Why You Won’t Be the Person You Expect to Be

Why You Won’t Be the Person You Expect to Be January 10, 2013

Somewhere an 87 year old man is looking back on his life and saying to himself, “You know, when I was 65 I just didn’t have a clue.”

They called this phenomenon the “end of history illusion,” in which people tend to “underestimate how much they will change in the future.” According to their research, which involved more than 19,000 people ages 18 to 68, the illusion persists from teenage years into retirement.

“Middle-aged people — like me — often look back on our teenage selves with some mixture of amusement and chagrin,” said one of the authors, Daniel T. Gilbert, a psychologist at Harvard. “What we never seem to realize is that our future selves will look back and think the very same thing about us. At every age we think we’re having the last laugh, and at every age we’re wrong.”


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