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A systematic study of the advice people would give to their younger selves

159 points| EndXA | 6 years ago |digest.bps.org.uk | reply

93 comments

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[+] easymodex|6 years ago|reply
This is a funny one. Just imagine if you do go back in time, tell your younger self to "not marry her" and you actually don't marry her, then you may end up in a different position like being alone or wasting your life chasing other feel good things. Then that new you may grow up with even more regrets and dream of being able to go back in time to tell themselves to DO marry her.
[+] scarface74|6 years ago|reply
I’ve thought about that. I married the objectively wrong person in my late twenties. Got divorced four years later. But, I definitely wouldn’t be as good of a husband or (step)father now if I hadn’t made that mistake the first time. I wouldn’t have appreciated my current marriage as much.
[+] BurningFrog|6 years ago|reply
I think there is a big difference between being allowed to send a one sentence "oracle" statement like that vs having a half hour conversation with your younger self around why you shouldn't marry her, how it turned out to be the wrong decision, and what you should focus on instead.
[+] devoply|6 years ago|reply
The other study mentioned shows regrets follow opportunity. So yes it's very likely... as we don't know the results of taking the other road and never will. So maybe the lesson is whatever you choose be content with that choice... in that at least you had a choice where none might have existed. But that's not the human condition.
[+] AmericanChopper|6 years ago|reply
This is essentially why I’d never take that theoretical opportunity. I’ve had plenty of hard times in life that could have been avoided if I knew what the future held. But I think I always come out the other end (eventually) better off in one way or another. Which I credit to the principles that I try to live my life by. If I was instead making decisions based on some infallible vision of the future, who knows how things would have turned out. There’s plenty of things in my life right now that I value a lot, and when I ask myself ‘would I trade those things to avoid hardship I experienced in the past’, the answer is always no.
[+] rolltiide|6 years ago|reply
It doesn't have to actually be MORE regrets, it is just as powerful with the observations of merely different possible ones.

While reading the article I was wondering what circumstances people were in when they made those choices.

For example, was it the late-20s to mid-30s man that was otherwise worried about companionship who then seemingly felt lucky or blessed to find a good match without compromise? Before the likelyhood of age-congruent marriages became a thing of the past?

Would just knowing to avoid that person actually prevent them from making the exact same mistake? Swiping on dating apps and enduring meetups with the forced pretext of dating?

Would the distraction of discontent in their relationship really be less fulfilling for them than the distraction of a wish for companionship, or the drive to merely check the box on rites of passage?

Is there a way to know?

[+] alexpetralia|6 years ago|reply
This is a great thought experiment. We don't observe the counterfactual.
[+] blackflame7000|6 years ago|reply
The grass is always greener on the other side, but a bird in hand is better than 2 in the bush.
[+] Tactic|6 years ago|reply
Yes, but one path is a known bad (marry her) and the other is a possible good/bad. Weighing the amount of bad that the marriage is vs the likelihood of it being worse is key.
[+] iandanforth|6 years ago|reply
I've wanted to build this as a service (for fun). Basically a sight to give advice to yourself from two years in the past. Why two years? It's long enough to have some perspective while retaining enough detail to be useful. The fun bit would be that you would have to contribute your advice before you got advice from people similar to yourself.

It would be a lot of fun to try to get basic demographics out of people giving the advice and try to find out the best way to pair advice given with advice seekers. Age? Some life choice your contemplating? Gender/Orientation/Race who knows what would make advice actually useful!

Probably a terrible idea but it's fun to think about.

[+] ianai|6 years ago|reply
Seems like a neat use for massive cross sectional data. The more people share the closer their advice can be tailored to someone like them 2 years ago. Similar applies for receiving advice. I’m thinking like an okcupid style question system.

But please build in a way to undo all those previous questions and answers with an account. Sometimes everything changes for somebody. Or they meet the love of their life and should be able to add that into their current perspective.

Might be a good way to help people bracket the bigger life changes and realize they need to make them.

[+] oceanman888|6 years ago|reply
Maybe start a subreddit?
[+] EndXA|6 years ago|reply
Key quote from the article:

> Participants mostly gave themselves advice around relationships (“Don’t marry her. Do. Not. Marry. Her.”), education (“Go to college”), selfhood (“Be yourself”), direction and goals (“Keep moving, keep taking chances, and keep bettering yourself”), and money (“Save more, spend less”). These topics closely match the most common topics mentioned in research on people’s regrets.

> Most participants said that the advice they offered was tied to a pivotal event in their past, such as a time they were bullied, a relationship breakup, or an incident involving drink or drugs, and about half the time they had regret for what had happened. The timing of these pivotal events was most commonly between age 10 and 30 (consistent with research into the reminiscence bump – the way that we tend to recall more autobiographical memories from our teens and early adulthood).

[+] novia|6 years ago|reply
> The majority of participants also said that following the advice would have brought their younger self closer to the kind of person they aspired to be, rather than making them more like their “ought self” (that is, the kind of person that other people or society said they should be).

This was the most important sentence for me.

[+] lapnitnelav|6 years ago|reply
Teens and early adulthood are the formative years and where most people are susceptible to peer pressure and gain an ability to make their own decision.

Therefore it's very likely that the combination of these factors are particularly powerful at enabling bad decisions in that age range.

[+] durandal1|6 years ago|reply
Now I need the study that tells me whether following that advice leads to the expected outcomes.
[+] sebringj|6 years ago|reply
Context is the crux of it all IMO. We try this with our kids. It doesn't work all that well. They have to have some context or experience to understand what the advice means as for myself, I would have a difficult time blindly acting on advice without understanding and unfortunately, hitting a wall with your head is a very good lesson.
[+] sebringj|6 years ago|reply
In relating to religion as it seems to have some parallels of missing "context" for me. Religions have amazingly very great advice in many things but I cannot accept the rationale behind them and have discarded them missing the good parts of the advice so I end up "discovering" things later in life that are actually good practices because I understood them from a framework that made sense to me. Some examples would be fasting and being thankful for what you have. Advice I would never take if I didn't have my own frame of reference.
[+] Godel_unicode|6 years ago|reply
I think this leads towards how I try to give advice; I tend to stay away from saying "do x" but rather telling a story about what happened when I tried it.
[+] xhrpost|6 years ago|reply
This is the struggle is it not? While it seems like some lessons are best learned the hard way, it also feels like a waste of time to not learn from someone else's mistakes.
[+] BurningFrog|6 years ago|reply
"Spend more time on discussion forums, young Frog"!
[+] canada_dry|6 years ago|reply
Future Frog here...

You first learned about the VR startup that has replaced Facebook and LinkedIn from an article on HN in 2020, so keep on surfing baby (p.s. go-all-in)!

[+] mettamage|6 years ago|reply
Advice I'd give:

- Discipline yourself to train your musical skill between 14 and 20. It is fine to also try to win over girls with it (I thought it was disingenuous at the time, I was wrong).

- If you can stick to programming, do it. Just be sure to find fun in it while sticking to it, if not it's okay to drop it.

- Rush through university in 3 years (bachelor and master) in business informatics and call it a day. Do keep an active social life though and do the honours program as well. If you can't help yourself, do an academic gap year with very varied courses after your master.

- For your master, you may want to consider going to another country. If you want to work in the USA, then try to see if you can get a cheapish US master that will allow you to quality for the H1B visa.

- During this time, learn coding on your own, enough resources available by now.

- If you have issues with being social, I wrote a guide. It's attached. You'll be fine.

- If you feel addicted to video games, understand it's social contact that you're after. So simply get more of a social life.

- By doing this: your life will be nothing like mine. You'll encounter your own set of issues which shows how gritty life really is. You'll simply have to deal with it. Also, life could be far grittier so count your blessings!

[+] PureParadigm|6 years ago|reply
Thanks for sharing. I'd like to read your guide about being social. Did you mean to add a link?
[+] daodedickinson|6 years ago|reply
> It is fine to also try to win over girls with it (I thought it was disingenuous at the time, I was wrong).

I have some regrets over some similar things, like letting a girl's ex scare me about her, and feeling it would be wrong for me to reciprocate the feelings of a 15 year old I liked when I was 17... sad you felt that way about music, why did you think that?

[+] 314|6 years ago|reply
- And wear sunscreen.
[+] distant_hat|6 years ago|reply
People can try giving similar advise to their younger nephews, nieces, etc and see the effect. The effect would be about the same of any advise given to their younger selves. Younger selves are excellent at ignoring advise from older ones.
[+] ekianjo|6 years ago|reply
Yup, and advices are rarely intemporal. Some things work better in certain contexts than others.
[+] protomyth|6 years ago|reply
I find it odd that they didn't have more folks in the same category as myself. I would want to warn myself about the circumstances of the deaths of some people I knew. A phrase such as "Make sure he doesn't get on that bus" seems a little more important in my eyes. I suppose the warning about horrible events would have more effect, but if limited to personal experiences it would seem saving folks in your orbit would be more popular. Maybe its a sign of how much safer the world has become.
[+] kbenson|6 years ago|reply
It might have to do primarily with how the question is asked. If you say "what information about the future would you impart to your past self if given the chance", then that opens it up to broadly changing future events. But "what advice would you give yourself" presents it more as what would you say to benefit yourself the most.

It's also possible that those that have had people close to them die in easily preventable ways may think of it differently. Having someone important to you die in a car crash is different than having them die of old age or of cancer or some genetic disorder, which are broadly either unchangeable, unknowable of what causes it for sure, or both.

[+] WalterBright|6 years ago|reply
Buy more MSFT, a lot more.
[+] scarface74|6 years ago|reply
And hold onto after it crashed around 1999 until Balmer left.
[+] Syzygies|6 years ago|reply
The one piece of advice a professor might have been able to give their class in the 60's or 70's, but I could never say now: Have more sex.
[+] hypeibole|6 years ago|reply
Why couldn't you say it now?

I had the idea young people are having less sex than the generations before.

[+] JohnJamesRambo|6 years ago|reply
I’d mostly want to tell my younger self to invest everything I had in bitcoin.
[+] achenatx|6 years ago|reply
and dont keep it in mount gox...
[+] kstenerud|6 years ago|reply
If I had followed the advice I'd have to give my past self to avoid unnecessary pain and hardship, I wouldn't be where I am today, and I wouldn't have met my wife.

I'll take all the pain and suffering it took to get to where I am. It made me who I am, and affected who I met, and who I kept, and how strong my relationships are.

I wouldn't trade that for anything.

[+] aitchnyu|6 years ago|reply
That's why I would tell myself to umm... lean in. I believed my love should be constantly high and less of a fight. I never believed relationships can survive lows. I thought study and programming should be effortless, so I was hard on myself when I was not smooth like an olympic gymnast. I could have excercised harder through some aches, hangovers, insomnia etc.
[+] lisper|6 years ago|reply
"Buy Microsoft at the IPO." :-)

Seriously: be nicer to people. Everyone around you just as insecure and unsure of themselves as your are. You don't need to show you're better or cleverer than everyone else. Just smile, be friendly, and chill. And offer to help out with the grunt work more often.

[+] hyperion2010|6 years ago|reply
"However scary it may seem, switch to emacs, evil mode is good enough."

"There's this thing called lisp, you should check it out."

Amusingly my younger self did actually get this advice (thanks Randall [0]), but I did not know what to do with it at the time, other than to file it away for exploration in the future. Only over a decade later when I finally had enough context could I actually take action on that advice.

This is one of the reasons why I find general advice to be useless in many cases. "You should do X" or "You should not do X" are practically useless, and often the person already knows that they should or should not do something, but they have no idea how to get from where they are to that imagined future. If all you can give is advice, the best you can do is try to give advice about the very next step so that someone can actually act on it. "Check out lisp" should be, "go install this package, and read this book," or "here's a professor you should take a course from." When I have gotten advice in the form of "take a course from this person," it has always proved to be invaluable because the first step was stupidly simple, and the rest of the journey had a guide who had walk that way before.

0. https://xkcd.com/224/

[+] rdiddly|6 years ago|reply
Raise your hand if you thought the first paragraph was going to end in this somewhat more humorous way:

The question is an old favourite – if you could travel back in time, what advice would you give to your younger self? Yet despite the popularity of this thought experiment, no one has actually done it.

[+] newsgremlin|6 years ago|reply
My advice would be to try new things, engage and embrace them. I've found im not the type of person that can do the same thing over and over for years, even if it's something im supposedly good at. Finding the courage to make that change has been the pivotal point.
[+] ollifi|6 years ago|reply
Tricky, I would say it's not worth it to gamble with winner takes it all type of things. You'll never notice that you made it and actually will probably fail.

On the other hand I would not have much respect for young person who would actually follow this advice.

[+] ianai|6 years ago|reply
Here’s my contribution after listening to “how to change your mind” by Pollen.

Keep your mind open, but live in the moment. Embrace those around you who embrace you-and go after Pamela.