Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - The Science of Making — and Keeping — New Year’s Resolutions | Hal Hershfield
Episode Date: January 1, 2024A leading behavioral psychologist reveals practical strategies to help you actually make the changes you want to make this new year (and beyond).Hal Hershfield is a professor of marketing, be...havioral decision-making, and psychology at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management, and the author of Your Future Self: How to Make Tomorrow Better Today. His research on future selves has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, as well as the Harvard Business Review and Psychology Today. In this episode we talk about:What he means by a future self, and why thinking about your future self will help you make better decisionsHow to think about your future self without neglecting the present momentThe importance of commitment devices, and what they are — including some which you can even adopt right nowThe importance of breaking down big goals to make them achievableHow to reframe commitments so that you actually stick to themThe role of mental time travel to help you actually do what you say you want to doRelated Episodes:How to Change Your Habits | Katy MilkmanAtomic Habits | James ClearSign up for Dan’s weekly newsletter hereFollow Dan on social: Instagram, TikTokTen Percent Happier online bookstoreSubscribe to our YouTube ChannelOur favorite playlists on: Anxiety, Sleep, Relationships, Most Popular EpisodesFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/hal-hershfieldAdditional Resources:Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/installSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the 10% Happier Podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hello, everybody.
Happy New Year.
You may be waking up today contemplating how to make and keep
New Year's resolutions. The bad news, I'll lead with this, but there is good news.
The bad news is that human beings are notoriously bad at this. Most of us will have bailed on
our resolutions by February. The good news, though, is that there's a ton of research
into how best to make and keep your resolutions.
And today, we've got one of the leading thinkers in the field here to walk us through it all.
You can make and actually keep your resolutions, but you have to do it in the right way.
And we're going to get some expert advice today.
Hal Hirschfield is a professor of marketing, behavioral decision making, and psychology at UCLA's
Anderson School of Management.
He's also the author of Your Future Self, How to Make Tomorrow Better Today.
We talk about the research that Hal has personally done as well as the work done by his peers in this field.
Among other things, we cover what he means by a future self and why thinking about your future self
can actually help you make better decisions right now.
How to think about your future self without neglecting the present moment.
What commitment devices are, the importance of breaking down big goals into manageable parts,
to make them achievable, how to reframe commitments so that you actually stick to them,
and other behavioral strategies such as temptation, bundling, and tangential immersion.
strategies such as temptation, bundling, and tangential immersion. But first, BSP, blatant self-promotion, starting this week on the podcast, we've got a special
New Year's series featuring some of the smartest people we know talking about the advice they
can't live without.
You're going to hear from the legendary Buddhist nun, Pemma Chodron, about one radical, non-negotiable
practice for her, and you'll get a master class in kick starting
or refreshing a meditation practice from John Kabatzin,
the series kicks off on January 3rd, many, many guests.
You're gonna love it.
Meanwhile, over in the 10% happier app,
we're kicking off a meditation challenge
that we're calling the imperfect meditation challenge
hosted by my friend and colleague Matthew Hepburn
and featuring some great teachers, Carlisle and Don Mauricio,
also friends and former guests on this show.
It's free, it runs for 14 days.
They're gonna help you cut through perfectionism and shame,
stuff that can derail your meditation habit.
If you wanna start the new year strong,
this is for you, it kicks off on January 8th
and you can join in the app right now,
download the 10% happier app today, wherever you get your apps.
If you've ever stayed at an Airbnb,
you know that it can be a fun and affordable way
to visit a new place,
but have you ever considered whether you could be an Airbnb host?
Maybe you're planning a long weekend
with friends or family this fall while you're away,
you could Airbnb your place and make some extra money
to help pay for the trip.
Maybe you have an extra bedroom or in-law unit
where friends and family come to stay with you,
you could Airbnb it and make some extra cash
while it sits empty.
You could be sitting on an Airbnb and not even know it.
My wife and I have talked about doing something like that
before we certainly love staying in Airbnb's,
especially when we go to the beach.
But again, Airbnb, as an experience, isn't all about you staying in somebody else's
home.
Whether you could use a little extra money to cover some bills or for something a little
bit more fun, your home might be worth more than you think.
Find out how much at airbnb.ca slash host.
Hal Herschfield, welcome to the show.
Thanks, Dan. I'm really happy to be here.
Happy new year.
Happy new year to you too.
We're taping this before new years, of course.
But I'm anticipating that we'll both be hung over by the time people are actually listening to this episode.
How bad do I be feeling? Yes, exactly. Well, if we hung over by the time people are actually listening to this episode.
How bad do I be feeling?
Yeah, it's exactly.
I don't even drink, but I'll be hung over from probably meeting too many cookies or something
like that.
And like a lot of family time.
Yes, yes.
A psychic hangover for sure.
I was going to say it's a specific kind.
So let's talk about this.
I mean, this is a time of year to state the blazingly obvious when everybody's thinking
about, you know, how do I get my shit together? How can I change my life? How can I make some specific changes
that will help me going forward? And everything I ask will be in that spirit. Before we get
into the tactical advice that I know you have, I'd be curious to get some background on
you. Any time I have somebody on the show who's dedicated their lives to a specific area
of research, I always ask, why? You know, why is this such a focus for you?
Yeah. No, I mean, it's a good point. Look, I'm a psychologist. My parents are both clinical
psychologists, my wife is a clinical psychologist. So essentially, for much of my adolescence and
even young adulthood, I swore against going into psychology,
but I guess it sort of found me.
And at the same time, I look,
I was an English major in college.
One of the themes that kept popping up
in every book I read was something about identity
and who people were and how they related to others
and how they changed in a short period of time
and a long period of time.
You could just say that I was sort of
like an organic interest of mine,
and it's stuck, and when I eventually started graduate school,
I just started studying these issues of identity
and how we think about ourselves,
but most importantly, how that relates to our decisions
and how we can improve them.
And as much as I try to study other topics,
there's so much more to be learned here,
and so I keep coming back to this general field of understanding who we are and how our perceptions
of who we are impacts the decisions that we make.
That's a, I don't know that I've ever thought about it in exactly those terms.
We've definitely done a lot on the show and I've wrestled a lot in my own life with
making decisions that are not totally stupid.
But I don't know that I've ever thought about it within the context of my identity and
how I see myself.
So what's the connection there?
Yeah, I mean, look, to be fair, I didn't either.
When I first started to investigate some of these topics, it was really through the
lens of just trying to understand
why people have a difficult time with long-term decisions.
And I kept getting caught up in the minutia
of the specific aspects of decisions themselves.
I was at the time looking at financial decisions,
retirement decisions.
And the more I kept asking questions
about this type of decision making,
I would return to
this bigger question of how do I even see myself now and then how do I see myself at the
point in which I will realize the consequences of these decisions that I'm making right
now.
And so it was that sort of lens that then got me down to this sort of viewpoint of the
self over time and our identity over time and how that then got me down to this sort of viewpoint of the self over time and
our identity over time and how that then factors back to what we're choosing right now, or
I should say another way we're not choosing to do right now.
Does that make sense?
It does.
I think what you're saying is that how we see ourselves and how we think about ourselves
really does have a significant impact on the decisions we make that will affect our
future self.
Yeah, yeah. You said it very well. I mean, at the end of the day, the nutshell summary is that
the way that we see ourselves and how connected we see ourselves to the person we will one day become,
that has an impact. That sense of connection has an impact on the decisions that we make right now,
whether we, you know, on a very basic level, whether
we choose to spend more or save more, you know, whether we choose to get off off the couch
and go exercise, but on a deeper level, you know, how we choose to spend our time. And in what
ways are we spending that time that we'll look back on in a more satisfactory way or possibly
more regretful way? I think those are sort of the, some of the outcomes that matter here.
Do you think most people spend much time considering
their connection to the future iteration of themselves?
I'm not sure, I'm just thinking about how I think about the world.
I don't know, I mean, yeah, maybe I'll think about how I,
am I feeling the morning, given the decision I might make right now,
but I don't know that I think that much about who I will be in 10 years and whether that
impacts what kind of decisions I'm making.
I mean, I would imagine the decisions are, for most people, basically like, I hate myself.
So who cares?
Like, why am I going to invest in any of this?
Like, why am I going to get off the couch at all?
Or I'm totally obsessed with myself.
So I'm obsessed with how I look on Instagram. So I'm going to do X, Y and Z. So I feel
much more like now based for most. That's my guess for most people.
Well, I mean, I think that's probably true. I mean, not to be too on point about it. But,
you know, now is the period that we live in, right? So we, you know, of course, that's what we're
paying attention to. I don't think that people are walking around saying,
well, how do I feel about myself in five years?
How do I feel about myself in 10 years?
Here's my suspicion.
I suspect that it is something that operates
in the background for many people.
And it may not be something that we call
to mind regularly.
It may not be something that we call to mind ever,
but I do believe that like many other aspects
of time perception and how we sort of relate to time, it's something that is happening, it's running in the background.
I'll also say I think it probably comes to the forefront during big momentous decisions.
Or you know, for instance, when I'm starting to really take a step back and almost run
an audit of my life, the type of thing that we do when we face milestone birthdays or
the start of a new year or a career change, that's what I think you're most likely to
have this almost explicit conversation about who I want to be and what will happen in
five years, 10 years, and so on.
Yes. Or you think about weddings, people talk about I can't wait to grow old with you.
Every time I hear that, I think these are people who have no idea what it's like to grow old. But there are big moments in
our lives where we are projecting forward. Yeah. I mean, look, my suspicion is that those moments
occur almost during chapter breaks when we're sort of forced to step back. You said weddings,
I would add graduations to the list,
births, divorces on the negative side.
Anything that makes us take pause.
And there's something that's uncomfortable about doing that.
I think there's some discomfort involved
in running the life audit.
But some of my own work suggests
that it's something that we do end up doing,
especially around milestone birthdays, but I imagine at many other times as well
Yeah, well one time that you've already mentioned and I mentioned before that is New Year's
What is it about New Year's? I mean because it's just another day on the calendar
Really and the calendar is a construct in and of itself. So what is it about New Year's that really makes us do this?
Right exactly. It is funny. It's arbitrary in some way.
One of my colleagues here at UCLA Hang Chen Die has some great work on what she calls the fresh start effect.
That's work she's done with Katie milkman and others. And essentially when we have a
quote-unquote fresh start, it gives us a new opportunity
to start doing the things that we've been saying
that we want to do it.
You know, it wipes the slate clean and it also allows me to convince myself possibly, possibly
in error, but it allows me to convince myself that this will be the time that I do things
differently, right?
Now I won't procrastinate.
Now I'll start meditating more.
Now I'll start spending less and so on.
But that's motivating.
And by the way, it doesn't just happen at New Year's.
The research shows, you know,
it happens at the start of a new quarter,
even on Mondays, right?
You know, on a lesser degree.
And then of course birthdays and whatnot.
But New Year's is a particularly salient one.
I would almost ask, would it be even bigger,
you know, the start of a new decade and so forth. I mean, talk about wiping the slate clean, right?
Just to say, you mentioned Katie Milkman. She's been on the show before talking about
the fresh start of reactant, other aspects of human behavior change, which is such a thorny
topic. I'll put a link in the show notes for people listening today who, you know, want
to go even deeper on this subject, because it is so relevant right now.
I'll put a link in the show notes
to my previous discussion with Katie Milkman.
But back to you, you made a reference to the fact
that perhaps this is a fallacy,
but we believe that this time,
our resolutions will work because it's a new year,
we've got this fresh start effect.
Why do resolutions fail so regularly?
I can't remember the statistic,
but it's something off the charts.
Yeah.
Look, there's a variety of reasons.
I would bet that one of the big ones is that we just get sucked back into the present.
And life takes over in a way that it was dominating before we made the resolution.
I don't mean to be pessimistic here, by the way, because I sort of fundamentally have
an optimistic view
of the possibility for behavior change.
Part of the difficulty isn't just that we go back
to our sort of pre-resolution reality,
but part of the difficulty has to do with the types
of goals that we set, and the way that we go
about tackling them, there's now a pretty big body of research looking at what are some of the ways that we go about tackling them, there's now a pretty big body of research looking at
what are some of the ways that we can make goals clear,
what are the ways that we can set them more realistically,
what are the ways that we can maintain them,
not stop the second that we mess up.
I'm happy to talk about some of that by the way, Dan,
but I don't know if that's too far-field
from what you wanna talk about,
but I would love to hear it.
Okay, two of my favorite bits of research.
So one is a project led by Marissa Shrieve, where she introduced a concept of emergency
goal reserves or emergency reserves.
And so think about it this way.
Let's say I have an unrealistic goal of working out seven days a week.
I could actually create a different version of that goal where I say I want to work out
seven days a week, but I'm gonna have two emergency reserves each week.
Where let's say I can't work out why dip in,
I just should have count that as one of my emergency
reserve days.
The beauty of this is that if I fail to work out one day,
it's not as if now I've completely messed up.
I can just say, okay, well I just dipped into my buffer,
I'm gonna get back on the horse.
The funny thing is I could have a different goal
of working out five days a week.
That's effectively the same thing
as seven days plus two emergency days.
But what the research suggests is that the seven days
plus two emergency days actually works better
at getting people to stick with the goal.
So that's one sort of just tip or intervention
that I think may be particularly useful
in thinking
about how to secel in a way that makes it more likely that we'll keep up with them.
Another one that I really like is it's related in some way, but goal ranges.
So rather than saying, I would love to meditate three mornings a week.
I don't know if this is embarrassing to admit that I don't do more than that, but I would
love to do that.
So I could just say that I want to meditate three mornings a week, or I could say, I want to meditate anywhere
from one to five days.
Now, what's nice about that is that if I hit my three days, I still have a further goal
that's going to stretch me, and I'm just going to try to hit five.
But if I'm somehow finding myself having a hard time sleeping, or I have a particularly
busy week, and I'm not going to get the three, at least I can tell myself I hit the low-end
goal of one day.
So you can see how it works on both ends where the high-end goal stretches me further,
the low-end goal keeps me involved.
To me, one of the biggest things about these types of goal setting endeavors is just trying
to figure out how you maintain the energy and effort that's required to keep
it going. Sounds from the data points that you just referenced that given how thorny behavior
change is, the human animal tends to benefit in this endeavor from some sense of flexibility.
100%, 100%, but it has to be the right kind of flexibility.
There's other work that's looked at the goals that I recommend to others and the goals I recommend to myself.
So let's say you and I both wanted to go in a healthy eating endeavor.
I can say I'm going to have three healthy meals a week.
I don't know when they're going to be, but I'm going to have three healthy meals a week.
If I were to be asked, what would I recommend to Dan?
My answer is shipped. I'd say,
well, you know, Dan, I would recommend that you choose Monday, Wednesday, and Saturdays
are healthy eating dinners. You might even want to make a plan that every week you have a partner
we do it with. So we actually have this realization that it may be better to recommend some degree
of consistency. I'm not going to call it rigidity, but I'll call it consistency for other people.
But for ourselves, we say, well, I can be flexible.
And you can easily see where the problem may arise there.
But there's nuance in what we mean by flexibility, right?
We can be flexible in setting a range of goals.
We can be flexible in having sort of an emergency reserve.
But when it comes to actually putting the goals into practice, I may benefit from trying
to have some consistency and regularity.
I mean, this is nothing new.
I mean, this is, if you think about it, we've known forever
that this is effective parenting too, right?
The kids who have a very unpredictable set of discipline
won't know what to expect.
They need the boundaries, they need a consistency.
And the same, maybe true for our own goal-setting adventures.
So wouldn't it be safe to say overall
that behavior change is hard,
but with the right strategies it is doable?
That is my optimistic take.
There's so much that operates against our ability
to follow through
and do the things that I think
we'll eventually look back on with satisfaction,
happiness, meaning.
But given the right set of circumstances and motivations
and external help, I think absolutely,
I think it's something that can happen.
Look, I'm a social scientist,
and so we were always trying to isolate
the one thing that caused A to move to B.
But in reality, maybe the case that the kitchen sink often works well, right?
You know medical researchers often
want to throw the kitchen sink at the equation is because they what they care about is a change taking place
and it may be difficult to isolate like why it necessarily happened. And I think that may be a good lesson when
experimenting with our own behavior change techniques.
Eventually, maybe want to sort of break it back and say, okay, well, what really works for me?
But if we want to see some movement, it may be good to try a number of different things.
But the kitchen sink approach seems like it could be fraught in that it would lead to sort of
leaf in the wind mindset where it feels chaotic and erratic.
And so, for example, like on New Year's,
if I'm thinking about making some resolutions,
you might not want to throw the kitchen sink
and make all the resolutions
that you might want to have won that you're going at.
Right, yeah, and maybe I should clarify,
when I said kitchen sink,
I meant perhaps there's two or three different tools
that we might want to use at a time.
There's some video synchrosies here.
It may be easier for some people to say, I'm going to try one thing right now and make
it as simple as possible.
There may be other folks who say, look, I want to both meditate more and eat healthier
and so I'm going to try this technique for meditating and this technique for eating healthier.
But your point's a good one, which is we can only go so far.
We may not want to try to change everything all at once.
Yeah, and my experience,
the confidence and happiness and satisfaction
that can come from establishing one habit
and making one important change
can fuel you to make others.
I think that's right.
I absolutely think that's right.
I'm trying to think as an analogy,
there's a lot of work looking at how people repaid debt
and the advice from financial advisors and economists
would be to say, you know, pay off the highest interest loans
first.
But in reality, we may benefit from paying off
whatever the smallest balances so that we feel like
we've made some progress
and then move on from there. I think there's a link to what you're saying here, which is,
you may feel motivating and may feel like we have more progress if I can just say, look,
I've checked out the box on one habit. Now let me fuel others.
In a couple of weeks, we're going to do a series on the show, we have this recurring series
that we call Sainly Ambitious,
which is, you know, how to like do your work life better to be more successful
and achieve your goals, but without driving yourself crazy or being craved
and about it. And one of the people we're going to interview,
his name is Daniel Goldman. I know him as Danny. He's a friend of mine.
He's quite famous for having written a book called emotional intelligence back in the
90s. So you'll know who he is, and I suspect some people
listening will know as well.
And a piece of advice that Danny gave me many years ago,
which people will hear him talk about right here on the show
in a couple of weeks, is do the easy things first.
So when you're writing, he and I are both writers,
just like do the easy stuff,
because it generates this sense of momentum.
Again, people will hear him say this in a couple of weeks here in the show, but he actually
clarified that in our interview to just do the easy stuff, only do the easy stuff because
if you're just doing easy stuff, you will get everything done.
And I'm not sure I believe this, but this is his view that you're just constantly creating
enough momentum so that everything becomes easy.
Yeah, yeah.
I love that.
You know, one of the things that resonates
about that is that it strikes me that you're also just
taking the tension out of any of these really difficult tasks.
One of the things I like to talk about is this tension
between current self and future self
and that many of our self control battles, if you will,
boil down to this current self, making the sort of painful sacrifice
in the future self-benefitting.
And anytime we can sort of dial down the pain
on what current self is experiencing,
I think it makes it a lot more likely
that we follow through to do something
that then benefits future self.
And I mean, writing is that perfect example, right?
Because it could be something I'm writing
for pleasure, it could be something I have to write
for work, whatever it is, but at least in my experience, getting started is the most painful thing, right? Because it could be something I'm writing for pleasure, it could be something I have to write for work,
whatever it is, at least in my experience,
getting started is the most painful thing, right?
And at some point, anything we can do to just smooth
that path to getting started and make that not so painful
will I think increase the likelihood
that we then keep it going and do the thing we wanted to do.
I'm not sure if I can do it.
Coming up, Hal Hirschfield talks about the role of mental
time travel to help you actually do what you say you want to do and how writing a
letter to your future self as Hoki is that may seem can be a huge help.
Quick reminder you can join the free 14-day imperfect meditation challenge over on the
10% happier app.
Now, create the meditation habit you've always wanted this January with my friends Matthew
Hepburn, Carlisle and Don Marissio.
Download the app now to get started.
Well, you've brought us to your work or back to your work.
So there are a couple of, I wasn't trying to force it, but I didn't feel that way.
I have a million questions for you about your work, so I'm glad you did that.
One of the key concepts in your work is mental time travel.
Can you teach us a little bit about that?
Oh, sure.
Yeah, mental time travel.
I mean, it sounds a little bit like it's something out of a sci-fi novel, but we do it all the time.
If you've spent any of our conversation thinking about what you're going to have for lunch,
that's a form of mental time travel, right? but we do it all the time. If you've spent any of our conversation thinking about what you're gonna have for lunch,
that's a form of mental time travel, right?
Or if you've thought about what you might be doing
in a couple weeks after the chaos
of the holidays have died down,
that's a form of mental time travel.
So it's anytime we think ahead to the future
or think back on the past
or something even more complicated,
think ahead to the future and think back
on how we will feel then about stuff we do now,
all of that is mental time travel.
And why is that so important in your work?
So here's the funny thing,
we have this unique ability to do it.
You know, there's some debate about
whether other animals can engage in mental time travel as well,
but I think if you sort of boil it down,
humans are incredibly sophisticated at our abilities
to travel through time in our minds.
At the same time, we often act in,
you know, what we could call present biased ways.
We act in ways that almost overweight
the consequences of things that are happening right now
and underweight the consequences that will occur later.
We almost devalue the future to some extent.
The reason mental time travel is important in my work is because it's almost the fuel
that can get us between who we are now and who we will eventually be and allow us to
think more deeply about the feelings that we'll have and the way that we'll react to some of the decisions
that we make today.
And yet, it sounds like many of us struggle
to do it effectively as it pertains to making
healthy decisions for our future selves.
So you're right, you're absolutely right.
But I think it's an important point to make that I don't start from the standpoint that
people should be saving more, they should be eating healthier, they should meditate more,
they should go to sleep earlier.
Frankly, that makes me sound like a really boring person to spend time with if that was
my point of view.
But I think when we say effectively, what I subscribe to there is the notion that effective
means doing the things that I say that I want to do.
So if I say I want to go to sleep earlier but I can't do it, that's not effective mental time travel,
that's an effective behavior. If I say I would love to not succumb to Instagram ads and start spending less money right now
but I just can never do it. And then next year rolls around and I feel like I don't have as much money
for the vacation I want to go on,
that to me is sort of ineffective decision-making.
That's what I mean by ineffective.
And then to come back to your point,
my argument is that in many ways we do act
in a way that could be considered ineffective
or could be considered, you know,
quote unquote suboptimal in so much
that many people often regret the decisions that they're making right now
in which that they could make different ones.
Yeah, this isn't you or us telling people
what resolutions they should make
and how they should live their lives.
It's us helping people do what they say they want to do.
Exactly, I think that's exactly right.
It's bridging that gap between the intentions
that I have and the actions I take. And so how can we learn to mental time travel in a
way that will help us do that? Right. So I mean, this is a big, this is the big
question we could talk for the rest of the show about this. But one thing to consider here
is what types of decisions are we talking about improving?
By my rationale, there's the big
single shot decisions. I want to
sign up to work with a trainer or not. I want to save more and spend less.
And then there's the ones that are sort of the repeated decisions. The things that happen multiple times
a day like dieting and eating and exercising or single one time a day but multiple times
we'd go in a bed earlier and so forth.
So I think to some extent we need different strategies for these different types of decisions
that we're making.
When we talk about the big decisions, one of the big sort of less frequent decisions,
one of the strategies that I've introduced in my work is to try to help people connect
more emotionally to their future selves.
And we've tried a variety of techniques.
One of the ones that I've really am fond of
is a letter writing conversation,
or an email writing, what a conversation,
where you're writing to some sort of future self,
whether it's in a year,
the self at the end of 2024,
that's gonna look back on this new year period right now,
or a self in five years or 20 years,
but pick some future self, right a letter to that future self,
but then write another letter,
write a letter back from the future self.
This is what the research suggests
can actually boost connections to future selves.
And the reason why is because it forces you to step into the shoes of your future self,
it forces you to be empathetic.
By the way, if that is hard, and the research hasn't texted this, but anecdotally, I do
this when I teach all the time, I have people write a letter first to their past self.
Because I think that can kind of grease the wheels for this sort of somewhat awkward conversation.
That ends up being a pretty emotional exercise.
And then we sort of flip it around
and go the reverse and say, okay, now write a letter
to your future self and now write a letter back.
It can take some time,
but this is a strategy that I think can be particularly useful
in trying to get over the hump of making some big decision
and what's that decision gonna look like,
and how I'm gonna react to it.
And by the way, you may not know.
We are just taking guesses.
The future is so uncertain.
But it represents more of a direct strategy
than what we normally do,
which is often just sort of hope that works out.
One of the many things I've been criticized for is,
I should just amend that to say, one of the many things I've been criticized for is I should just amend that to say one of the many
things I've been criticized accurately for. I'm not meaning to signal that I get inaccurate criticism.
I'm meaning to say that pretty much all the criticism is accurate and one of them is that I can
be dismissive. And so I feel that coming up a little bit as you talk about this exercise of writing a letter
to your past and then future self
and then having that self right back to you,
I do find it intriguing, I suspect I would get a lot out of that,
but I'm, yeah, I feel like, oh, well, I'm not gonna do that.
Like I'm not gonna sit and do that.
So how do you get past that?
Yeah, wait, can I ask a question, why do you feel that way?
That's a great question. I mean, I think it goes back to dismissiveness. You know, like I was
dismissive of meditation for my whole life. And now my whole career is built around it. So
sure. I think just a little bit of that sounds a little corny. I don't do journaling, for example,
even though I am a journalist. I mean, I write memoirs, but I don't do journaling, for example, even though I am a journalist.
I mean, I write memoirs, but I don't write, you know, I don't journal in any way.
And part of me suspects that someday I actually will start doing that because I'll have a
good guest on and they will convince me to do it.
And I guess another thing is that sounds really time consuming and unless or until I sign
up for some course where I'm forced to do it. I'm probably not gonna like do it at any given moment because I've got so much other
Shit on my to-do list sort of them. So yeah, I
Mean now all of a sudden I think this is a challenge to be the guest that gets you you know to do some
But so my reaction and my own dismissiveness because I'm similar to you and there's a part of me that feels like
This could be a little hokey, it could be a little corny. I think part of the reaction stems from the fact that it's not
necessarily an easy solution, it's not necessarily a quick one. I mean, wouldn't we love when it comes
to behavior change to be able to flip some switch, take some pill, and then that's done, and now I can
go about doing like all the other shit that's accumulated as you've said. That said, what I'm suggesting
here isn't a daily letter writing exercise.
It could be a one-shot exercise
that just forces you to step back.
I'm also thinking about, gosh, we do so much other stuff,
especially around these fresh starts
to try to make a change.
It is kind of the right time to step back
and maybe have this conversation.
I also wonder if there's some version,
and I have to sort of take off my rigorous
social scientist hat here and put on my speculation hat.
But I have to wonder if there's a version of this
that doesn't evolve, the sitting down
and writing the letter back and forth
and more just having the conversation.
Maybe it's in your own head, with your future self.
And I hesitate there because it'd be really easy
to do that quick.
I'm think that I've done it and checked the box,
but it's probably not that deep,
but it may be better than nothing.
I think part of the value here is creating some sort
of reckoning with the person I'm eventually going to be,
the person who's going to sort of benefit or not
from the decisions that we're making.
But I'll say one other thing, which is, you know,
like any other behavior
change strategy, those idiosyncrasies, perhaps this sounds too hokey for you, but other strategies
will sound better, and we'll explore that. But there's other folks who might say, you know, that
sounds like something that I might get something out of. So I would pick what sounds right to you.
Some degree. Just to pick up on your point about doing this in your head
instead of actually writing letters,
a new friend of mine recently said something to me.
We're both parents and he was saying that sometimes
when he's putting his kids to bed
and finding himself muttering internally
about why is this taking so damn long,
he will jump forward to the perspective
of his 85 year old self and say how much would that person give? How much money would
that 85 year old person give to be back putting the kid to bed for 30 seconds?
Dan, I couldn't agree more. My kids are seven and four. And it's funny, I don't have this so much of bedtime
as much as I have it, A, when they're fighting with each other.
But the sort of general moments where I feel
like I've got a million things going on around the house
and my daughter, that's a seven year old, who you was,
can you do this thing with me?
It's like, I'm finding you really needy right now.
And I don't think about 85.
I think about five years, six years from now
when she's a teenager.
And I convinced myself, oh, she'll be different
than other teenagers, and she'll still want to spend time
with me, and at the same time, I know that's probably not true.
And I think how much will I just want to go back
to a period of time where she wanted to spend time with me?
You know, that is a conversation with my future self.
And look, their times
were just makes me feel guilty for saying, well, I still got to do the thing I need to do.
But I would say on balance, it makes me a little bit more likely to just say, screw
whatever I was just doing. I can get to that later and help you with whatever sort of arts
and crafts is of the moment. I have two stories coming in a mind or two
comments coming in mind. One is a story, one is a comment.
One story is that I was talking to somebody close to me recently who was in the process
of explaining to his wife why he couldn't do a family thing and his wife turned and
started singing cats in the cradle to him.
That's tough. That's tough.
That is tough.
Yeah.
It was pretty on point though.
The comment is that if you are a parent or if you have kids in your life in any way,
if you can tune into this, it's actually a great way to sensitize yourself and bring
some more awareness to the notion of future selves.
Because when I think about my future self, you know, age 85, that's harder to, if I make
it that far, it's harder to connect with.
But in two years, your seven year old will be a genuinely different person.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gosh, I mean, and if that's concept sounds at all Abstract just look backward, right? My seven-year-old is a very different person from the one she was when she was five
And we can sort of project that forward, but I think you brought up a bigger point which is
With more and more sort of expanses of time it becomes that much more difficult to relate to that
ultimate future self and
To that end, I don't think we need to jump right ahead to 85 or 65 or whatever, because
that's really hard.
But we could start two years, five years from now, and there's some great work on working
backwards that I think could be really useful there.
But it almost may be off-putting to go too far into the future if we don't start with a slightly more
proximal closer period in time. So we're going to move on to other tactics but just to make sure we
didn't give this one short shrift, I think what you're saying is the letter writing campaign
could start with your past self then be to your future self and then be from your future self back to your present
self. And you reluctantly can see that if one is dismissive or wary of the actual letter
writing, one could do this work in one's own head.
Yeah. And maybe I'll add something on to this here. Let's just talk about what's happening
under the hood here, right?
Part of what I'm trying to get at here
is a way to make the future self more vivid
and more emotional.
When we move through time, we're hampered by the present
to some degree.
The future is really abstract.
And part of what happens there
is that the abstraction of the future
makes it a little bit less emotional.
There's some great work on what's called future anodonia, which is a fancy term for saying that in our minds the future feels
less emotional somehow.
And I mean, if you think back, sometimes people think back to the past, they say,
well, I can't believe I felt the thing that I was feeling was such intensity back then.
This goes back to the mental time travel. We have a hard time stepping ahead and stepping back.
The letter adding exercise part of what that's doing
is creating a more vivid image.
I mean, my own work, I've also explored age-progressed images
where we show people their future selves
as a way to get that future to be more emotional.
And that in some ways borrows from charities
who do this really well, right?
If they're trying to get you to donate,
they don't give you stats, they give you a picture,
they give you a story, they tell you a narrative.
And I think to the same degree,
if there's a different technique that you wanna use
that can make that future self more vivid,
don't write a letter, tell a story.
What is the story of you at 50, you at 60 look like?
I don't know if you react less dismissively or cynically.
I don't know, I don't mean to make that too pejorative,
but really what this is boiling down to
is trying to create some concrete version of ourselves
that we can then connect with.
And if it's a letter, if it's a picture, if it's a story,
I think it can go far beyond what we're normally doing,
which is just thinking about that future self
and really abstract and maybe less emotional terms.
I'm actually just to be clear,
I'm really supportive of this concept of creating
some sort of relationship with your future self
in no way dismissive or skeptical about it
or cynical about it.
And actually, I think the letter writing thing is very compelling.
I think I'm personally more likely to start doing this as a thought experiment.
But I think all of it sounds great.
And from what I can gather, there's data behind this.
Yeah.
I should just say, as a side note, I also feel like the thought exercise feels a lot more
like something I'd want to do than the letter writing one.
Of course, over the years, I've done sort of everything, but I don't know if it feels more natural to me.
Now, the data on this is, I am my collaborators.
We've explored the age-progressed images.
We've explored letter writing.
Other people have explored letter writing, and still others have done sort of more of a story that's told.
or letter writing, and still others have done more of a story that's told. And as just one example in a recent paper, we worked with a bank, this was a bank in Mexico,
and there was 50,000 customers.
And half of them got sort of a standard message that it's important to make a contribution
to your retirement account.
And half of them got that message plus the opportunity to see themselves older using age-progressed
software, the ability to see what older using age-progressed software, the ability
to see what one would look like at retirement.
And the group that got those images, they were 16% more likely to make a contribution.
And I mean, the caveat here is that it's pretty small base rates, right?
Like, I mean, anytime you do a messaging campaign, you don't hit the majority of people.
But what I think is promising about this
is that that's a very low touch type of intervention.
I mean, think about how many communications
you get from your bank that you ignore.
And I think it holds some promise for other domains
and other opportunities to try to enhance the vividness of the future self.
That's in the financial space.
Other work has looked at, actually, was more of a thought exercise of just trying to talk about a more vivid future.
This is with women in rural Kenya, and has found that that sort of vividness exercise of really talking about a more concrete future self
leads to more preventative health actions,
also leads to more saving,
but the thing that they were focused on
that particular work was chlorinating water
so that one's kids would have fewer digestive issues.
So that's in the health space.
You could imagine are there other spaces
where this would matter?
And again, it boils down to making that future self more vivid.
Coming up, Hal talks about why thinking about our future selves plural can help with behavior change, and the importance of commitment devices.
He'll describe what they are and how to put them into practice.
There are other tactical and strategic pieces of advice that I want to get to from you, but let me just ask a more theoretical question.
The title of your book is your future self, but in the book, you actually talk about our
future selves plural.
In fact, here's a quote from you,
you are actually a wee.
So can you just unpack that a little bit
before we dive back into the practical stuff?
Yeah, here's the way I think about it.
We have many different versions of ourselves.
There's the simple, I have my work self and my home self,
right, and I've got my family self and my friend self and I have my nighttime self and my home self, right? And I've got my family self and my friend's self and I have my
nighttime self and my morning self. But then we can think about selves over longer expanses of time.
You know, I've got the, well, for me, I've got my middle-aged self. And I've got the version of
me at 7580. Now, those are two selves, but there's many selves along the way. And the number of selves I think about and how I think about them depends on what I'm
really considering, right?
Let's say I have an image in mind of, I want to be healthy in 25 years so that I can
still travel and still go on runs and still interact with my kids and maybe grandkids
who knows.
There's many selves along the way
that have to help me get there.
Like I also have to think about this weekend's self.
Like is that guy gonna go on a run or a walk or whatever?
It is kind of a thorny subject of multiple selves.
The way I like to consider it is that
we can have sort of a big, almost cumulative future self.
And we can have many selves along the way
that add up to that eventual future self.
But it really depends on what we're thinking about. I do have a future self for next summer.
And that guy wants to go on a trip with my family. And that's going to require some specific
decisions between now and then financially and time wise and whatnot. That's just one future
self, right? There's going gonna be others that will exist long after
he's had his trip or not.
Does that resonate?
Does that make sense?
Yeah, I guess the way I think about this is,
and I'm not sure this is correct,
but this is the way I think about it,
at least right now, my present self
is thinking about this, is that there are,
and you're a psychologist and I'm not,
but there's this modular theory of mind
that we have different modes.
I think of those modes as being like the tiles
within a magic eight ball that are competing
for salience at any given moment,
competing for the top slot,
that is the one visibility portal we have
into the magic eight ball if you've ever played with one of those.
So I've got my angry mode, my jealous mode, my kind of mode, my patient mode,
whatever that are all given various causes and conditions, reaching the steering wheel at any given moment.
So that makes sense to me about our many selves you have something you want to say to her.
Yeah, to that end, there's somebody I wanted to mention here.
There's actually a language professor at Stanford, Joshua Landy,
and he talks a little bit
about the multiple selves problem.
And he actually uses the analogy of a bus,
where he basically says, the bus driver
is the most dominant self,
that may be the current self.
And then the passengers are different iterations
of our past and future selves,
some of whom may be having a louder voice at
other times and can actually almost impact the driver and some of whom may be quiet. Now he talked
about that in the space of grief and the idea that when we have someone close to us who dies,
the driver at that time may be most influenced
by the sadness and the possible trauma of that moment,
but then eventually that driver is gonna step to the back
and a new driver will take over
and he'll become a passenger
and he may shout occasionally and other times he may be
just sort of quietly sitting there.
I really love the notion because I think it it highlights the idea that it's not just that
we have one current self and one future self, but that there's many different selves,
and the different selves will have a different ability to impact what we're thinking about,
what our motivations are, what we're deciding right now.
So when we write a letter to our future self, which self are we writing to?
I almost never specified it.
And maybe that's too messy.
But to some extent, I think what matters here
it is incredibly is what's the goal?
What are we trying to think about?
If you were to ask me the thing that I'm considering right now
for a variety of reasons, I would talk about my health
in five years.
And so if I were to engage in this conversation,
it would be a future self in five years, and it
would be around the notion of health, and am I doing the things that take care of myself that I need to
do. But I think, you know, you can see why I kind of balk at the idea of specifying which future
self someone should be thinking about, because everybody has different goals in mind and different
concerns that are front of mind. If that feels like I'm
evading the question, though, let me know. I can try to say, I can say more specifically.
No, I mean, I think we're adding some useful to a point complexity to this, which is,
the self is not one thing. In fact, it may not exist at all if you're looking at this from
a Buddhist standpoint. But we have many modes, I think that's kind of uncontroversial
to say. And then the question is, when we're trying to get in touch with our future self,
which mode of that self are we connecting with? And I think what you're saying is,
you know, pick your poison. It's really up to you. I think that's exactly right. Yeah, you said that
well. All right. So let's go back to some of the ways we can get more intimate with our future self
so that we can make decisions now that serve the goals
that we are setting for ourselves.
You talk about something called commitment devices.
What's that all about?
Right, so I love the concepts of commitment devices
because there are these strategies
that are incredibly effective if you adopt them.
Let me give you a setup that happens in my house a lot,
at least.
I woke up this morning and I didn't feel like my health
is self in part because last night I ate some of my kids
Halloween candy and I know that's going to sound funny
at this time of year, but they got a big bag and it just sits in our pantry and I think they've forgotten they've moved on to other things
And I sort of slowly pick away at it
And then I eat a little bit and then I eat a little more and then I was like well, I'm still kind of hungry
And I'll have some granola whatever you don't need to go to the nuance of what I ate last night
But there's no need and I woke up not feeling great and then I said you know what tonight
I want to make sure that I don't
Do that like I don't need to snack tonight.
And I have also tomorrow morning that guy I want him to wake up saying I didn't snack last night, but then I have this guy tonight.
That guy is going to be tired because today is a pretty busy day and I've got a lot going on.
And I'm worried that he's going to end up sort of fucking
this whole thing up. Sorry if that's great. So here's what a commitment device does. It
recognizes that tension. It recognizes the tension between what actually one of my students,
Megan Weber, she's been calling the planner, do a reflector model.
It's a little bit of a twist on some other models, but you've got the planner who wants to
not snack. You've got the reflector that's tomorrow's self who wants to reflect back and say,
I didn't, and then you've got the doer. That's the guy who snacks. And you can put in your sort of
dilemma of choice there. I don't want to be on my phone during dinner. That's another one, right?
there, I don't want to be on my phone during dinner. That's another one, right? What commitment devices do is they put guardrails on future behavior. So as to make sure that the doer acts more
in accordance with what the planner and reflector both want. And there's a whole range of types
that can operate here. So the quote, softest ones would be like,
if I were to just tell my wife,
yeah, I'm just gonna make a promise to you
that I'm not gonna snack tonight.
Well, what happens if I do?
Nothing really, other than a cost to my self-esteem,
because now I'm somebody who didn't stay true to their word.
And, you know, what else does that mean about me?
But, at the end of the day, I could probably get around that
because we're great at rationalizing things.
I know I told you I wasn't going to,
but it did rain a little in LA today,
and that's just enough of a weird event that I deserve.
I deserve to snack, right?
So there's a psychological cost there,
but there's not really a material cost to messing
up, but it's a type of thing that could keep me on track.
But there's more extreme ones, right?
I mean, of course, I could rid my house, I could make a show of it and throw out my kids
Halloween candy.
That's difficult, but if I did, then the temptation is no longer there.
My modern day version of that is that I actually have
an electronic timed safe.
It's called the K-safe.
I talk about it in some of my work,
but it was designed to lock away snacks.
And then the developer of it, Dave Krippendorf,
found that people were using it for things,
well, beyond snacks.
Like drugs, alcohol, gaming remotes, phones, right?
And so when I talked to him, he'd asked me if I, like, what was the thing I was trying to stop?
And he, I was like, being on my phone around my kids.
I probably should have said it more generally, but we got to start small, as you said.
And he said, okay, well, then I'm going to give you the opaque box.
They have two. There's one that's clear and there's one that's opaque. And he's like, if I give you the clear one, okay, well, then I'm going to give you the opaque box. They have two.
There's one that's clear and there's one that's opaque.
And he's like, if I give you the clear one, people try to, try to peek in.
And I don't do it all the time, but I try to do it during dinner time where I put my
phone in there.
I'll set the timer for two hours or an hour and a half.
And what's interesting about this, here's a commitment device to constrain the guy who
is going to sort of inadvertently look at his
phone during dinner time.
You know what it is, there's a variety of reasons I wanted to quickly respond to something
or look up the weather or whatever, and then suddenly I find myself on my phone, well this
just makes it impossible to do that.
That's a stronger commitment device where you're taking away an option.
And then the strongest commitment devices, which the research shows are the ones that work
the best, are the ones where work the best are the ones where you
add in an accountability partner who who is like checking to make sure you did the thing you said you're gonna do
and you impose a cost to messing up. So there's a great website called stick dot com STIC KK and
I see KK and what that website allows you to do is to make a commitment and state what it's going to be, state an accountability partner, but also state what the cost is going
to be if I mess up.
So if I snack tonight, I've given it my credit card and I've also given it the name of
an anti-charity, an organization I don't want to donate to.
And then if I mess up, instantly some amount of money gets taken out of my account.
So it's a popular site, especially among behavioral scientists.
But one of the things I really like about it, one of the things I like thinking about with
it, is that it requires some sophistication to go about properly, right?
In other words, if I say, if I snack tonight,
then a thousand dollars is gonna be charged
in my credit card and donated to XYZ campaign.
That's too much.
I'm not gonna actually follow through with it.
I have to pick the right amount for me
or the right punishment for me
to actually make it so that I sort of stick
with this strategy.
I wonder if the people who started stick
are stealth Trump supporters,
because he probably gets more money from that site.
That's great.
It's Dean Carlin is the name of the guy.
He's a professor and well, now I've got to ask him.
That is really funny.
So, all right let me just go back to the food thing, the snacking thing. First of all,
I mean we're the same guy in this sense. I literally woke up today hung over
from eating too much cookies last night because I was tired last night and just ate too many cookies
and I feel like shit today and I'm having this conversation
with my future self. Tonight, the same thing I want tomorrow, Dan, to wake up feeling fresh
because I don't want to have so much drag in the system tomorrow as I have today. And I'm
already thinking about like what's my strategy for this evening. Funny, there was an episode
of this show, which I'll find and put in the show notes too,
with the guy who wrote Atomic Habits.
Oh, James Clear.
James Clear, so many years ago.
And he talked about the case safe, or just basically the idea of locking up snacks.
And we got an enraged email from a listener saying that is sending a really unhealthy message about our relationship
to food and our bodies.
And I remember at the time being dismissive, but I actually, I don't have the rage at
all, but I've come to believe that my past self was wrong on this to be dismissive, because
I give myself full permission to eat whatever the hell I want.
And I don't think declaring certain foods sinful is healthy and you're not in your head
in agreement, so I'm not lecturing you. I don't think that's helpful. And I worry about locking up
food because it does send a signal to myself or others that certain things are off limits,
which creates kind of pathology around that food. And so it's really about understanding, oh yeah, well, X and Y food might make me sleep
poorly and feel horrible tomorrow.
And so how am I going to manage that?
Anyway, I'm saying a lot of words.
Is this all land for you?
No, well, it does.
I mean, I think part of what I'm hearing here is the motivation for wanting to lock
something up matters.
Yeah, I think your explanation of this behavior
leads me to feel worse tomorrow
and whatever that behavior is.
Is really important because it would be really hard
for me to tell you, well, don't do that
because it's not, you know, you shouldn't prioritize
feeling good tomorrow.
I mean, that would be crazy.
But maybe the nuance here is that there can be
the sort of slippery slope toward pathologizing
certain behaviors that could be problematic
in terms of modeling, especially for our kids
or other people around us.
Part of me wonders whether or not it's not a positive thing
to model the idea that like sometimes I have issues
with controlling my impulse.
Some of them as I wanna do something
and I don't feel good doing it later.
So I'm trying to figure out ways to be a better version of myself where I don't do that. Now,
I mean, I think if you... There's a big difference between locking up the cookies for 24 hours,
so you don't have them tonight and swearing off desserts forever. And I know some people do this.
I know some people say, I just don't eat dessert. And that's fine, like if that's your thing, right?
But I think there's daylight between the two strategies.
And I'm trying to empathize and think about what's the perspective
of having a rage field response to that.
And I suspect a large part of it boils down to the modeling
that's exhibited to others
and what sort of message we want to send out there.
And I wonder if there's a way to counteract that.
Yeah, I think the rage which I understand
and maybe I'm overstating what was in that person's mind,
but the disappointment and frustration and upset
was that many people feel,
and I think justifiably victimized by what the culture sets
as an ideal kind of body.
And so I think if you're locking up the food,
I'm not sure I'm ever gonna cosine on locking up the food,
but I think there's a difference between locking up the food
because if you eat it tonight,
your future self in the morning is gonna suffer needlessly.
I think there's a difference between that
and locking up the food because you're saying
one should never have cookies and by extension, your body should look a certain way.
Even though it's an aesthetic standard that has nothing to do with the underlying health
implication.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I joke, you know, that I'm in LA before, right?
But maybe I'll just leave that there.
But yeah, I couldn't agree with you more. So let's get back to some of the other strategies and tactics that we can use. Well,
I'm just going to list a bunch of things and put them out there for you. Think about the time
that lies ahead in terms of days rather than years, make the present easier, take the good with
the bad, temptation bundling, tangential immersion, and make the big small. So those are a bunch of
ideas that you want to hit them all, do some of them.
We can do some.
Here, I'll start with the idea of make the present easier.
That's kind of an overarching bucket, by the way,
to take a step back.
The way I think about these sorts of processes
that we're trying to do,
this sort of idea of connecting to the future
and making it like, quote unquote, better. One bucket is bring the future self closer. That's sort of idea of connecting to the future and making it, like, quote unquote, better.
One bucket is bring the future self closer.
That's sort of the vividness we talked about.
Another bucket is staying on track, and that's the commitment devices, and then the sort
of third bucket is making the present easier.
I alluded to this before, but there's the present self.
That's the one who always has to endure some sort of quote unquote sacrifice for a future
self.
And so when we talk about making the present easier, what I mean by that is figuring
out any way that we can turn the dial down on the pain that we're experiencing right now.
So I think you said make the big small. The gist there is to try to break down any sort of goal pursuit exercise into smaller
buckets to make it feel easier.
So I'll give you one example from my own research.
This is a project that it was Slohmob and Artsy and Steve Schu, where we collaborated with
a FinTech company, Acorns.
It was a savings app.
Anytime people signed up for the app,
we asked them if they wanted to enroll
in an automatic savings plan.
And I hope you don't roll your eyes
at how sort of silly this intervention was,
but we asked one group if they wanted to save $150 a month.
We asked another group if they wanted to save $35 a week
and we asked a third group if they wanted to save $5 a day.
And the thinking here is that $5 a day feels a lot easier.
There's a lot of things that I could think of
that in theory could cost $5 a day.
There's fewer things that cost $150 a month.
And as it turned out, and this was a couple thousand
people in each group, as it turned out,
seven percent of people signed up for the savings plan when it was $150 a month,
but 30 percent signed up when it was $5 a day. And there's something silly about it, because it feels like a trick. It's just the same amount of money it's just expressed differently.
But the framing there feels a lot easier to sort of undergo. I should say after a month there were some
folks who dropped out. I think they were probably like, shit, this is 150 hours a month,
but we still got, we still had way more people enrolled in the program than we would have otherwise.
A recent paper is actually found similar thing works with getting people to volunteer.
Instead of saying however many hours per year, they're saying just four hours a week.
And that increased the likelihood of people signing up to volunteer, which is, you know, there's something...
There's something a little tricky there. But then I apply that in a larger way.
And I know others have talked about these types of strategies, but one of the takeaways for me is,
what's the sort of smallest piece of the puzzle I can pull off? And what if I just do that?
And this goes back to the conversation we had earlier
about making things easy, starting simple.
I think you said it, right?
That's one strategy you would mention a couple of years.
Maybe I'll talk about one or two others.
So I think in the same sort of category comes
Katie Milkman's excellent work on temptation bundling.
The idea there is you pair your, quote, unquote, painful sacrifice
with something pleasurable. So the classic example is listening to a juicy audio book while
you work out and only being able to listen to that juicy audio book if you work out. And,
you know, what you're doing there is it makes it a little easier to pull yourself out of
bed, pull yourself, you know, out of the house and go for the run or whatever it is, if you're coupling it with something that feels good.
There's another version of this from one of my colleagues at UCLA, Ali Lieberman, and
it's called TAN-GEN-GTL-Emergin.
The idea with TAN-GEN-GTL-Emergin is that if we want to try to increase the length that
we do something, so the classic example she talks about is brushing our teeth, which that may sound trivial,
but we know a lot about the role that teeth health
that oral health plays into the rest of our lives.
And we're supposed to brush a certain amount of time
two minutes, which feels like an interminable amount of time
when you're actually brushing your teeth.
The idea behind tangential immersion is that you partner
the sort of unpleasant or uncomfortable activity with something
that is pleasurable. Okay, that's just like temptation bundling, but now you have to think
about the match being right. So in other words, if I say, okay, I'm going to brush my teeth
and watch like a really engaging horror movie while I do it. Most likely, I'll stop brushing my
teeth because the horror movie is way more engaging than brushing my teeth. But if I can
because the horror movie is way more engaging than brushing my teeth.
But if I can instead pair the sort of uncomfortable activity
with something that's equally,
like a, maybe brushing my teeth is a little boring
and doing a word puzzle on my phone on my other hand,
that's just a little bit enough engaging.
It'll make it more likely that I'll continue
to follow through with the task.
I've used it a lot with like trying to tackle somewhat boring tasks that I just need to follow through with the task. I've used it a lot with like trying to tackle
somewhat boring tasks that I just need to get through.
Maybe I can say something that's a little bit different
from some of this though, which is that
a lot of what we've been talking about
kind of boils down to this idea of like
me now doing something for me later.
And I think there's two things I want to sort of like correct here,
just in case they get misconstrued.
One is, you know, there are times when doing something for later
actually benefits me right now.
I mean, the kind of banal examples,
if I go on a run, that is good for my future self.
I also feel really good right now, right afterwards.
If I'm hesitating on calling a buddy of mine
because I don't feel like I have 30 minutes to catch up,
but I know it's good for our relationship. The irony is that it's also good for me right now
when I eventually sit down and have that chat.
That's one point I wanna make.
The other point is that I think there can be a danger
of doing too much for the future
and missing out on the present.
There's a world in which living for right now
is actually doing a service for our future selves.
Call it the big party that I feel hung over from tomorrow in one way or another,
you know, whether it's drinking or food or socializing, whatever it is, the experience
of that, the memories of that, like, will actually benefit my future self.
And I think it can be easy, especially in the work versus life space.
It's just sometimes put our heads down and tell ourselves we're doing something for our
future selves.
And then you look up and you realize
you've missed a big chunk of the present.
So I really don't want anybody to leave this conversation
thinking that all we need to do is go sacrifice now,
make the present more bleak for a brighter future.
I really think it needs to be two sides of the same coin.
I don't know if that makes sense to you.
It does, and I think it's actually a beautiful place
to bring this to a close.
Like, if I could write a letter back to my past self
and maybe I'll actually do that
and follow your advice instead of being dismissive,
I would tell him, stop worrying so much.
And you know that my presence, I would remind
whatever year old Dan, the 52 year old Dan,
feels like, you know, pre-game is over.
Stop living your life for some future outcome.
I wish I had that mindset a long time ago.
Just to say also that I totally grew you up for me socializing is absolutely worth the
cost and sleep, or whatever hangover I'm going to feel the next day because that is the stuff of a good life.
And you are providing your future self with memories and you are making yourself healthier now in a way that will make you healthier later.
Even if you've missed some sleep because you're strengthening relationships and relationships are the most important thing from what I can tell for longevity and happiness. Yeah, I couldn't agree with you more there.
I remember at some point being worried that my kids were going to miss their bed times at
the holidays, you know, because they're with their cousins or their grandparents or whatever it is
that routine's getting disrupted. And you quickly realize that any sort of like hit that you get
to the routine that you have to adjust or any hit that you get tomorrow,
because your kids cranky, it's worth it to have the, you know,
whatever, whatever that memory is that they're creating,
they're at the bond that they're strengthening in that moment,
which of course, then I look back like you and I say,
what couldn't I apply that same lens to myself, you know,
and get in the moment a little bit more in a way?
Well said.
Hal, thank you very much for doing this. May your future self tomorrow morning be
clear and not groggy and remorseful and may your future self when you hear this post on New Year's
Day be as happy as possible. Hey thanks, Dan. This is an awesome conversation. I appreciate you
having me. Thanks again to Hal Hirschfield.
You can listen to the conversation with Katie Milkman
that we referenced during this conversation.
If you dive into the show notes, we'll put a link there
that episode is all about changing your habits.
Your future self will thank you for listening to that.
We've also put a link to a conversation I did with James Clear,
the author of Atomic Habits.
Lots of good stuff to help you.
Make and keep your resolutions.
Good luck out there.
Thank you for listening.
Really appreciate you.
Don't forget to sign up for the newsletter
where we sum up the learnings from the various episodes
that we post here.
We'll let a link to that sign up in the show notes.
And thank you most of all to everybody
who worked so hard on this show.
10% Happier is produced by Gabrielle Zuckerman, Justin Davy, Lauren Smith and Tara Anderson.
DJ Kashmir is our senior producer.
Marissa Schneidermann is our senior editor.
Kevin O'Connell is our director of audio and post-production.
And Kimi Regler is our executive producer.
Alicia Mackie leads our marketing and Tony Magyar is our director of podcasts.
Finally Nick Thorburn of the Great Band Islands wrote our theme.
If you like 10% happier, I hope you do.
You can listen early and add free right now by joining Wondry Plus
in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts.
Prime members can listen to ad free on Amazon music.
Before you go, tell us about yourself
by filling out a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.