
Discover how to bridge the gap between present actions and future outcomes in Hal Hershfield's groundbreaking book. Endorsed by Adam Grant and Angela Duckworth, this science-backed guide reveals the surprising psychological trick that transformed decision-making for thousands - mental time travel to your future self.
Hal Hershfield, author of Your Future Self: How to Make Tomorrow Better Today, is a renowned psychologist and behavioral decision-making expert at UCLA’s Anderson School of Management. His work bridges psychology and economics, focusing on how individuals can make wiser long-term choices by emotionally connecting with their future selves.
A Stanford-trained PhD, Hershfield’s research has reshaped retirement planning, ethical decision-making, and health behavior strategies, earning him recognition as one of Poets & Quants’ “40 Most Outstanding B-School Profs Under 40.”
A frequent contributor to The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Harvard Business Review, Hershfield consults with organizations like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Fidelity, and Merrill Lynch. His insights, grounded in decades of peer-reviewed studies, translate complex behavioral science into actionable advice.
Your Future Self distills his findings into a practical guide for aligning present actions with future goals, blending academic rigor with relatable storytelling. The book has garnered widespread acclaim for its innovative approach to personal and financial well-being, solidifying Hershfield’s status as a leading voice in decision science.
Your Future Self explores how to make better life choices by mentally connecting with your future self. Psychologist Hal Hershfield combines behavioral science and psychology to explain why we often prioritize short-term rewards over long-term goals, offering strategies like writing letters to future selves or using age-progression tools to bridge this gap. The book emphasizes balancing present needs with future wellbeing.
This book is ideal for anyone struggling with financial planning, health habits, or career decisions. It’s particularly relevant for professionals in behavioral psychology, marketers, and individuals seeking frameworks to align immediate actions with long-term aspirations. Hershfield’s research-backed insights also appeal to fans of books like Atomic Habits or Thinking, Fast and Slow.
Yes—Hershfield’s blend of academic rigor and practical advice makes it stand out. The book provides actionable tools (e.g., commitment devices, visualization exercises) to overcome the “future self as stranger” bias, backed by 10+ years of research. Critics praise its readability for both general audiences and experts in decision-making fields.
Hershfield argues that people often perceive their future selves as unrelated to their current identity, leading to poor long-term decisions. For example, choosing immediate gratification (junk food) over future health. This disconnect is rooted in brain imaging studies showing different neural activity when considering present vs. future needs.
Key strategies include:
These methods reduce psychological distance, making abstract future consequences feel tangible.
This cognitive bias causes people to believe their current preferences and values are final, underestimating future change. Hershfield cites studies showing 20-year-olds underestimate how much their personalities will evolve by age 40, leading to under-saving for retirement or resisting skill-building.
While both focus on behavior change, Atomic Habits emphasizes incremental routines, whereas Hershfield’s work targets the emotional disconnect between present and future selves. Your Future Self uniquely integrates neuroscience and behavioral economics to explain why we sabotage long-term goals.
Some reviewers note the book prioritizes individual choices over systemic barriers (e.g., poverty limiting retirement savings). Others suggest Hershfield could delve deeper into cultural differences in future-oriented thinking. However, its actionable frameworks are widely praised.
The book advises treating retirement savings as “paying your future self,” using mental accounting tricks to reframe sacrifices. Hershfield shares case studies where visualizing elderly selves increased 401(k) contributions by 30% in behavioral experiments.
He compares the future self to a “stranger you’ll become” and decision-making to “negotiating with a future roommate.” These analogies simplify complex psychology, illustrating why we often fail to act in our long-term interest.
Yes—the book’s “future self journaling” technique helps align career moves with long-term aspirations. Hershfield demonstrates how professionals who visualize 10-year goals are 2x more likely to pursue skill development or strategic job changes.
Key studies include fMRI scans showing brain regions for self-identity activate weakly when imagining future selves, and experiments where age-progressed photos reduced impulsive spending by 22%. Hershfield also details his work with the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
I kill for pleasure.
Does forgetting yesterday's breakfast make you a different person?
We treat strangers differently.
Our future selves lack the vivid detail of our present self.
What truly matters is what sort of other people our future selves are to us.
Scomponi le idee chiave di Your Future Self in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Distilla Your Future Self in rapidi promemoria che evidenziano i principi chiave di franchezza, lavoro di squadra e resilienza creativa.

Vivi Your Future Self attraverso narrazioni vivide che trasformano le lezioni di innovazione in momenti che ricorderai e applicherai.
Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli la voce e co-crea spunti che risuonino davvero con te.

Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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You're scrolling through old photos when you pause at one from a decade ago. The person staring back looks familiar, yet somehow foreign. Same eyes, different everything else. Now flip the lens forward: who will you be in ten years? Most of us can't answer that question with any clarity. We assume we'll be roughly the same person, maybe with a few more gray hairs and life lessons. But here's the uncomfortable truth: your future self is essentially a stranger to you right now. And the way you treat strangers-with indifference, occasional kindness, but rarely deep sacrifice-is exactly how you're treating the person you're destined to become. This disconnect explains why we sabotage ourselves so consistently, choosing the extra slice of cake, the impulse purchase, the skipped workout. We're not just weak-willed; we're literally failing to recognize that the consequences will land on someone we deeply care about: ourselves. Consider Pedro Rodrigues Filho, who tattooed "I kill for pleasure" on his arm and murdered dozens. Today, he runs a YouTube channel promoting nonviolence from a remote cottage, claiming disgust at his former self. Is he the same person? This isn't just philosophical musing-it's the ancient Ship of Theseus paradox made flesh. Replace every plank of a boat during a voyage, and is it still the same vessel when you return? Most of us believe in personal continuity despite change. The kid who lost a tooth in second grade is still fundamentally "me." Yet research tracking individuals over fifty years reveals something more nuanced: while about 60% of personality traits remain predictable, we typically change in one core trait per decade. What anchors us, then? Not just physical continuity-thought experiments prove that. If your consciousness transferred to another body, you'd follow your mind, not your original flesh. Philosopher John Locke suggested memory creates the chain of identity, but that's problematic too. Forgetting breakfast doesn't make you a different person. The answer may lie deeper: research by Nina Strohminger suggests our moral self-our kindness, empathy, character-forms the truest core of identity. When moral traits shift fundamentally, even close relationships fracture. When they remain intact, we recognize continuity despite dramatic surface changes.