help us keep our
resolutions.
There's resupp in that front too.
Exactly, exactly.
So there's another way of raising our commitment levels,
and that is to take away the options that
would tempt us from the path that we want to pursue.
Tell me about the work of an entrepreneur
who came up with an invention that involved a lockbox.
It gave Krippendorf, he was a MIT grad student,
and he lived right near a whole food.
And every time he found himself having difficulty
with a problem set, you know, he'd walk across the street
and grab a snack, you know, of course, these aren't cheap.
And so he's finding himself kind of hurting
on two fronts, right, he's paying more money and he's
snacking too much. And he's like, I've got to come up with a solution here. And he starts sort of
talking to folks and he creates this little lock box that he puts in the kitchen. He calls it the
kitchen safe. And it's basically a little box and it's got a digital timer with a lock on it.
And it can go anywhere from a minute to 10 days days and he can throw his snacks in there and lock it up.
Well, some of his friends start getting ahold of this and he likes it and he ends up going
on Shark Tank and wins a whole bunch of money and leaves his high paying post-MIT business MIT Business School job to really go full on in this entrepreneurial endeavor.
But what was so interesting about this is that he finds from the users of this kitchen
safe that they're using it for all sorts of things.
They're locking away not just snacks and food, but drugs and alcohol and prescription
medication that you can only take at a certain
number of hours and so on and so on.
And so he changes the name to the case safe.
What's great about this is that he's essentially creating a device that makes it easy for us
to commit to a certain course of action by automatically taking away the
temptation, by taking away the thing that we are worried we are going to mess up on.
There's one final step in hardening our commitments and that is to add consequences for violating
our resolutions. And one way to do that is to pit consequences for violating our resolutions.
And one way to do that is to pit different drives in the mind against each other, as we've discussed earlier.
You cite one technique that pits our desire to give into temptations against our desire to avoid losing things.
It's called burn or burn.
How does it work out? Yeah, Nieriel has this great idea, which is that he knows he wants to burn calories every day,
but he also knows that he may be tempted to not do it. On his dresser, he has a $100 bill,
and he has a lighter, and he's tacked that bill up to a quirk board, and he calls it the burner
burn technique.
And the idea is that if he doesn't burn calories in some way that day, he's got a burn,
the $100 bill.
And it's really an interesting strategy because you're injecting a sort of punishment for a
future version of yourself if you mess up something.
So it can kind of help create a sense of guardrails.
I don't want to deviate from my plan
because if I do, I know I'm going to get punished.
Now, in that particular case,
it requires an extra dose of self-control
because now I have to actually follow through with it.
That can be hard to do.
Hmm.
Hmm.
You know, in an early episode of Hidden Brain Hal,
I was trying to get a colleague
of mine to quit smoking. And so I asked him to make a commitment to quit and added a very
painful punishment, which is if he started smoking again, he would have to donate money
to an organization he detested. And this idea, of course, came from the platform stick.com.
It's spelled STICKK.com, which helps people stay bound to their commitments.
What is the data show about the effectiveness of programs like stick?
Yeah, so recent research led by Craig Brimhall has found that people who sign up with
a punishment attach and you don't have to add a punishment, but if you do, the people who add in the punishment
are four times as likely to follow through
with their commitments compared to the people
who don't add that punishment in.
That's remarkable.
Yeah, I mean, it is remarkable and it makes sense
because I really don't want to lose out
and I don't want to suffer the punishment,
especially when I know that the person who deserves the blame
is essentially me.
So we've talked at length today, Hal, about ways in which we can avoid
prioritizing our present selves over our future selves.
But some of us can also tip over in the other direction and
start to prioritize our future cells over our present cells exclusively.
And of course that can mean that we lose out on enjoyable things in the here and now.
Can you talk about that risk, Hal?
Sure.
So, you know, so much of my own career has been focused on my opi-a or being tunnel focused
on the present so that we ignore
the future. But there's this other sort of type of bias that we have that's called hyper
opia where we're almost too focused on the future and end up ignoring the present.
Here's a great example of it. It comes from work by Suzanne Shou.
If you've ever had a gift certificate to a restaurant, and you said, okay, yeah, I'm
going to wait for the perfect time to use that gift certificate.
And then the restaurant closes.
In some ways, this is hyper-optic.
You have been so focused on doing something right in the future that you forget that it
may make more sense to just do that thing now,
here's the irony here. This is another mistake where even though we think we're doing something
for the future, waiting for the perfect moment, we end up making life worse for our future selves
because now they haven't had that experience. We've also made life worse for our present selves because we haven't had that experience.
You know, one idea that follows from this hell is that living a successful and happy life
involves seeing the big picture, not just prioritizing the needs of the present self and not
just prioritizing the needs of the future self. You call this taking a bird's eye view of time.
And I feel like we're
almost in the realm of philosophy now, not just psychology. But can you tell me what you
mean by that? And whether you are able to successfully apply that idea in your own life.
So, Cassie McGillner Holmes, Jennifer Akron, I have been theorizing and thinking about this for
years now. And the idea here is that we are often confronted with these moments where we say,
should I do this thing or not? Should I spend or should I save? We force ourselves to ask these
sort of weather questions, whether I should do something or not. Our suspicion is that the birds I view of time changes that
weather frame into a wind frame so that we can start thinking when should I do
something and when should I not do something? When does that vacation make sense
and when does it make sense to to save? In my own life I've applied this sort of
thinking not just to how I spend and save, but also how I allocate time.
More and more lately, especially with kids who are young, I've been thinking about, you know, when it
makes sense to travel for work or not, and you know, when it makes sense to be fully present at home and when it doesn't, because ultimately, when
I sort of step back and I look down at my life and the way I imagine I will look down on
it much later on, I think I'm going to want to be satisfied with how I've sent my time
and not regret it. HAL Hirschfield is a psychologist at the Anderson School of Management at UCLA.
He is the author of Your Future Self, How to Make Tomorrow Better Today.
HAL, thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain. Thank you so much for having me.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Annie Murphy-Paul, Christian Wong, Laura Quarelle,
Ryan Katz, Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm
Hidden Brain's executive editor. Our unsung hero this week is Stacey Bond. Stacey
works on the editorial team at Apple Podcasts and she's been an excellent
partner as we've launched our new podcast subscription Hidden Brain Plus. Stacey
has great curatorial instincts and is really committed
to making sure that podcast listeners are exposed to great shows. She's been a
big help in brainstorming ways to bring hidden brain plus to larger audiences
and we're truly grateful for her creativity and attention to detail. Thank you
Stacey. If you haven't yet tried out hidden brain plus we hope you'll give it a
try.
In our most recent episode, we explore how to navigate sensitive and difficult conversations.
I need somebody to get it, I need somebody to understand,
and to walk alongside me through some hard stuff,
I think is really at the heart of so many difficult conversations in our lives.
You can find Hidden Brain Plus in the Apple Podcast tab or at apple.co slash Hidden Brain.
Next week in our YouTube.io series, we explore how to master the art of slowing down and
savoring our lives.
I'm Shankar Vedanthantham.
See you soon.
See you soon.