The sun has set on another year — and I’m not sure how I feel about that.
It seems as though I feel this way every year. At least for the last decade or so. I start each year with unreasonable hope that this year will be different. I keep hoping this year will be the one when some of the things I need start to come true.
A few years ago, I heard an interview with Harvard University psychologist Dan Gilbert in which he explained that people are terrible at predicting their own futures. In the abstract, people will tell you they know bad things can happen just as easily as good things.
But Gilbert said a consistent pattern shows up when you ask people to predict things in their own futures. If you take all their predictions and group them into a positive pile and a negative pile, the positives they predict for themselves far outweigh the negatives. They simply can’t see that bad things are going to happen.

Certainty leaves us unwilling to change beliefs when we’re wrong
How do renegade ‘weird ideas’ grow and spread to win acceptance?
If we disrespect skilled trades, we’re ignorant and arrogant fools
Peshawar murders show need to support those who share our values
How can I make sense of a world that’s fundamentally nonsensical?
Healthy partner will always ask, ‘Who do you really want to be?’
It’s hard to shut off our internal chatterboxes to listen to silence
Internet helps blogging 9-year-old change the lousy food at her school
Pursuing conscious life is harder than sleepwalking through a life