This isn't a trick question, nor do I have a particular answer in mind.
Tomorrow, all of your memories are going to be wiped. There is a crucial piece of information that you need to make sure you remember, and more specifically, you need to be very confident you were the one that sent this message and not a third party pretending to be you.
How do you go about transmitting, "signing", and verifying such a message*?
--edit: I should have clarified that one of the assumptions is that some malicious third party can/will be attempting to send you false information from "yourself" and you need to distinguish between that and what's really you.
--edit2: this may be formally impossible, I don't actually know. If anyone can demonstrate this I'd be very appreciative.
--edit3: I don't have a particular universal definition for the term "memory wipe" in mind, mainly because I didn't want to pigeonhole the discussion. I think this pretty closely mimics reality. So I think it's totally fine to say, "If you retain this type of memory, then I'd do X."
First idea that comes to mind: log on to my online bank, make some wire transfers e.g. between my own accounts, and include the message in the wire transfer description. Alternatively, if the message is very long, an URL to it.
Getting access to my online bank requires both a username/password combo that only exists in my memory, as well as a separate authentication by entering a numerical code from a unique list of codes that gets randomly queried on each log-in, so the adversary shouldn't be capable of forging this message. When my memories are wiped, I will forget the username and password, but as long as I have a reliable way of proving my identity, I can go to the bank and have them reset.
This assumes that I can still know who I "should" be after having my memories wiped. There's also the risk of me never happening to look at my transaction history to notice the message, so this isn't entirely fool-proof.
For that you simply add any non-verified message to yourself telling you to look at your bank. You wouldn't trust that that message came from you, but you'd at least check.