Don’t Forget, You’re Going to Die

That’s the happiness notification I get 5 times a day. Now I’ve checked the psychology, and it’s not at all what I expected.

Alexander M. Combstrong
Mind Cafe

--

Photoangel / Freepik

Here’s a mixed and fascinating bag of psychology for you: If you contemplate your own death, some weird things happen. Next time you’re in court, you better hope your judge doesn’t use this kind of meditation.

Yet in Bhutan, people are expected to do this five times a day, and it’s one of the things credited for making it known as one of the happiest countries in the world. The idea is that it puts your life into perspective and lets you see a fuller picture of the things that get to you. That’s more Buddhist contemplations than science, but that doesn’t mean it’s not correct or valuable.

There’s an app I have called WeCroak that sends me reminders that I’m going to die, five times a day. After several years of using the app, my response to the notifications over time has been pretty interesting, but more interesting is the unexpected psychology behind contemplating your own death.

“Don’t forget, you’re going to die.” – WeCroak notifications

Gravitate Towards Happy Thoughts Automatically

--

--

Alexander M. Combstrong
Mind Cafe

Research-backed ways to change your life for the better. Out now: The Confident Introvert’s Handbook. Actor/screenwriter. Forge, Better Humans, Mind Cafe.