
Who Could You Be a Year from Now?
| Rob Brezsny Mar 17, 2026 |

Many cultures worldwide have celebrated their New Year as spring begins, around the vernal equinox. I propose we all do that now with a rousing ritual, as described below.
The Sacred Contract with Your Future Self
I invite you to write a letter to the person you will be one year from today. Tell this Future You that you have taken a vow to accomplish three feats by then. Say why these feats are more important to you than anything else.
Describe them. Brainstorm about what you’ll do to make them happen. Draw pictures or make collages that capture your excitement about them. Then create a sanctified space where you will put this letter. Open it a year from now.
+
Why This Works
Let’s talk about why this practice is different from the usual goal-setting that comes every January and often fades by February.
Most goals fail because they’re written to an imaginary version of yourself. You declare you’re going to lose 10 pounds or write a novel or learn Portuguese, but you’re not actually making a promise to anyone real.
You’re performing goal-setting for an audience of cultural expectations. Maybe you post your intentions on social media, announce them at parties, or write them in a journal.
But there’s no actual relationship or real covenant involved. There’s just you, performing the ritual of aspiration without the substance of commitment.
The practice I’m inviting you to do now will work because you’re entering into a relationship with a specific, real person: Future You.
Not the idealized version that’s already perfect and doesn’t need to work at anything. The actual person who will exist one year from today. They will be dealing with the consequences of what Present You does or doesn’t do in the coming months.
When you write to Future You, you’re acknowledging that they are real,. They have needs and hopes, and they’re counting on you. You’re creating accountability not to an abstract standard of self-improvement, but to an actual person who will open this letter and feel either gratitude or disappointment about what you did with this year.
+
How to write this letter so it has optimal power:
Part 1: The Greeting
Start with an intimate welcome and invitation. Example:
“Hello, my beautiful, beloved future self! I love you so much! You’re my hero! Thank you for entering into this daring covenant with me. Let’s collaborate to create the best possible destiny for each other.”
Or:
“To the gorgeous version of me who exists one year from today: I see you. I know you’ve been through things I can’t imagine yet. You have faced challenges and had victories. I made you a promise, and I am asking for your help in fulfilling it.”
The greeting should establish that this is a conversation between two real people who adore each other and are on the same team.
+
Part 2: The Vow
This is where you get serious and invoke the power and glory of your highest powers. Don’t just say “I have three goals.” Say “I am taking a sacred vow.”
A sacred vow is different from a goal. A goal is something you’d like to happen, whereas a vow is something you’re staking your integrity on. A vow has weight and consequences. You could say:
“I am taking a sacred vow to accomplish three feats by the time you read this. These aren’t optional. These aren’t ‘nice to haves.’ They are the three things that will determine whether I spent this past year serving my deepest purpose or betraying it.”
Notice the language: FEATS, not goals. Feats require courage, strenuous effort, and risk. Feats are worthy of being celebrated, even revered. They are the stuff of legends.

Part 3: Why These Three Things Matter More Than Anything Else
This is the heart of the letter. You are boldly and brazenly honest about what actually matters to you, versus what your conditioning and peer pressure try to tell you.
When people fail at their goals, it’s often because they’re pursuing goals that don’t align with their deepest values. They say they want to get in shape, but what they really want is to feel alive in their body.
They say they want to make more money, but what they really want is freedom from financial anxiety. They say they want to write a book or record an album or have an art gallery show, but what they really want is to be taken seriously as a thinker and creator.
So before you name your three feats, I hope you will answer: “What do I want my life to have been about when I look back on this year?” Not what will make you look good. Not what seems responsible or mature or properly ambitious.
When you open this letter one year from now, what will make you feel like you flourished during this precious year of your mysterious life?
Examples of why your feats might matter:
“This feat matters more than anything else because if I don’t do it, I’ll be the same person next year that I am right now, and I can’t bear that. I’ve been stuck in this pattern for five years, and this is the year it ends.”
“This feat matters because my daughter or son is watching how I live my life, and I want them to see someone who keeps promises to themselves, who doesn’t just dream but acts.”
“This feat matters because I’ve been carrying my unrealized potential my whole life like stones in my pocket, and I’m either going to finally actualize it or I need to grieve it and move on. No more middle ground.”
“This feat matters because I survived cancer / divorce / bankruptcy / depression to get here, and I didn’t survive just to play small. I survived to build a more beautiful destiny with this second chance.”
“This feat matters because I’ve glimpsed what I’m capable of at my best, and I want to spend a whole year living closer to that edge. Not fixing what’s broken, but celebrating what’s extraordinary.”
“This feat matters because joy is serious business. This is the year I stop treating pleasure, beauty, and delight as rewards I have to earn and start treating them as the whole point.”
“This feat matters because I’ve been given rare gifts—temperament, circumstances, relationships, hard-won wisdom—and I want to be a worthy steward of them. Not out of obligation, but out of sheer gratitude for being alive.”
“This feat matters because the people and places and ideas I love most are asking something of me, and I finally feel ready to answer. This is my yes.”
“This feat matters because I’ve already done impossible things, and I know now that the fear before a great leap and the exhilaration during it are the same sensation. I want more of that aliveness.”
+
Part 4: Describe Each Feat in Sensory Detail
Don’t just write “Finish my book” or “Create my dream garden” or “Build a stellar intimate relationship.”
Instead, describe what it will feel like when Future You has accomplished your desirable feats:
“You will hold the completed manuscript in your hands. You will feel the weight of it, not just the physical pages but the weight of having actually finished a creation this big. You will remember all the days you chose this instead of easier pleasures and all the moments you pushed through the fear that it wasn’t good enough. And you will know that you’re a soul who finishes what they start.”
Or:
“You will be standing in the garden you planted, harvesting tomatoes in July, and you’ll realize with amazement that you created this. You transformed that dead patch into something alive and beautiful. And you’ll understand that if you can do that, you can do anything.”
The more sensory, specific, and emotionally resonant you make the description, the more power it has to pull you toward it across the year.
+
Part 5: The Brainstorms: Making It Real
Here you shift from vision to strategy. You prove to Future You that you’re serious.
For each feat, brainstorm specifically what you will do to make it happen:
What you’ll do from:
– March-May
– June-July
– August-September
– October-December
+
– Weekly: Protect three mornings per week for nothing but these feats.
– Monthly: Share your progress with trusted allies.
– Daily: Remember why this feels so good and how it amplifies your sense that your life is meaningful.
+
The brainstorms should be specific but also flexible enough to adjust as circumstances change. You’re not striving to control the future. You’re creating conditions that make the future you want more likely.

Part 6: The Visual Component
Words alone may not carry the full freight of your commitment. So draw pictures. Make collages. Create symbols. Visualize the specific scenarios in your imagination.
PS: You don’t have to be an artist. In fact, crude drawings may have more power because they bypass your critical mind and access more primal sources.
+
Part 7: The Closing
End the letter by giving Future You permission to be honest about what happened.
“When you open this letter a year from now, tell the truth. If I kept these vows, celebrate. If I broke them, examine why with compassion but without excuses. Either way, you’re reading this, which means you survived another year, and that’s not nothing. I love you. I’m doing this for you. Everything I do this year, I do with you in mind. See you in 365 days. — Your devoted past self”
+
Creating the Sanctified Space
Don’t just stuff this letter in a drawer. Create a sanctified space for it:
Option 1: The Altar. If you have a personal altar or sacred space in your home, this letter becomes a central element. Place it there along with objects that symbolize your three feats. Light a candle when you place it there. Speak your vows out loud.
Option 2: The Sealed Container. Get a beautiful box, an artful envelope, or a decorated jar. Place it somewhere you’ll see it regularly but can’t casually access.
Option 3: The Buried Treasure. Bury it somewhere on your property in a waterproof container. Mark the spot with a beautiful object. The act of burying it makes it even more ceremonial, and the act of digging it up a year later becomes its own ritual.
Option 4: The Witnessed Vow. Read the letter aloud to someone you trust, then give it to them to hold for a few moments. The presence of a witness makes the vow more binding.
Option 5: The Time Capsule. Create a time capsule that includes the letter, photos from right now, objects that symbolize where you are today, and maybe even recordings of your voice. Make it rich with context so that Future You gets the full picture of who was making these vows.
The key is that the space must feel sacred to you. It should communicate: This is a binding agreement with my future self.
+
The Monthly Check-In Ritual
Don’t wait a year to think about the letter again. Create a monthly ritual where you commune with a copy of the letter without opening its actual container:
On the 21st of each month (or whatever date you wrote it), remember what you wrote. Ask yourself: “Am I keeping my vows? Am I on track? If Future Me opened this today, would they be grateful or disappointed?”
Don’t criticize yourself if you’re off track. Just recommit, adjust, and course-correct.
The letter is a living covenant, not a static document. You’re allowed to renegotiate if circumstances genuinely change. But you’ve got to do it consciously, not by drifting.
+
What Happens When You Open It
One year from now you will perform the ritual of opening this letter. Make it ceremonial. Don’t do it while distracted. Clear your schedule for an hour.
Open the letter. Read what Past You wrote to you. And then write back.
Yes, write a response to Past You. Tell them what happened. Which vows did you keep rigorously, and which did you only partially carry out. Tell the Past You what you learned and what surprised you. What do you want them to know about who you became?
And then—if you want to continue the practice—write a new letter to the person you’ll be on March 21, 2028.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Three Types of Feats Worth Vowing
As you choose your three feats, consider that there are different categories of transformative action:
Type 1: The External Achievement. Something you can point to in the world as evidence that you did the thing. A completed manuscript, a degree earned, a house built, a garden planted, a business launched, or a performance given.
Type 2: The Internal Transformation. A shift in how you relate to yourself, to others, to the world. Healing an addiction, developing a spiritual practice, transforming a toxic pattern, learning to receive love, making peace with a difficult part of yourself.
Type 3: The Relational Shift. A change in how you show up in your relationships. Deepening your partnership, healing a family rupture, creating genuine community, or becoming the kind of friend / parent / partner / mentor you want to be.
+
A powerful set of three feats might include one from each of the above categories. That way you’re developing holistically, not just achieving externally while staying stuck internally; not just transforming internally while avoiding external impact; not just focusing on relationships while neglecting your individual growth.
+
The Dark Night Clause
Include this in your letter:
“I know there will be times this year when I want to abandon these vows. There will be moments when they seem impossible, stupid, or irrelevant. I’ll be tempted to tell myself that circumstances changed or that I was naive to think I could do this.
“So I’m writing this now, while I’m clear and committed: Those dark moments are part of the path, not evidence that I should quit. The resistance is the work. The doubt is the initiation.
“When I want to give up, I will remember why these feats matter more than anything else. I will recommit, even if only for one more day.
“This is the vow: not that I’ll never doubt, but that I’ll keep going anyway.”
+
Your Assignment From Past You to Future You
Right now, today, you could:
1. Get materials. Beautiful paper, colored pencils or markers, magazines for collage, a container or envelope that feels charged with magic.
2. Create space. Set aside an hour minimum. Turn off your phone. Light a candle. Put on music that makes you feel deep and rich. Make tea. Settle in.
3. Meditate on the question: What do I want my life to have been about when I look back on this year? Not what should you want, but what do you actually want?
4. Choose your three feats. Don’t overthink it. Your body and your heart know. Choose the three things that make you feel scared and excited in equal measure.
5. Write the letter. Don’t rush it. This is a sacred document.
6. Create the visual component. Draw. Collage. Make it vivid and real.
7. Sanctify the space. Choose how you’ll store this letter and make it ceremonial.
8. Read it aloud. To yourself in the mirror, your spirit allies, or to the universe. Make it real by speaking it.
9. Seal it. Once it’s sealed, it’s done. No changing your mind. It’s a time capsule now.
10. Set a reminder for one year from today, and for monthly check-ins.
And then, live like someone who made a vow. Because you did. And Future You is counting on you. They’re already grateful for what you’re about to do.