Regret for what
we have or have not done can be tormenting.
Everyone has
regrets of one kind or another resulting from what we perceive as having made
the wrong decision when confronted with a choice.
Sometimes we
enter into a decision consciously, taking full responsibility for our actions;
at other times, we do so with avoidance, denial, and in extreme cases,
obliviousness.
Mr. Y., for example, became disabled
with crippling arthritis and emphysema. As he looked back at his past, he realized that he had ignored his bodily symptoms that resulted from years of
alcohol use and smoking. Vaguely cognizant of his choices, he continued to
indulge in these habits until he ruined his health.
Rather than
perpetuate regret, we may examine ways to stave off further regrets. In the course of psychotherapy, Ms. U.
decided that she didn’t want to stay married.
“I only hope I
don’t regret my decision in the future,” she said.
By examining the
situation from many angles, she stands a better chance of understanding the
implications of her choice.
Some people
manage to avoid regret by recognizing their failure to follow their “bliss”—
innermost desires and goals. When Ms. O. reached the age of 50, she realized
that if she didn’t modify her life soon, she wouldn’t be able to fulfill her
dream to become a journalist.
Changes in
health can also be a catalyst for change and heading off regret. When the
writer Katherine Russell Rich was diagnosed with cancer, she left her magazine
job to devote full-time to writing her own books. (for further details, please also
refer to my blog of April 13, 2012, How Now Courage).
Approaching
regret from a cognitive point of view, reframing our thoughts from the past to
the future, and asking, “What’s next?” can also help to process regrets.
Those who dwell
in regret may suffer from imagining that they would have been better if only
they had zigged instead of zagged. Mr. A., a poet nearing the end of his life, regretted that
he sacrificed his personal life to devote fulltime to his art. He was relieved when he realized that no one knows whether
an alternative would have been more gratifying to him. There are simply no
controls in the experiment of life.
Distinguishing
between productive and nonproductive regrets can also be useful.
Regretting what
we didn’t do in the past serves little purpose. “Water under the bridge,” the cliché opines. But to regret harming another person in the past may help us
modify future behavior. Take for example, a parent who immediately responds to diverse situations with anger. By reflecting, he recognizes the need to replace his typical reaction with an attempt to understand his child's actions.
Conclusion: Everyone has regrets. As Edith Piaf expressed in the popular song, Je Ne
Regrette Rien (I Don’t Regret Anything), rather than tormenting ourselves, the
goal is to learn from our regrets and relinquish them before they impact negatively on
the present.
Dear Reader: I
welcome your comments. jsimon145@gmail.com
your last blog about regret brilliant. i have to work on that perhaps the mind slips and then one needs to reframe.
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