Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - BITESIZE | 5 Life Lessons Everybody Learns Too Late (And How to Live With Fewer Regrets) | Bronnie Ware #601
Episode Date: December 5, 2025What do you think you might be saying on your deathbed? Will you be looking back at your life with a sense of joy and completeness, or, do you think that perhaps you might be consumed with regret? ... As today’s guest shares, “It’s easy to assume that you will live with great health to a ripe old age, then die peacefully in your sleep wearing your favourite pyjamas but it doesn’t work out that way for most people…” Feel Better Live More Bitesize is my weekly podcast for your mind, body, and heart. Each week I’ll be featuring inspirational stories and practical tips from some of my former guests. Today’s clip is from episode 383 of the podcast with former palliative care nurse and author of the best-selling book ‘The Top 5 Regrets of the Dying’, Bronnie Ware. In this clip, we reflect on some of the meaningful lessons Bronnie learned from those at the end of life, and she shares some thought provoking insights that could help us live better lives right now. Thanks to our sponsor https://drinkag1.com/livemore Show notes and the full podcast are available at https://drchatterjee.com/383 Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
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live more. Welcome to Feel Better Live More bite size. You'll
weekly dose of positivity and optimism to get you ready for the weekend.
Today's clip is from episode 383 of the podcast with Bronny Ware,
former palliative careness, an author of the bestselling book, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying.
In this clip, we explore some of the life lessons that people often learn too late,
and she shares some thought-provoking insights that could help us the better lives right.
now. There's something about the truths that people share on their deathbed that teaches us about
life. I mean, reading them for me caused me to reflect on everything in my life, not just my work,
family balance, everything. How am I living my life? And I would also say that I think I came
across it when I was ready to receive it.
Yes.
And so I wonder, could you just outline those top five regrets of the dying?
Sure, sure.
I spent eight years looking after dying people.
And the most common regret during those eight years was I wish I'd lived a life true
to myself, not the life that other people expected of me.
And we'll unpack it.
It's a pretty powerful one.
The second most common was I wish I hadn't worked so hard.
And then the third was, I wish I'd had the courage to express my feelings.
And then I wish I'd stayed in touch with my friends.
And the fifth one, I wish I'd allowed myself to be happier.
I mean, there's so much there.
I was rereading them again this morning.
Because for me, I'm always trying to look at root causes.
So I'm trying to think, what's the root cause of a particular problem?
Not necessarily downstream symptoms.
What's upstream from that?
And I looked at these five regrets and I asked myself the same question.
Are they all separate or actually is one more of an umbrella where the other four feet underneath?
And to me at least, I felt that first one you shared is almost like an umbrella.
I wish I had the courage to live my life, not the life that other people expected off me.
To me at least, I feel if we get that right, like spending time with our friends, not working so hard, choosing happiness, to me they feel downstream of that kind of central idea. Now, you wrote the book. When I say that to you, does that land or do you see it differently?
It absolutely lands. And despite the amount of interviews and conversations I've had over the decade, no one's ever put it that way before.
But it absolutely lands because if you are honoring that first one and living a life
true to yourself, you are going to prioritize work-life balance.
You're not going to work as hard.
You're going to do things that make you happy like stay in touch with your friends.
You're going to do those other things.
And so, yeah, I think that's very well perceived that if you're honoring your own life,
then you certainly have less chance of having those other regrets as well.
Let's go to the second regret.
I wish I hadn't worked so hard.
Now, as a doctor, I've been very alarmed for many years at the growing rates of chronic stress,
the increasing rates of burnout.
And there was one, I think, recent UK study that suggested that 88% of UK workers had experienced.
experience some form of burnout in the past two years.
Now, this is just one study, right?
So I don't want to make a generalisation.
No, but that's still a lot of...
Whether it's slightly exaggerated or not,
that's an alarming signal in terms of what it says about our culture,
about the way that we're living our lives.
So there will be people listening right now, Bronie,
who probably feel that they work too hard.
for that person who can't see a way out,
how is that regret going to help them?
A lot of people will think there's no choice
but to work hard because of their responsibilities
and, you know, I'm a mom I have to provide for my daughter
and I get that.
I get that there's responsibilities.
But around that regret was not making work your whole life
and that was the regret that the patients shared
that they had let their work become their whole identity and their whole life.
And then when work was taken away, there was nothing left.
And they hadn't spent the time with their family that they wanted
or they hadn't achieved other personal dreams that they had hoped to.
And so I think it's a case of just creating a little bit of space.
And when, you know, I'm guilty of it, you're guilty of it.
I think any of us who have really gone for our dreams
and or being having responsibilities.
We've all worked too hard
and we've all worked ridiculously unhealthy hours at some point.
But it's about like navigating that,
pulling that in a little bit and thinking,
okay, well, I'm actually going to show up better for my work
if I have a bit of a break sometimes.
So I find now, I always say space is medicine.
So space is medicine to me.
if I leave space and I actually have to schedule it in sometimes to have
unplanned time that has no agenda just to allow myself to be in
and let the day take me wherever it wants to.
When I do that, I return to my work with so much more efficiency and clarity.
So I get things done in a shorter time than what I thought I needed.
And if you can at least just take an extra two or three hours a week off from work,
the world will keep going
and the more you can do that
and make a habit of that
of honouring some part of your life
that you're craving
whether that's more time with your family
whether that's getting out on a golf course
whatever it is
if any of us can just think
what would I love to do
if I didn't have to work so hard
and then cut out
even if it's like three hours of fortnight
or something like that
but commit to it
and create that habit of it
then life tends to expand
and support us
because we've shown the courage and the commitment to actually having a better life
and living how we want.
And so I've found that in doing that, life gives us with more space or more time to do those
things and everything else copes.
And if it's a case of I'm working 60 hours a week, if I don't work that, I'm going to get
sacked.
Well, you're probably in the wrong job.
Yeah.
You know, get sacked, find a job that's 40 hours a week or 35 hours a week and actually
try and create some space for your life.
It's like building a muscle.
And the more you do those little things.
And when I say about creating the space, it's space with no agenda.
So it's space to lie in your backyard, in your back garden or whatever and look at the sky.
Or it's, you might sort of feel like, okay, I've given myself two hours today.
I might just go to a cafe and not be on my phone, just sit and have a cup or watch people go by.
or I certainly turn my phone off a lot.
Me too.
It's really important to acknowledge that that regret around not working too hard
isn't about not loving your job.
It's just not making your job your whole life
and that you do take that other time off.
You've got to believe or you learn to believe that you'll be okay
if you do it your own way.
And the more that we can actually face the fact that we're going to die
and realize the sacredness of our time,
the more courage we have to trust in that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that idea.
Space is medicine.
Do you remember one of the first moments
when you heard something from someone who was dying
when you actually stopped and reflected on your own life?
I thought, wow, I'm sort of guilty of that.
I could maybe make a change here.
Do you remember that first moment?
Yeah, I definitely, it was with Grace, who was one of my favourite patients.
And she had stayed in a very unhappy marriage for decades.
And she'd wanted to travel around Australia and her husband didn't want to and he was a bit of an ogre.
And he ended up going into a nursing home.
And so she went straight off to the travel agent.
She was in mid-80s and picked up a catalogue, a brochure for bus tours around Australia.
but it turned out that she had lung cancer
and she'd never smoked and he'd smoked in the home all those years
and so I was looking after her, she never went anywhere
she hardly even left the house after that
or didn't leave the house once I arrived
and so she squeezed me, she was a tiny little lady
and she squeezed me in my hand in her tears
and said, promise me, Bronie, that
you'll always have the courage to live a life true to yourself
not the life others expect of you.
That's why my ears were open to hearing the same message
but in different words through other people to come, other patients to come.
And that's when I sort of really stopped and thought about it
and I was really trying hard to get going as a singer-songwriter then.
And so I was doing gigs at Singer-Songwriter nights
and open-mic nights while I was looking after the dying people.
And I didn't have a lot of confidence.
I was a non-drinker.
My father had been a very successful musician.
He was just knocking me down like crazy and telling me I was wasting my time.
remember the anguish and the heartache of grace in that moment and I thought, what does that
mean? What does that look like to live a life true to myself, not the life that other people
expect of me? And because I'd left the banking industry a good career, I'd sort of been
really condemned in the family from that as well. A good, innovative commerce. I had a good job.
A good career. I had a good job and a good career. You know, what are you trying to do now? And, you know,
It used to be a running jack.
Oh, where is she now?
What's she doing now?
You know, and all I was trying to do was find my way.
And I think that time with Grace was a real turning point because I stopped in question,
what does that even look like for me?
And I thought, well, dear, I think I could be a creative person
and make a living as a creative person because that's what I want to do.
Yeah.
It's so powerful.
I guess just that experience.
whether it causes us to
overnight transform our lives,
which it probably doesn't for anyone.
It just opens a door, doesn't it?
Yes, it's a start.
Just opens a little door to go,
oh, wow, there may be another way.
You say in your book,
this is in your year for change, right?
It is easy to assume
that you will live with great health
to a ripe old age
and then die peacefully in your sleep
wearing your favorite pajamas.
It doesn't work out
this way for most people, however. No one wants to face the fact that they may not live past 60,
they may not even live past 40, but this is the truth of life. Yeah, it is. And we all assume we're
going to live a long time. We also assume we'll have time to reflect and make changes and that
sort of thing. And it's not the way of life. I mean, you look at animals. There's always young ones
die, there's old ones die, there's middle age ones die, and it's exactly the same with
humans. And so when a child dies or a young adult, everyone says they died too soon. And of course,
you know, it's heartbreaking. I've had friends that have lost children under 10 and it's just
devastating. But that is actually how life works. And I've had quite a few friends die
in their 30s and 40s. And one of them, he rang me and he'd just been diagnosed with
stage four pancreatic cancer.
He was a songwriter.
And he said, when I get through this, let's write some songs together.
And I said, sure, you know.
And so he'd been diagnosed three weeks earlier.
Three weeks later, he was gone.
Just like that.
And so the more we can actually understand that we may not have those years in retirement
and retirement may not look how we think it's going to look anyway.
Because what plan in life ever turns out exactly as we think anyway?
Life always throws some curveballs to stretch us and help us grow
and help us prioritize things that light us up.
And so we can sort of think, yeah, at 65 I'll be all cashed up and I'll retire
and I'll go off and play golf or travel the world.
But a year before you retire, you may end up in a wheelchair for some reason
or you may end up dead.
Yeah.
We can hear that.
We can hear these things.
We can watch films where we see this stuff.
And then we can almost compartmentalize it
and get back on with our lives
and then not make a change.
But that is so real, the fact that you could step out of your front door
and get knocked down by a car.
Yes.
It's by acknowledging that you're going to die.
Yes.
That you get to truly live life.
I think it just lands where any message
just lands when we're ready to hear it.
We can hear things.
repeatedly beforehand, but sometimes, like I'm sure in your time of looking after your dad,
raising your family, working really hard, there were other messages similar coming to you
from different angles, but you weren't ready to hear them. And so sometimes the message
has to be articulated in the right choice of words or in the right language for us to actually
hear them. And I think that's where the readiness and timing lines up as well, that
Life can be saying to you slow down for a long time
but suddenly you hear it a certain way
and it just lands and you think, oh.
Yeah.
Broan, it's interesting to me that you've written
these five powerful regrets of the dying.
Each one of them, I think, can help us reflect on our own lives
and encourage us to make some maybe gentle changes
that over time can become bigger changes.
I also know, though, that not everyone,
cared for in their dying days, had regrets.
Are you able to articulate what the difference was in people who did have regrets at the
end of their life compared to those who didn't?
Sure, yep.
I noticed three things, and I didn't realize at the time they were just, but there were
three common things.
And one was their relationship with their family, if they had.
good communication with their family, then they weren't in that category of regrets.
I think just the support of family perhaps helped them have a go at their life or they were
content in the life.
Another was humour, that they could laugh at their mistakes, that they could laugh at the
winding road that life can become without taking it on too heavily.
and the other was faith that they just trusted there was a in the bigger picture that everything
was fine the way they'd lived and they had a faith to go home to sort of thing so um and that's
do you mean religious faith yes yeah and so i'm not saying that every person who had faith didn't
have regrets there were plenty of people that had regrets that had a religious faith but of those who
didn't have regrets, they believed in something larger, and not always religious, but a spiritual
belief, and humour and family connection. Yeah. Which is interesting, like, you know, it's a whole.
So relationships, humour, yes. And a belief in something greater than themselves. Yes. Yeah. It's really
interesting to me, because I always wonder about how we can tackle issues.
Like are there ways that we can focus on particular ones or can we still address those issues by focusing on something else?
So I wonder if instead of focusing on those five regrets, which I think would help anyone anyway, but as a thought experiment,
if you didn't look at those five regrets and instead you looked at what are the three qualities that people who have a regret-free life exhibit,
I find it really interesting to go, okay, number one, I need to focus on my relationships.
How many times do we need to hear that relationships are what make up life?
Yes.
You know, whether it's Robert Waldinger from the Harvard Study of Happiness, whoever, 85 years,
they say the number one factor for health and happiness is the quality of your relationships.
Right?
So we can see that from scientific studies, we can also feel it intuitively ourselves.
We kind of know, you don't almost need the science to teach us that.
right? So that makes sense.
Humor, I guess that's not what I'd thought about,
but that's really interesting to hear that that's what,
that's a commonality you found. Why do you think that is?
Well, they just had a different approach to life,
so they didn't take life as seriously.
And so if you're not taking life so seriously,
then you're not judging yourself so harshly either.
Got it. Yeah.
So that makes sense,
so we can focus on bringing that into our life.
And I think that last one, a belief in something greater than yourself, I mean, again, how many
times do we need to hear that? It can be for some people through religion and for other people
through spirituality. For some people, it's through nature. It's through nature, that's right.
Two of the regrets, the way you've written them down at least, have the word courage in them.
Okay, I wish I had the courage to live my life, not the life others expect it of me,
and I wish I'd had the courage to express my feelings.
So the obvious question is, what does the word courage mean?
Ah, I think it just, for me, it means breaking through the resistance.
And any fear is just resistance to,
either what is or what could be
and so to me
courage is that force
that can say I'm scared
but I'm still going to do this
it's like the dismantling
of the walls that stop us doing things
and what stops us
from having courage
being scared of our potential
being as amazing as we can be
yeah
So, and that can be being scared of what other people think of us.
It can be scared of failing, which really just comes down to what other people think of us.
It can be scared of wasting time, trying for something and not landing how we think.
But we're still going to grow through that and we're still going to become a better person
as a result of anything like that.
And all of us make mistakes.
That's how we learn.
We learn by our mistakes.
And it's part of the imperfection of being human.
And so, you know, none of us are going to go through life without making mistakes unless
we don't live a life.
Unless we don't live.
We just stay on the lounge and watch Netflix and we don't have a go at honoring our dreams.
And then, well, there's a mistake in itself.
But if we're actually going to have a go at living our dreams and finding, and when I say
living the dreams. It all sounds, you know, all very trendy and cliched, but it's different for
everyone. It could just mean living a slower life, living a simpler life. It might be
travelling the world first class, but it may just be to be more present with your child or to be a
happier person or to learn an instrument in old age, whatever. But, you know, you're going to make
mistakes if you're going to grow and try and become the best person you want to be or as close to
that is possible. But whether a mistake turns into a regret is really only our opinion
on it. That's all it is. It's us beating ourselves up for years and years and years over a
mistake. And all of us have made mistakes. We can all look back and cringe over stuff we've done.
I'm sure I certainly can. But it's only self-judgment. And so if we can have a bit of
compassion for our younger selves, then they're just mistakes, they're not regrets.
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