This past summer, I read a book called No Regrets. A somewhat autobiographical
semi-historical narrative, unexpectedly interrupted at times with
poetry-related bits, it wasn’t exactly my cuppa.
Perhaps I’m not used to such a rambling, mish-mash
of prose, and poetry that didn’t always appear to be poetry.
Personally, I felt it could have used editing,
particularly for grammar, punctuation errors, and run-on sentences that
interrupted the flow. I’ll leave the poetry to those more gifted in that art
form.
But the theme of the book started me wondering:
Can you live a life with no regrets?
I suppose, if you have a Pollyanna outlook, or
you’re lucky enough not to commit any egregious mistakes along the way, it’s
possible.
But I’m not that person.
Yes, there are aspects of my life for which I’m
satisfied or even duly proud.
But I do have regrets.
True, mistakes are meant to be a learning
experience. But when the same situation occurs over and over, what is the
lesson to be learned?
For example, you meet someone who seems pretty
nice, but after dating for a while – or sometimes only once – you discover what
a jerk the person really is. It wasn’t something you could tell without a few
dates. Sometimes the relationship might be very hurtful.
Okay, one such relationship would be a lesson
to be more careful and discerning about people. Probably shouldn’t have dated
that one.
But when it happens multiple times, you have to
wonder why life is beating you up this way. How are you supposed to know
nice-seeming people are really creeps when they give no sign?
This is particularly distressing when you meet
nice people in-between, who actually are
nice people, but simply aren’t for you.
I’ve often heard others say, “If I could live
my life over…” This is usually followed by, “knowing what I know now.”
But no.
Realistically, some of the things I know now
were not knowable when I was a child.
I wish I could re-do my entire school life,
from first through 12th grades. Not knowing what I know now, but
being encouraged to work harder and do better. Since my grades were usually fine, I didn’t
get much encouragement. Besides, I was just a girl.
It would have been nice to have been given
reasons to do well, a bigger picture – like winning the medal in a particular
subject, or preparing the way for an academic scholarship later.
Expecting me to do my best just because I
should, when I didn’t see it getting me anywhere, didn’t work.
A word of encouragement, a smile, an expression
of my parents being pleased when I did well would have gone a long way. Never
mind the present-day habit of paying
children for good grades.
Instead, when I earned a B, I was asked why it
wasn’t an A. Or when the next grade was
an A, I was asked, “Why didn’t you do that last time?”
I’ve been told this negative reinforcement is a
particularly Irish attitude. I don’t know if there’s a rule among people of
Irish heritage that it is wrong to ever praise a child for good work, but that
was my parents’ philosophy.
While it’s true that my ADD and mild dyslexia
got in the way of some things, “knowing what I know now” probably would have
kept me from developing my own unique compensations. I might never have learned
to think outside the box.
I suppose it would have been nice to have extra
time to complete standardized tests. But most of the time, I didn’t need it. I
did better on those tests than the ones my teachers dreamed up.
Social life was always more difficult for me
than academics.
If I had it to do over, I would wish my mother
hadn’t been so focused on instilling empathy – “How would you feel if someone
said that to you?” (ignoring that someone had)
– and had, instead, instilled a sense of justice and standing up for myself,
something I’ve never been good at doing.
I wish someone had clued me in on what people
didn’t like about me so I could fix it, instead of still having no clue how to
make friends. It would have saved me from hanging around people I didn’t
particularly like simply because they let me.
I wish I’d worked harder in school and gone to
a better university. Maybe then I wouldn’t have spent 30+ years in a profession
I didn’t like and wasn’t suited for.
I wish I were kinder. I try, but it gets
difficult when people are pushing my buttons.
I wish I knew how to be more loving – or at
least how to be more comfortable expressing it, other than on paper.
I wish my feelings didn’t get hurt as easily as
they do.
I wish I had more patience. Some people think
I’m very patient; I know better.
I wish I didn’t talk so much. I know people
don’t want to hear what I have to say most of the time. Sometimes it feels like
an alien has taken over and controls my mouth.
I wish I didn’t have so much anger inside me.
People easily say, “Just let it go,” but can never offer a way to do that.
No regrets? I don’t think regrets are a bad
thing. They show you where you need improvement.
Life isn’t about perfection. It’s about
becoming your best possible self.
If you regret nothing, you never see the potential
for improvement.
Yes, I wish I hadn’t had certain experiences
and relationships or made certain decisions. Would that have made me a
different person? Possibly. But I’m not convinced that would be a bad thing.
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