At the end of your life, will you look back over time and be content with how you spent your days or will you wrestle with regrets? Use regret to propel yourself to a better way of living. At the end of your life, will you look back over time and be content with how you spent your days, or will you wrestle with regrets? Confronting this crucial question can be a pivot-point in your life. For how you will eventually answer it is determined by whether or not you are learning from your past, living fully in the present, and freeing yourself for your future. Either your past is serving as a springboard to a better tomorrow or it is the proverbial albatross keeping you from moving forward today.
Chances are you have missed doors of opportunity you should have entered. There are conversations you wish you could do over. Irreplaceable moments where you would wind back time if you could. Every honest human being has a few regrets. But not everyone knows just how sneaky these regrets can be. If left unchecked, they can sabotage the things that matter most and waylay your attempts to live a life you will love. Why? Because regret is a close cousin to guilt. And guilt that lingers too long turns into shame, the most toxic of all emotions. Read by Les Parrott. 3 CDs. 3 hours.