Communicating between your past, present, and future selves
Today we have a guest blog post from Hal Hershfield, Professor of Marketing and Behavioural Science at UCLA Anderson School of Management.
Today we have a guest blog post from Hal Hershfield, Professor of Marketing and Behavioural Science at UCLA Anderson School of Management.
If you’ve ever written a letter to your future self, you know it can be a valuable tool for reflection. You can even use it as a form of expressive therapy similar to diary writing. But how do others to it? And what can we learn from them?
You already know FutureMe as the most amazing way to send letters to your future self. But you can send letters to other people in your life, too. In fact, you can even write a letter to your future husband — that amazing man who might not even be in your life yet, but will be one day.
Wow, you’ve changed! No, really. Remember what you were like a year ago? Five years ago? The world’s a different place now, and friend, so are you.
It might seem on the surface like a letter to your future self should be filled with massive milestone achievements and huge news.
Not sure how to write a letter to yourself? Read on to find out how you can capture a memory to send to the future.
A famous poet once said, “It is better to loved and lost, than never to have loved at all.”
Gratitude rhymes with attitude, and it is the attitude we apply to our lives that help us celebrate the present and be truly happy.
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