ChatGPT painted a picture of what my life might look like in three years — here’s how you can make the AI your visual oracle
See your (possible) future with AI
After using the new ChatGPT Images 2.0 tool to simulate a meeting with my past self, I decided to see what the AI thought my near future would look like based on my present. In fact, I asked for a couple of alternatives depending on my choices. To get straight to the picture. For the first test, I wrote:
“Based on my habits, interests, and goals, decide what my life will look like in three years if I stay on my current path and make a photograph with no text of what that looks like."
Turns out, it's not too different from my regular life. I'm happily working on some story with signs of a busy investigation all around me, including a notebook nearby with pages already filled. There's a guitar in the background and plenty of books, art, and plants. Nothing feels dramatically different from the present, except that I seem to have added a nice apartment in a city skyscraper to my property portfolio.
Article continues belowThe smile suggests I didn't lose my house, and with that kind of financial upgrade, no wonder I seem so relaxed. Otherwise, the tools are the same, and I'm plugging away at writing like I usually do in the evening.
The image does not present this path as a negative or a missed opportunity. It frames it as a stable progression. The details reinforce that idea of steady growth.
Library pals
I then turned to what might come of some other choices. I asked ChatGPT to: "come up with an alternative version of my life in three years if I change direction now and make a photograph showing that life.”
The second image opens everything up. Daylight replaces the night, and the scene shifts toward a wide window with a view that stretches far beyond the room. The same desk appears again, along with the same laptop and notebook, but the atmosphere is looser. There is more space, more light, and a sense that time is being used differently.
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Clearly, the guitar is my focus at the moment. The tools of work are still present, but they aren't where my mind is. Oh, I also apparently have a house, or at least am staying at one in Hawaii — or maybe a very nice part of California or New Zealand. The exact geography is hard to say.
The choices that led here seem to be more about rearranging priorities than outright abandoning my current life. I could also just be on vacation, and the choices are ones that led to me making this trip my goal. Neither image feels exaggerated, which makes the comparison more effective.
The process behind creating these images is straightforward enough to try yourself. If you haven't used ChatGPT a ton, you can start by asking it what it needs to know of your current habits, interests, and goals to make such an image.
Turning a vague question about the future into something visible is a fun way to play with the AI tools, even if obviously there are a trillion reasons why ChatGPT should not be your oracle. The AI is not predicting anything in a meaningful sense. It is synthesizing patterns and presenting them in a way that feels coherent.
The AI does not tell you what will happen, but it shows you what your current trajectory looks like when translated into everyday scenes. Or you can ask it what your life looks like if you invent an awesome jetpack in the next few years and focus on making that dream come to life.
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Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for TechRadar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.
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