My deepest regret is that I can't go back to 1970 and relive my life knowing what I know now. That would be heaven, wouldn't it?
At 27 perhaps I'm not the appropriate age to pass comment, but no I don't think it would be. Part of the fun of being young is the fact that you basically have no idea what the hell you're doing with life most of the time. Certainly a more mature version of myself would have been much more financially responsible but god damn life would have been so much less interesting. Yeah I made mistakes, some big ones, but I'm still here and kicking and you know what, that's pretty awesome in and of itself.
Well said
Meh. It was okay, but it would have been much more fun if I'd done the right thing instead of the stupid/thoughtless thing. And through the years, the previous mistakes were compounded, until I ended up a long way down the wrong road, and no clear idea how I got there..
There are so many. let's take one: musical ability. I do have some. But I listened to friends of mine, who were as confused as me, possibly more so. They said something like, "If you get lessons for playing music, you'll only end up sounding like the teachers. Better to practice and do it your way.". They were foolish for saying it, but I was more foolish for listening, and being too proud to unbend. Now I'm a tad too old, I can't go back and undo that or change it.
Years later, I learned that Mozart did it his way,
then went to university to study music,
then went back to doing it his way...
only better. If I'd been a little smarter, a little more knowledgeable, I'd have known that Think of how much more fun I'd have had if I had gone to uni/college to study music, writing, and a bunch of other stuff. (Note: not saying I'm as good sa Mozart, just saying that I can see now it would have been better to do what he did).
And that's one of the minor ones.
But, as I maintain, it's better to look forward than look back. Just every now and then, it hurts, but I've learned.
One of the saddest aspects of life is that we never really learn from the things that go right, only the things that go wrong.