Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - Top 5 Regrets Of The Dying: Life Lessons Everybody Learns Too Late with Bronnie Ware (Re-release) #610

Episode Date: January 11, 2026

What 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 ...this week’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…” Bronnie Ware is an internationally acclaimed speaker and author of the bestselling memoir, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying. Published more than 10 years ago, it’s been translated into 32 languages and continues to attract new audiences. The book is about her eight years as an end-of-life carer, the close relationships she formed, and lessons she learned from those dying people, which changed her life forever. In this conversation, we discuss some of the various regrets of the dying and what they can teach us so that we can live better lives, right now. We talk about the concept of choice. Everything we do, or don’t do, has a price – be it time or money. Our culture incentivises what we can measure – salaries, possessions, status, social media ‘likes’ and comments. But Bronnie urges us to realise the sacredness and value of our time. Is something a choice worth making if it means you have to sacrifice time with your loved ones? Is it worth pushing extra hard for the promotion that may bring you more money but also more stress and more time away from home? These are decisions that I think we all need to wrestle with from time to time if we are truly going to be living a contented and intentional life. We also talk about the real meaning of regret, what it means to be courageous, and how self-compassion can help us see our mistakes as a natural part of life and growth. Importantly, Bronnie also defines the qualities and habits she observed in those patients who reached the end of life with no regrets – what can we learn from these people? Death can be a topic that many people shy away from discussing but Bronnie is a wonderful soul who is able to talk about death in a relatable, powerful and authentic way. Appreciating we are going to die is the first step to getting more out of life. This really was a thought-provoking and intimate conversation. I hope you enjoy listening.   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. Thanks to our sponsors: https://www.thewayapp.com/livemore https://drinkag1.com/livemore   Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/610   DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 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 off me. The opinions of others are only as valid as you allow them to be. It's you that will be judging your life at the end. Yeah. Hey guys, how you doing? I hope you're having a good week so far. My name is Dr. Rongan Chatterjee, and this is my podcast. Feel better, live more. What 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
Starting point is 00:00:49 to a ripe old age and then die peacefully in your sleep wearing your favorite pajamas. But it doesn't actually work out that way for most people. Brodieware is an internationally acclaimed speaker and author of the best-selling memoir, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying. Published more than 10 years ago, it's been translated into 32 languages and continues to attract new audiences. The book is really about her time as a carer for people at the end of their lives, which ended up changing her own life forever. Now in our conversation, we discuss the various regrets of the dying
Starting point is 00:01:31 and what they can teach us so that we can live better lives right now. We speak about the concepts of choice. Everything we do or don't do has a price, be it time or money. And our culture incentivizes what we can measure, salaries, possessions, status, social media likes and comments. But Brony urges us to realize the sacredness and value of our time. Is something a choice worth making
Starting point is 00:02:01 if it means you have to sacrifice time with your loved ones? Is it worth pushing extra hard for that promotion that may bring you more money, but also more stress and more time away from home? You see, these are decisions that I think we all need to wrestle with from time to time if we are truly going to be living a contented and intentional life. We also talk about the real meaning of
Starting point is 00:02:26 regret, what it means to be courageous and how self-compassion can help us see our mistakes as a natural part of life. And importantly, Brony outlines the qualities and habits. She observed in those patients who reach the end of their lives with no regrets. What can we learn from these people? Death, of course, can be a topic that many people shy away from discussing. But Brony really is a quite wonderful soul who's able to talk about death in a relatable, powerful and authentic way. Appreciating we're going to die is the first step to getting more out of life. This really was a thought-provoking and intimate conversation. I hope you enjoy listening.
Starting point is 00:03:18 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 sort of outline those top five regrets of the dying and then we'll sort of maybe unpick them bit by bit?
Starting point is 00:03:53 Sure, sure. Well, the most common, 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 yeah, like you say, 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 that came from a few different angles that we can talk about. 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
Starting point is 00:04:48 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 a life. 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
Starting point is 00:05:30 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 I don't it absolutely lands because if you are honouring that first one and living a life true to yourself, you are going to prioritise work-life balance.
Starting point is 00:06:01 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 honouring your own life, then you certainly have less chance of having those other regrets as well. I mentioned that these ideas came to me at a time in my life where I was very open to receiving them. I don't know what would have happened had I come across these ideas when I was in the midst of caring for my father and having a young family and working and being stressed out, burnt out. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:06:44 You know, maybe it would have landed, maybe it would have helped me then. But I get a sense from not only that book, but your other books that I've got. here that I've read, that you are very spiritual. I don't know if you resonate with that term, but you come across to me as someone who believes that life unfolds in the way that it's meant to unfold, that we get the right message at the right time. And so for me, certainly, this came to me at the right time. Yeah, I believe strongly in readiness and timing. Absolutely. And it is a divine thing. It's definitely my relationship with divinity that
Starting point is 00:07:23 gives me the faith to trust in that readiness and timing. And so it didn't come to you at another time. It came to you when it was the right time and when you're ready to receive it. And I know people that have received the book in their 80s
Starting point is 00:07:38 and then I know backpackers that have carried it around Europe in their backpack in their 20s. So 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
Starting point is 00:08:07 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. And I think also we get the messages that we're looking for, right? So let's look at this through a different lens. Many people know the idea that if they have gone to a car garage maybe to look for a new car and they're looking at a red car of a particular brand, a particular make,
Starting point is 00:08:48 suddenly, for the next two weeks, they think, oh, wow, there's loads of red cars on the street. That particular car is everywhere. It's everywhere. And of course, it's not that magically over those two weeks, suddenly that same car appears everywhere. No, you have directed your attention to that red car and that particular model. So now your brain, which is always filtering out so many inputs that come in, is like going, oh, there is. that I'm interested in that. And I feel it's the same thing here
Starting point is 00:09:19 that actually, if we put our attention to this and say, you know what, I'm slightly dissatisfied, I feel I'm working too hard, and maybe in my 40s and my job is not serving me. I don't particularly enjoy it. Is this what life is? I know for a fact this is how so many people feel, Ronnie.
Starting point is 00:09:41 That often in mid-life, they're like, is this it? Like something, you know, you're at school, you're trying to strive, in your 20s, you're trying to find out what you're meant to do, your career, 30s, maybe you have kids. Of course, not everyone. This is just, you know, I don't mean to cliche it too much. But I often find when people hit their 40s, it's very much like, is this it? Is this all there is? And so I think many people these days are asking themselves the question, what doesn't mean to live a happy and consented life. Yeah, I think so as well. And I think that the conversation is a lot more public now, which almost gives people permission to question their discontent. Back in the old days, you'd stay in one job for your whole career. And whether you were happy or not really didn't come into it,
Starting point is 00:10:34 you just stayed in that job. And now because the dialogue is a lot more public, then people can actually voice their discontent. But prior to that, it's just that quiet discontent to start with. And we can only deny it in ourselves for so long. And then either we find the courage to make the change or life throws a curveball our way, which is really just our heart asking for a big change
Starting point is 00:11:03 that we haven't given ourselves permission for. And life will throw a curveball and break our life up. And then we're like, oh, okay, well, I need to reset here. and how am I going to find my way forward differently? Yeah. 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
Starting point is 00:11:30 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 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.
Starting point is 00:11:53 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 or watching right now, Bronie, who probably feel that they work too hard. how would you help that regret land for them?
Starting point is 00:12:20 I wish I hadn't worked so hard, right? So people say that on their deathbed. But 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.
Starting point is 00:12:42 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,
Starting point is 00:13:12 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.
Starting point is 00:13:48 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
Starting point is 00:14:10 than what I thought I needed. And so there's that aspect, but there's also, say, you know, so you're working too hard as a doctor prior to, you know, you're waking up to this. And you're wanting to spend more time with your family, especially while they're young. 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 house. habit of that of honoring some part of your life that you're craving, whether that's more time
Starting point is 00:14:46 with your family, whether that's getting out on a golf course, whatever it is. So 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.
Starting point is 00:15:29 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. I love that idea. Space is medicine. Yep, it's mine. It's... It's... Like my medicine, that's exactly how I treat it. It's really beautiful because there's a macro component to that and a micro one.
Starting point is 00:15:55 So as we're speaking, I'm a couple of days away from taking my summer break. Now, this is a big macro thing, which I have fortunately been able to implement over the last couple of years. Before that, I couldn't, but I take a prolonged break now each summer. And as I say that, I want to acknowledge that I fully appreciate that not everyone is able to do that. I'm now in a place in my career where I can. And it doesn't mean I completely, you know, don't do any work at all, but, I mean, without going into all the specifics, let's say this podcast, for example, the common narrative is that you can't break. The online world demands content.
Starting point is 00:16:45 You've got to keep releasing. You've got to, you know, back it up in advance so you can take your break and keep releasing it. And that's what many content creators do. I just don't want to do it. Well done. I know it sounds, I don't know how relatable that is to people, but for me and my world,
Starting point is 00:17:04 that has been a conscious decision to go, I'm not buying into that. there's only one way that goes. That goes down to burnout, right? That is not the way I wish to live my life. Firstly, my wife is the producer on this show. So if we release all summer, like as a family, there's no switch off there, right?
Starting point is 00:17:25 You would just be aware things are going out. You've got to check various things. There's a show like this is so many things to check before each show goes out. So we just break for sit sweets. And people say, oh, you know, you're going to lose listeners. it gives someone else an opportunity to get in that sort. And I'm like, you know what? I don't care. I literally don't care because I have worked too hard in the past. And now I realize that actually
Starting point is 00:17:48 I want that space in my life. My kids are young. They're off for the summer holidays. So, you know, in two days, we're going off for three weeks or three and a half weeks. And I can't wait. There'll be no work. It will just be spending time together, swimming, walking, going. going out for meals, whatever it might be. And actually the truth is when I come back, I'm better able to have great conversations on this show. And so when I hear that space is medicine, the term that comes up for me is work-life balance.
Starting point is 00:18:21 And I think I don't really like that term anymore, work-life balance, because as you say, there are times in your life when you may have to go all in. And that's okay. I think the problem lies, and I'd welcome your perspective. on this, especially, you know, having spoken to people at the end of their lives so much,
Starting point is 00:18:42 I think the problem is when that continues unchecked for too long. Like, let's say you've got a business project, you're writing a book and you're going all in for a year. Okay, the problem is is that that year becomes five years and ten years. And for those ten years, you're never seeing your wife or your kids. But maybe for that one year, so that's one aspect I wanted to share with you. But then there's also the micro of space being medicine whereby can you block out a bit of time each weekend where you're giving yourself that space. Can you block off a bit of time each day, whether it was just 15 minutes to give yourself that space? So I kind of feel it works on so many levels. Yeah, sure does.
Starting point is 00:19:22 Sure does. And you're right. I mean, if we're working, especially project-based things, we do go all in and we work like crazy. but and often when we're getting towards the end of something the new ideas are already there for the next thing but what I've found is I don't jump straight into the next thing now I just trust in that it'll be okay that if I don't have a new project lined up straight afterwards it's going to be okay like like if there's a gap in between the projects it's going to be okay I've come this far I'm going to survive and and anyone listening has
Starting point is 00:19:59 come this far and they're going to survive. And so I think it's, you know, 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, you do take that other time off. But then on the other levels, those little bits of time, like you just said, 15 minutes or an hour or whatever, it's a habit. And, 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.
Starting point is 00:20:39 So it's space to lie in your backyard, in your backyard 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 to sit and have a cup or watch people go by. Or I certainly turn my phone off a lot. Me too. And I'm actually off social media at the moment. And for someone who, you know, I have over a million books, a million readers of five regrets, and that's a huge success.
Starting point is 00:21:12 But in terms of my social media numbers, they're really, really small because I love my social media audience, but I've never prioritised it. And I have a very devoted mailing list and I write my fortnightly newsletter no matter what. but I don't feel like I'm missing out. I have tried doing the mass amounts of content and pouring it out there, but I just felt like it was really out of alignment with who I am and how I want to live.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And so I'm actually off social media at the moment. I've just said to my audience, I'm just taking a break for a while. And I don't know if that's, I think it's been nearly a month already, but I don't know if that's going to be a month or three months. I just knew that I was sick of all that little micro,
Starting point is 00:21:56 you know, just the busyness of the tech world. And so I think there's an element of faith in there as well because whatever your faith is, because 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.
Starting point is 00:22:26 and to actually think, okay, the world won't fall apart, say if you don't have a podcast for six weeks, if people went off and listened to something else, they're going to come back in six weeks. They're going to be hanging out for you to come back. And like you said, you're going to have better conversations when you come back as well. But also, Ronnie, on that,
Starting point is 00:22:45 and we're going slightly off the truths here a little bit, but in I think the book after the top five regrets of the dying, your year for change, 52 reflections for regret-free living, one of the chapters in that I really loved was called Dissolving the Ego. So this is something I really think a lot about. So let's just go to that point you just made. Let's say in those six weeks off, right, an avid listener finds a show that they prefer to this one.
Starting point is 00:23:18 That's okay, isn't it? Of course it's okay. That's okay? Yes. Maybe there's a better show. Maybe there's a content which resonates with them deeper than might. than mine does. For where they're at right now.
Starting point is 00:23:28 For where they're at and. And I always ask myself this question, if you're doing this for impact, not ego, it kind of doesn't matter. No. You make it matter in your head because we often live according to the constructs that society has conditioned us with.
Starting point is 00:23:48 That's the first regret, right? Which I had the courage to live a life, live my life and not the life other people expected off me. So if you're conditioned from a young age that, as I very much was, that being the best is really important, that external validation is how you measure yourself with. I mean, these are things that I've really had to unpick over the past 10 years. And now I will say, feel in a very, very good place. Most of the time, I can still fall back into all patterns sometimes, especially when I'm tired or overworked. But generally, I feel pretty good. So if you go down that, line of thinking. In fact, let's go to dissolve in the ego because I thought it was a powerful chapter. I think it totally plays into these top five regrets. You say in that chatter that this is
Starting point is 00:24:38 what we are here for to dissolve the ego. And you shared how you initially used to feel when people would repost your work without giving you credit. And then there was this beautiful idea that there's a legal ramification here and a sole ramification. So I want if you could share your thoughts on that. Yeah, I still have readers write to me all the time and say, this has been shared and they haven't credited you and da-da-da, and I have a very loyal audience. So they're always bringing it to my attention. But I have to stop and think, well, I'm the messenger for this, for the five regrets of the dying. And I'm very honored to do that. And I have to earn a living. to support my child, but not at the detriment of every other part of my life.
Starting point is 00:25:28 So if I spend, and I have followed through legally on a couple of occasions, but if I spend every single minute chasing up every single misuse of my work, well, then I'm wasting my sacred time on things that aren't lighting me up. And so if I can let go of having to be credited for every single thing and realize that I'm honored to share this message, life is looking after me, my daughter and I haven't had to go hungry yet, you know, we're doing fine, I've gone hungry before she came along, I know what it's like.
Starting point is 00:26:05 But life is supporting me enough. And so I just trust that the message will reach who it needs to reach. And so there's the physical side. If I chased it all up, I may get some more book sales because people who don't know the work yet may be drawn to me and get to know me through whatever platforms I'm on. But on a soul level, I just feel honoured that I've been chosen as a messenger for this, that I got to live those experiences that have then shaped my own life massively. and that does it really matter? Like I don't want to miss the present moment of my life,
Starting point is 00:26:49 the present moments of my life unfolding, of my daughter growing up, of all her little nuances changing, just because I need to prove that, hey, hang on a sec, that's my work and I deserve to be credited for it. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you for sharing that.
Starting point is 00:27:06 The key word that for me keeps coming up, here is choice. The choice of how are you going to live your life? What are you going to put your attention on? Focus your energies on. Because you're right, you could actually chase up every single one of them. But at what cost? Yeah, exactly. And I kind of feel strongly that this is something we all need to consider in our own lives, just this idea that every single thing in life that we choose to do or not choose to do, there's a price. Whether it's it's, it's a financial price, whether it's a time price, and I don't think we often look at that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:46 Like, I honestly, I think about this a lot, and I'm writing about this in my next book at the moment, this idea that the very best things in my life, they can't actually be measured by the societal definition of success. The amount of time I spend with my children each week, I have no metric I can, show people and go, hey, look at me, the intimacy or connection I have with my wife, I don't have a metric I can share with people to show that. Right. So the culture incentivizes a lot of things that don't bring us happiness. Like if you have so many more followers, and believe you me, I know a lot of influencers who are deeply unhappy. Genuinely, I've met so many,
Starting point is 00:28:38 But you would think from the outside, looking at the numbers, that would be incredible. And so it's great to hear you as a very, very successful author who's made a conscious choice. So you know what? I don't have time or energy for social media. You know, I'll do what I can when I can, but that's not the best use of my time. Yeah, well, the thing is, though, Rangan. Today's episode is sponsored by the Way Meditation app. Now, you probably heard me talk about this app over the past few months, and that is because I absolutely love it. Meditation has so many benefits for our physical health and mental well-being, but only if we do it.
Starting point is 00:29:27 And that's one of the reasons I love the way so much. It makes it really easy to establish a meditation practice that sticks. One of the most unique things about the way is that it is a meditation app with no choice. They understand that too much choice is stressful and can lead to procrastination and indecision and so with the way you only ever have one choice which makes things really easy. Just open the app, follow the path
Starting point is 00:30:01 and your transformation will unfold. Now there's no question that for me using the way has helped me feel calmer, more relaxed, and I would say it's also broadened my perspective on life and what is truly important. The creator of the app is Henry Shookman, a Zen Master, with the most wonderful relaxing voice, who actually was a guest on this podcast a few months ago
Starting point is 00:30:28 on episode 590. So if you think 2026 is finally going to be the year when you start and stick to a meditation practice, I'd highly encourage you to check out The Way. And to give you a little extra motivation, The Way is offering my podcast listeners 30 free sessions to get you started with your practice. That is a fantastic offer.
Starting point is 00:30:55 What have you got to lose? To take advantage, all you have to do is go to theway app.com forward slash live more to get started. and begin your journey towards peace, calm and purpose. At the end of our life, it's our own reflection. Those people who are maybe giving us validation because we've got so many followers or those external rewards,
Starting point is 00:31:32 they're not there at the end of your life when you're reflecting back. And they'll probably be new regrets down the track. I wish I hadn't spent so much time online because those things that you're saying can't be measured, the time, you know, the beautiful relationship with your wife and with your children, they help you show up in the world as a happier person or as a more peaceful person.
Starting point is 00:31:56 And either way, it's you that will be judging your life at the end. And so the opinions of others are only as valid as you allow them as anyone allows them to be. and those people are going to die too. So, you know, they're going to have to reconcile their own choices along the way as well. But for ourselves, if we can realize the sacredness of our time and realize that, as you said, about choice, like every single choice has a price. Everything has a price, definitely.
Starting point is 00:32:32 And if you can realize that every choice you make or you don't make has a price, then you actually start looking at, is this worth the price? And so in your case, you're saying it's not worth the price of going gung-ho and losing time with your family. You've prioritised the price on that. And I agree. I remember one time I was really nomadic. I had no responsibilities at all.
Starting point is 00:33:02 I was living in the back of an old four-wheel drive that I'd just taken the seat out and thrown a mattress and curtains in. And I, there was one, and most of the time I loved it, but there was also a real emptiness driving me in those years and a loneliness. And I was listening to the Chris Christopherson song, I think it was me and Bobby McGee, he says freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose. And that's where I was. You know, I was as free as the wind, but I had nothing to lose.
Starting point is 00:33:32 And I realized in that moment, just driving along and listening to that, that freedom had a price. And I was glorifying my freedom, and I still, it's one of my highest values, I still love freedom, but it had a price. And I started weighing it up. Is this price worth it for me now? Like, am I at the point where the cost of this is actually detrimental
Starting point is 00:33:58 or advantageous to me? And I realised then it was becoming detrimental. So if you can realize that every choice you're making does have a price, you just think, well, do I want to pay that price? And also, it's what works for you at that time in your life, right? We can change our priorities. You know, maybe going around in a van, being nomadic was great at a particular point in your life. For a while it was. Until it wasn't. That's right. Right? And I think all of us have this stuff going on in our lives. There's choices we make, there's behaviours we do that work until they don't.
Starting point is 00:34:39 Until they don't. Yeah. And so I feel it's a constant, I feel one of the most important skills we can learn is the ability to re-evaluate. You know, we all sometimes, as we've said, have to overwork, or we feel we have to. But there's a price to that.
Starting point is 00:34:55 And maybe that price is worth it. Maybe that gives you a better job that allows you to take care of your family and yourself in a better way. Great. But unfortunately, many people keep doing that and they retire at 65 and realize they have no relationships left. And, you know, I'm sure that that would have come up many times for you. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:35:13 I think also that conversation about ego, I think it's so important. You know, I face similar things. I have a beautifully loyal audience who will say, hey, wrong, and listen, they've, you know, shared your work and they're not giving you credit. And once I got an email or a message on Instagram saying, oh, this school has basically taken your four-pillar plan and put it on their website without giving you credit. And then I think self-awareness is such an important skill. So if I look back at that honestly, my initial feeling was, oh, they've not credited me. I thought, I very quickly thought, wait a minute, Rangan, this is a school, right? They're taking these ideas to help the kids
Starting point is 00:35:58 with their physical well-being and their mental well-being. And you know what, mate? You didn't kind of invent this stuff yourself, you've been influenced by the books you've read, the people you have followed over the years. And yes, you try to put it across in your way for some people that's been helpful, for others maybe not so much. I think there's a real humility to go, I didn't invent this stuff, right? I'm just a messenger of things that I think are useful. So what would it say about me if I was then going to get a bit frustrated with a school for sharing material? material that's going to help them. When I get it, it's easy, you know, as a successful author to say, oh, you know, that stuff doesn't matter. I imagine someone else at a different stage in their
Starting point is 00:36:43 creative life, for example, it may be problematic. So I do want to acknowledge that. But there's something there isn't there about our ego and what's really driving us? Yes. Yeah, I think so. And it is wrong if people are intentionally stealing your work and not crediting you. And it is wrong. But if, if you can, like, follow up sometimes if it needs to be followed up and let people know, hang on, I'm not cool with this, but at what price? Like, is stopping them worth what you've got to give up to do that? And so it's just weighing, constantly weighing it up in life. And we are always at different stages.
Starting point is 00:37:26 And so initially, yeah, I would have been ropedable if people were sharing my work when I had worked so hard to even get the book out there. it had taken me 14 years to become an overnight success. And so if people were sharing my work then, yeah, I would have been like a vigilantean and been after them. But then I started coming back to what I'd learned through my meditation practice that we are here to dissolve the ego. And now, you know, occasionally my team will send a message to someone and say,
Starting point is 00:37:55 can you please credit Brony because you're using her work. But most of the time, I just want to focus on where I'm at. now and I'm working on other things now. Yeah. I guess the deeper and more spiritual question is, is anything really our work? That's right. Is it? No. Of course it's not. And I say that as a challenge to ourselves and to all of us. Like none of us come out.
Starting point is 00:38:26 We're all influenced, aren't we? You're influenced by those interactions. Yes. You know, and I find that's just a, for me, personally, a very helpful way, a very calm way of interacting with the world, that, hey, listen, you know, the best, you're a songwriter, I'm also a songwriter, and so many songwriters will say that it's not my song, it just came through me. It just came through me. That's right. And I think we're not only gifted with being the channel for any, any expression, any creative expression, But in doing so, we're gifted with the courage that we've had to find to bring it through and release it into the world.
Starting point is 00:39:09 And so we're sort of receiving indirect rewards besides the monetary side as well. And because you're very vulnerable when you release something into the world and you have to break through the resistance of how it will be received or will it even be received, just having the guts to do things like that is a personal reward. anyway and expands us on a spiritual level. So I just always feel grateful and honored when stuff comes through me and delighted because it's it's so fun, creating. But I've reached the stage where I now create regardless of what outcome. And I still need to earn money.
Starting point is 00:39:52 I still need to support my family. I've got big dreams like everyone else. But some things I'll release into the world won't really become big. incomes or even incomes really just very small things but I've really enjoyed doing them and having them out there and then there's other things that I'll do that will actually make me really good money and that I my heart was into but not massively it was just like oh yeah I feel called to do this now I'll do that and it's like oh okay that's that's surprising I guess one of the ironies is that when you wrote your blog the top five regrets of the dying yes you probably
Starting point is 00:40:30 never, ever imagined that this would turn into a worldwide sensation, selling millions of books. So it's funny, we can say that actually some things I'm just going to put out there for the joy of them rather than because of what will come on the back of it. But I guess maybe the best art is the art that we put out without any expectation at all, because that landed in a way that you can't predict. you couldn't have got together with a branding team and figured it all like, oh, yeah, this is going to land, right? It wouldn't have worked. There's a, there's a certain beauty to the fact that you just put it out there and it blew up. I don't think it blew up initially, right? No, I had 25 rejections for the book. No, so I wrote the blog and it took about, oh, six to eight months.
Starting point is 00:41:19 So hold on. So when did you write the blog? In 2009. So you wrote a blog called the Top Five Regrets of the Dying in 2009. After I googled good blog topics. Okay. So I have to go on time. And what was regrets of the dying in there? Yeah, yeah, because I just finished teaching songwriting in a women's jail.
Starting point is 00:41:38 That was what I did after working with the dying. I wanted to work where there was some hope. And so I had this random idea. I'm going to teach songwriting in a women's jail. Never been inside a jail. Had no skills in teaching, but somehow managed to get some funding through a philanthropic mob and set up this program.
Starting point is 00:41:55 And so then a music magazine asked me to write an article. about that experience. So I wrote that blog. And then I thought, why aren't I writing more? I love writing. I always had pen friends as a kid. I'll start a blog. And then I've Googled good blog topics.
Starting point is 00:42:13 And it was stuff like sensationalism, like Angeline, Jolly, and, you know, some sort of gossipy thing. It's like whatever was hot at the time. And I was just like, oh, no, I certainly can't write about Hollywood sensationalism. And then a day or two later I was just sitting there in a real calm moment of space, watching a bird sitting on an outside lounge. And then I just got this really clear guidance, right? What you know?
Starting point is 00:42:41 And I thought, okay, well, I know about dying people and I know about the regrets they shared with me because I've been transforming my own life through those regrets, being exposed to those regrets for the last eight years. And so I wrote the article then. and so then it took about six to eight months to actually go crazy, go viral. And it was actually during that time that I sunk into a really heavy, my only and first experience of depression.
Starting point is 00:43:12 And so as I was coming out of that, and I just said to life, I'm bored of being sad, just show me a new way forward. I can't look after dying people anymore. I certainly can't go back to being a bank manager, which I was decades before that. And then the blog took off. And so then an agent came to me, said, you want to write a book?
Starting point is 00:43:30 I'll represent you. And I said, yeah, sure everyone's got a book in them. I can write about the regrets of the dying, but I can only do it in a way that it's a memoir because people aren't going to buy a book about death. They need, you know, no one wants to just open a book and read just about death. And I also wanted people to see how hard it is
Starting point is 00:43:48 to break through your resistance and actually allow yourself to live according to how you want to live. and so that was rejected by 25 publishers. And then so I thought, well, you know, I've been an independent singer-songwriter or tried to be and I'll put it out independently. So I did that in the October of 2011 and then in February of 2012, in the same 24 hours as my daughter, as I went into labour,
Starting point is 00:44:17 first time mum at 45, like really blessed to conceive naturally and quickly at 44. and so about to become a mum, then the book took off, The Guardian, quoted it, and it just went ballistic. So I was doing emails in labour, from my hospital bed, and that night I closed the lid of the computer and I sent a prayer out. I said, send me help now because I'm going to quit because I had worked so hard to get my message out there as a singer-songwriter or whatever. And before that I was doing inspirational quotes.
Starting point is 00:44:50 This is all before the internet, selling them at my own. markets with my nature photos and I was ready to quit and then the next day my daughter's born and hey house rang me and said we'd like to offer you an international deal so you know that's what I think that's why I'm so strong about timing and readiness as well because I genuinely was going to quit I mean there was so much that I want to know it's lovely it's just so much I want to ask you about um you used to go to her market and sell these kind of inspirational quotes can you remember remember one of your favorite inspirational quotes? Oh, I had this snow gum, which is the beautiful gum tree, but it's got red.
Starting point is 00:45:29 They're about 35 in my range. And I used to cut the matting myself and everything for the frames and make the cards and glue the photos onto the cardboard cards. It was all, you know, very manually. And I was showing my commitment. But there was one of this red in the bark. The snow gums have these really bright colors in them. And I'd taken it at a certain angle
Starting point is 00:45:54 and it just said it's only through stretching ourselves that we can reach the sky. And that was one of the most popular ones. Yeah. Yeah, love it. You mentioned before writing the blog, you were talking about writing what you know. You had already experienced changes in your own life
Starting point is 00:46:17 from working with dying people. 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,
Starting point is 00:46:39 who was one of my favorite 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, went off to a travel agent and picked up a catalogue, a brochure for bus tours around Australia
Starting point is 00:47:05 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, Bronny, that promise this dying woman
Starting point is 00:47:30 that you'll always have the courage to live a life true to yourself, not the life others expect of you. And it was my first awakening to the fact that, you know, that's why my ears were open to hearing similar sort of 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.
Starting point is 00:47:58 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 a waste of time and wasting my time and I was a dreamer and all those sort of things you don't need to hear from the people you want to, please.
Starting point is 00:48:25 But I 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, Inobverts of Commerce. I had a good job. A good career.
Starting point is 00:48:50 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 joke. Oh, where is she now? What's she doing now? You know, and all I was trying to do was find my way. And thankfully, my mum always believed in me. And even at one point she was so scared.
Starting point is 00:49:08 And I said to her, if you can't have faith in me, have faith in me. And I did have faith in me. But it was, 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.
Starting point is 00:49:33 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 know, I'm, I guess, bias in terms of my friend circles and how I grew up. But of course, I know a lot of doctors.
Starting point is 00:50:02 And I know a lot of doctors who went into medicine because it is a good job to do. Not necessarily because it was their calling. You know, and certainly in Indian immigrant families in the West, it is highly valued being a doctor. So many of us end up in medicine, not always because we have a deep desire to be a doctor. That's the truth. Yes.
Starting point is 00:50:30 Right? And it may be a truth that people don't want to hear or acknowledge, but it's a truth. It is a truth. So the way I see the world, it's a truth. And, okay, let's play this out. let's say there's a doctor listening to this right now who's 44, right? Let's say they're married. Let's say they've got kids. They've got a mortgage, but they don't like their job. And they feel trapped.
Starting point is 00:50:58 And they feel, hey, listen, Bronny, these regrets all sound pretty cool. I get what you're saying, you know, but I have no choice here, right? I've got a mortgage. I've got children to feel. feed, this is what I trained to do. I'd be doing it for 15 years now. There's nothing else I can do. What would you say to them? I'd say there's always a choice. It doesn't mean it's easy, making significant changes, but there's always a choice. Do you need to live where you're living? Do you need to live in such a big house? Do you need to have such a big mortgage? Could you sell your practice and work, what's called it, the locum? Like, could you go part-time while you start studying for something else
Starting point is 00:51:43 or could you drop one day a week to start putting your toe in the water of some other direction? It doesn't have to be the shock of dropping everything in one go but could you drop one day a week or could you reduce your mortgage or could you relocate and choose a simpler life how much of what you're doing is the responsibilities that you've created for yourself
Starting point is 00:52:11 or how much is it because you're worried what other people will be thinking of you if you're not a doctor anymore. Yeah, wonderful advice. So many questions there that I think, I think relate to all of us. I think all of us can think about those and reflect because it's not a one hit where you just read the book
Starting point is 00:52:29 and suddenly change everything. It's a constant re-evaluation, isn't it? Yes, yep. You know, when you were sharing the story of grace, I actually started thinking of my dad. because dad's, dad's work and his overwork and chronic stress for 30 years where he effectively only slept for three nights a week for 30 years. He was working that hard. Day job, night job to provide for his family and, you know, all kinds of things which I've spoken about on the show before.
Starting point is 00:53:01 It was only towards the end of dad's life that I learned, I think, from dad or from mum, that I think it was from mum actually. I think it was after dad died. That, dad had always planned in retirement, you know, so at 65, I'm going to go back to India and set up some street clinics and help kids and families who don't have anything. It's actually quite emotional thinking about it now because I think he fell into the... I can't say fell into the trap because I can't speak to his motivation. If that's... that was still alive now, I would have to ask him, was it worth it? You know, he may say, actually, you know what it was worth it to leave India, to come here, to set you and your brother
Starting point is 00:53:54 up, to be able to provide for my family back at home. Yeah, getting lupus, kidney failure, nearly losing my eyesight, all that stuff. He might say it was worth it. So I can't be arrogant enough to speak for him. I have to respect that he made choices. Yeah, okay. But so instead of saying falling into the trap, what I can say is that he made the assumption that many of us make, which is we'll have time in the future. In fact, you, where was it in your book? I think you say something about assumptions. Can I find it? I think it was page 30. Yes. Okay, I've got it. This is in your year for change, right? I scribbled all over your book because I thought it was so key. It is easy to assume that you will live with great health to a ripe old age,
Starting point is 00:54:48 and then die peacefully in your sleep, wearing your favourite pyjamas. 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.
Starting point is 00:55:16 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-aged 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.
Starting point is 00:55:35 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 4 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.
Starting point is 00:56:01 And so he'd been diagnosed three weeks earlier. Three weeks later, he was gone. And he was like, I'm going to get better. I've got two teenage boys. You know, I'm not going to leave them. without a father, everything else, he was gone. He was just like that. And so the more we can actually understand that we may not have those years in retirement
Starting point is 00:56:21 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.
Starting point is 00:57:02 Someone's out for their run or walk right now. They've just heard that. what's going to change that person. Not that we can change anyone else, but I guess what I'm trying to get to is 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.
Starting point is 00:57:25 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. And what's really interesting when I read your work, Bronie, is that I don't think I was exposed to death growing up.
Starting point is 00:57:45 I had a complete disconnection with where my food came from, right? Complete disconnection. And I think until my dad died, I don't think anyone close to me had died. So I think that's why I found it so difficult and why it changed me so much. Yeah, sure. Whereas you write about your childhood growing up on a farm,
Starting point is 00:58:05 and how you saw death all the time with animals. So how do you think your childhood experience there with animals has potentially influenced the way that you see death now as an adult? Well, it was just a part of life. And so it helps me realize it is a part of life. I'm going to die, you're going to die. The person listening to this jogging with the headphones on, you're going to die.
Starting point is 00:58:31 You are going to die. And so none of us get out of. of it. And so we not only saw a lot of death, but my parents would have a butcher out and I'd see the cows or sheep in the yard in the morning. And by the nighttime, we were riding on the cut of meat while it was still warm, put it in a plastic bag and writing what cut of meat it was and then putting it into a huge freezer. And so it just made me realize that it can be over just like that. I'm in these warm slabs of meat.
Starting point is 00:59:05 I'm vegetarian now and you understand why because it was a bit too real. But those, seeing the cows or seeing the animals in the morning alive and of a night in the freezer, it just became a way of life. And I think it helped me on levels I didn't even grasp as a child then. And there were dead birds, there were dead snakes,
Starting point is 00:59:29 there was dead animals all the time. And so we were also the same. We weren't exposed to death very much at all. And it really wasn't until I went into working with the dying that I was exposed to death on a regular basis. But even with the first person I looked after, Ruth, that I speak about in the book, even though it was a shock to me to find myself in palliative care unexpectedly, I still, that knowledge of growing up on the first.
Starting point is 01:00:01 farm and knowing what a dead body looks like, help me not, helped it not be too weird. Yeah. Yeah. It's really fascinating. Would you say maybe because of that experience and your life experience that, like, how do you see death? Do you fear your own death? So for me, I don't have a fear of death at all, not the physical and not the after. because I've seen enough people in a state of joy right at the moment before they've died.
Starting point is 01:00:41 And not a lot, but enough to realize there's something to return to. There was such a state of recognition. Tell us about that. Go on. That is so fascinating to me. So you are sitting with them in their final moments. Yes, yeah. And what have you seen?
Starting point is 01:00:58 Well, say in the case of Stella, so she had been in a co-examination. for a couple of days and all her feet and her feet and hands had gone cold. You know, their organs aren't reaching the extremities so well. And so when they, so this is what my palliative doctor who used to come in and check on, the patients explain to me that the organs aren't pumping to the extremities anymore. They're closing down. So you sort of know, I mean, the fact that she was in a coma was enough of knowledge, enough to indicate she was close to the end.
Starting point is 01:01:33 And she'd been in a coma for a couple of days. And so I'd called the family in and her husband was sitting on one side of her, holding her hand, her son was sitting on the other side holding her hand. I was sitting down the other end holding her foot, just wanting to sort of be there and let her know that she was there
Starting point is 01:01:50 and looked after and loved. And she just opened her eyes and looked up at where the wall joins the ceiling up at the corners up there. And she's just looked up and opened up, and opened her eyes and, like this is after a couple of days of complete coma. And she's just opened her eyes and gone, and it was just bliss and, it was bliss and recognition and joy, just absolute joy.
Starting point is 01:02:15 And this elation on her face and her son and husband are looking at me and I'm looking at her and then she's just sort of like done that and then she's gone, ah, and her eyes roll back. and she was gone and she was gone and I just like it was really it was life changing for me in that moment though she was only the second person I'd never looked after so then the family is saying is she gone is she gone and I'm trying to feel her pulse because like I wasn't even a nurse I'd just gone in as a companion and ended up in palliative care and so I'm trying to feel her pulse but my heart is just jumping out my chest and I don't know if I can feel her pulse or whether that's my heart beating or whatever.
Starting point is 01:03:01 And then I just got a really clear feeling from her, you know, that she's gone. And I just said, yeah, yeah, she's gone. And I just, oh, I still remember her husband just like running out of the room and just sobbing. And, you know, he was like in his 70s at the time and they'd been married since their 20s. And I can still hear that raw grief that. But for me personally, that helped me see. and I did see other similar things, not as glorious as that, but where people just found this beauty in their death.
Starting point is 01:03:38 And so that just helped me enormously. So I'm not scared of the transition of death. I'm not scared. I have enough faith, and I've witnessed those sort of things to not be scared beyond that. What I would be more scared of, and I make sure that I don't have to be, is not facing the fact that I'm going to die
Starting point is 01:03:57 and living with the regret of not having honoured whatever my dreams are or at least given them a go, even if I don't see all of them realised or life changes direction, at least I can die knowing that I've given them a go. I would be more scared of that, of delaying my dreams and of not honouring it when I've witnessed the anguish and pain of regret. And, I mean, they just sound like words, but when you've witnessed, this is anguish,
Starting point is 01:04:26 like full-on heartache, when you've witnessed that repeatedly, and then you don't find the guts to follow your dreams, well, you know, you'd have some pretty big self-accounting to do at the end. So for me, that would be a bigger fear than the actual death. What does the word regret mean to you? Today's episode is sponsored by AG1, a daily health drink that has been in my own life for over seven years. Now, the colder months can make it harder to stay motivated.
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Starting point is 01:06:30 while supplies last. Self-judgment because 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.
Starting point is 01:07:01 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,
Starting point is 01:07:27 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 be become the best person you want to be or as close to that as 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.
Starting point is 01:08:01 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. Yeah, I really appreciate you sharing that perspective. Ever since I had Dan Pink on this podcast after he wrote a book on Regret, maybe a year or two ago,
Starting point is 01:08:29 it really caused me to think deeply about what regret is. because I can hand on heart sit opposite you today in 20203 say I don't have any regrets. That does not mean I haven't made any mistakes. And first of all, I think Dan's book is really, really great. So I think we were both saying the same thing in different ways.
Starting point is 01:08:54 In Dan's book, he talks about regret being human. It's the most human thing there is. It's what makes us. human or one of the things that makes us human. I don't quite see it like that. I think this whole piece of compassion and judgment plays into regret. So if you are deeply compassionate for yourself and you believe that you are always doing the best you can, based upon your experience, based upon what you know, that I actually feel
Starting point is 01:09:30 there's kind of no room for regrets. Because if I regret, let's say something in my 20s, I don't. There's many things, I hope, if I was in that position again now, knowing what I know now, I would act differently. Yes. But about that I didn't know. Right? So beating myself up for a decision that I may have made in the past,
Starting point is 01:09:52 in many ways it's the height of uncompassionate behavior to yourself. You're kind of believing that you should have been this perfect person who should have known the wisdom that you've not. now gleamed 20 years on, which is kind of ridiculous. Yes. But if I believe no, actually, you know what? You genuinely did do the best that you could. With hindsight, you could have made a different decision.
Starting point is 01:10:18 Okay, next time something that presents itself to me, in my life, I'll try and make a different decision. Yeah, you will. It's kind of a, it's a different flavor. And I guess, you know, does it really matter? No, you know, but people can perceive regret. any way that they want, I guess. But that's why I was so fascinated
Starting point is 01:10:38 because I think all your books are great. I think the top five regrets to the diet, I can see why it has changed so many lives and sold as many copies as it has because it kind of gets to the heart of what it means to live a meaningful and contented life, doesn't it? Yes. Yeah, it does.
Starting point is 01:10:57 And we're allowed to do that. Yeah. Yeah, we just have to give ourselves permission and break through the resistance, like have the courage to break through the resistance and, yeah, give ourselves permission. You so would courage there. And when I was writing out the regrets this morning
Starting point is 01:11:15 in this book, which I always just write down some ideas before I have a guess. It's a way of imprinting them into my brain. I noticed something that I hadn't noticed when reading. And that was this. Two of the regrets, the way you've written them down at least, have the word courage in them.
Starting point is 01:11:34 I wish I had the courage to live my life, not the life others expects 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? I think it just, for me, it means breaking through the resistance. And any fear is just resistance
Starting point is 01:12:03 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 scared of receiving, being as amazing as we can be. Yeah. So, and that can be being scared of what other people think of us.
Starting point is 01:12:43 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. So, yeah, I mean, it's an abyss. there's just one layer after another after another. Wasting time you just mentioned. Again, something I've been thinking about a lot recently is,
Starting point is 01:13:19 is it possible to waste time? Because again, the term wasting time is a negative judgment. Right? Ultimately, we spend time. The way we spend time has consequences. Yes. Like whether you call it a, waste or not depends on, I guess it depends on how you look at life because you could make the
Starting point is 01:13:43 case. And I guess I haven't fully got clear on my thoughts yet. So I'm kind of working it out as we go here. But I kind of feel it is possible to look at life in a way where you never waste time where actually any time that you spend on anything is a learning opportunity. If, for example, you do something that you could consider wasting time, you could go, no, actually I've learned that when I spend two hours scrolling social media mindlessly, I don't feel great afterwards. Because if you say wasting time, it's almost like a self-judgment. Do you know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, I do.
Starting point is 01:14:25 And I think that the more present and mindful we become, the more we're probably likely to have that judgment. because we can look back to our youth and think, oh, I was just stumbling along and didn't know what I was doing or I could have achieved this or that in my youth that I didn't. And so that can feel like you've wasted years and everything else. But if you're experiencing life and it's brought you to this point where you can be discerning enough to recognize that, then you're right. It's not a waste of time.
Starting point is 01:14:56 There's an Aussie singer-songwriter. He's one of the country's favorite singer-songwriter, as Paul Kelly. And he's got a song that says, I've wasted, I think it's I've wasted time or whatever, but the line in it is, I've wasted time. Now time is wasting me. And, you know, he's an older man now. And I really love that sort of play on words.
Starting point is 01:15:19 But that aside, I just had to drop that in because it is a really great way to put it. But I do think that if we're kind enough to ourselves, we can realize it's, all a part of the fabric of our life. And as long as we can look back with kindness for our younger selves, and like you said, if you could go back, you'd hope that you could, you'd do things differently again. But we're all doing the best as who we can in the moment. And if we're not, that's where we've got the power. If we're, if we're sort of thinking, okay, I'm probably capable of a little bit more than this, but I'm too lazy or scared to have a go, then maybe, you know, time to motivate yourself and say, I may not have time to do this later. I won't have time to do
Starting point is 01:16:07 this later. I've got to get on with it now. There's never a perfect time to start anything other than right now. Yeah. This idea of doing your best, I once heard you say in an interview, if you have done your best, there's no need for regret. That's right. Yeah. Which is a really beautiful way to look at it. I think in that same interview you said, courage is always rewarded, but not in the way we expect. Right. So you've expanded on what you mean by courage. Yes.
Starting point is 01:16:37 But I wonder if you could just speak to that. You know, how can it be rewarded in unexpected ways? Sure. Okay. So say you're going for a dream and you've had to find so much courage. Say that example of the doctor who's overworking, has the big mortgage, everything else. And so that person decides I'm going to change direction. and I probably shouldn't use such a specific example.
Starting point is 01:17:03 It's for anyone. So you want to change direction. And so you have the courage. You've made these significant changes. You've gone out on a leap of faith. You've taken risks and everything else. And you haven't landed where you thought you'd land. But what you've learned about yourself in that process is the reward in itself
Starting point is 01:17:24 because it sets you up for the next step. And so there's plenty of times we think we want one thing. And we think it's going to look a certain way. But it's the feeling we want. It's not necessarily the physical reality of what we're dreaming of. It's the feeling that we're aiming for. And so the reward may not be the picture perfect result that we thought we were working hard towards. It will be the freedom we've gifted ourselves or the permission that set us free from other things that have been holding us back or weighing us down.
Starting point is 01:17:57 So courage is rewarded. And that's not to say, if you go in a different direction and the physical doesn't turn out, it's not to say that something wonderful is not waiting for you, it may just look slightly different to what you thought. But the other reward is how you get to know yourself. And the pride in having a go just makes you have so much more self-respect but also so much self-kindness because you've faced all these fears and you've learned to love you. yourself through that and still have a go. Yeah. Yeah, I love that. Or the the job you go for
Starting point is 01:18:35 that you don't get, but then it's actually a good thing because had you got it, you wouldn't have got the job that then you got two months later, which actually is nourishing you. Yes. Yeah. And didn't look anything like what you thought it was going to look like. Yeah. It's like me as an author instead of a singer-songwriter. I was like, I tried so hard to get going as a singer-songwriter. I hated going to gigs at 10 o'clock at night playing in pubs. I hated being on stage like trying to get over my nerves and everything else. But those years set me up to be a speaker and I can walk onto a stage now. And not the slightest nerves.
Starting point is 01:19:14 Just walk out, connect with the audience, have a great time, you know, give them an empowering session, whatever, and enjoy every minute of it. But if someone had have said, oh, you're doing this so you can become a speaker and an author, I'd just be like, no, I'm going to be a singer-songwriter. No way, I'm going to be a singer-songwriter. And so when I didn't make it as a singer-songwriter, that led to me setting up the thing in the jail so I could earn money from my music,
Starting point is 01:19:41 the songwriting program, which led me to writing an article, which led me to writing the next article, which led me to becoming an author and a speaker. So I would never have consciously chosen that. I'd have been like, I'm not qualified in writing, I hate being on stage. Now I love speaking. I've written books and made a living out of it for over a decade.
Starting point is 01:20:05 Yeah. Yeah, it's, you don't know. Have a trust in life. Life will unfold the way it's meant to unfold. Yeah, and let yourself be surprised. You know, that was advice given to me in my 20s. Let yourself be surprised. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:18 As Johnny Wilkinson, the rugby player once said to me on the show, he said, make friends with the unknown. Yes, that's lovely. which again is, I think, a beautiful sentiment that speaks to the same kind of philosophy. But 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 you cared for in their dying days had regrets.
Starting point is 01:20:58 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.
Starting point is 01:21:37 Another was humour that they could laugh at their mistakes, that they could laugh at the winding road that life can be. come 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, and that's... Do you mean religious faith?
Starting point is 01:22:07 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
Starting point is 01:22:26 yeah which is interesting like you know it's a whole so relationships yeah humor yes and a belief in something greater than themselves yes yeah
Starting point is 01:22:39 it's really interesting to me because I always wonder about how we can tackle issues Like are there ways 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,
Starting point is 01:23:06 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.
Starting point is 01:23:39 Right? So we can see that from scientific studies. We can also feel it intuitively ourselves. Oh, I know. That's right. 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 thought about,
Starting point is 01:23:56 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. Yeah. And so if you're not taking life so seriously, then you're not judging yourself so harshly either.
Starting point is 01:24:12 Got it. Yeah. So that makes sense. So we can focus on bringing that into our life. And I think that last one, want, 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.
Starting point is 01:24:31 For some people, it's through nature. It's through nature, that's right. You know, when this amazing professor in America called Daka Keltner came on this show about six months ago and he wrote a book on Orr. and the eight different ways that humans can experience all. And one of them is nature, right? And he talks about the power of awe and what it does to us. But I guess that kind of speaks to point three.
Starting point is 01:24:58 And what we're talking about is I believe in something greater than yourself. Interestingly enough, although when many of us think of all, we think of nature, he also shared in a different chapter that birth and death are also human experiences where we really feel all. I love that, yeah. And I can understand that too. I mean, we can understand it from birth,
Starting point is 01:25:30 but from death as well because how incredible that the spirit can be extracted from a physical body and leave that body behind and it is an extraction and you know that one minute there can be a life force inside this collection of cells
Starting point is 01:25:51 and the next minute it's just a vessel an empty vessel like that in itself is absolutely worthy of all yeah and I love the fact that for I love the fact that despite our supposed evolution as humans, but we still can't explain it.
Starting point is 01:26:15 No. I love it. Thank goodness. Thank goodness. I don't want us to be able to explain that scientifically. I love the fact that there's a mystery there. It's like, I don't know, I think it adds to the magic of life. Yeah, and that in itself becomes worthy of all, you know, that it's just, it's too big and
Starting point is 01:26:35 beautiful and magnificent to be able to articulate into little words, into. language. Do you feel that everyone would benefit from spending time with people who are dying? Oh yes. Yeah, yeah. We would, as a culture, as individuals, as a species, everything, we would, we would be so much more on track if we were all around dying people more, or if we at least had some direct exposure to it more regularly. And I'm not saying everyone needs to go into eight years of palliative care, but rather than wait until your ageing parents die, which is when most people are subjected to death,
Starting point is 01:27:26 or a lot of people are subjected to death for the first time, if we could all do, you know, a week a year or a few days a year or something like that, and actually witness a death, then I really believe it would, it's such a great question wrong, that I just think it would totally change the direction of humanity because we would let go of all the nonsense,
Starting point is 01:27:56 of all that empty achieving and prioritise what's truly important, and then we would work as a team rather than against each other. I mean, even this idea of intergenerational connections, I think, speaks to that. And what I mean by that is, in the era of nuclear families, and in the era that we live in now of incredible loneliness and isolation, I think there's something incredibly special about transgenerational communities, friendships, you know, kids spending time with their grandparents and their great-grandparents. parents, you know, holidaying together, all of you where you're experiencing people at different
Starting point is 01:28:42 stages in their life. It may not be on their deathbed necessarily, but I think even that gives a richer perspective to life that we often lose when we're just with one generation. I agree. Yeah, I agree. And the intergenerational doesn't necessarily need to be family either. It could be our neighbours or some sort of. of community and like my daughter at the moment she's with her grandmother and they're shocking together there up for so much mischief and sugar and stuff that I just you know but I've just got to let it go and you know they're both so excited to be hanging out together while I'm away and and my grandmother had such a beautiful influence on me as well and I just we're not meant
Starting point is 01:29:32 to do it just singular like that really not no something I've been thinking of about, Bonnie, about your experiences is to do with mental faculties. So my understanding is that most of your experience with dying people was with people who did not have Alzheimer's. So it was with people who were able to clearly articulate to you the things that they wish they had done differently. First of all, am I right in that assumption? Most of them.
Starting point is 01:30:07 Occasionally, if there were no shifts, I would take on a shift in a nursing home or I did have one woman who had Alzheimer's at home. But yeah, 90% of the people I looked after were exactly that they could converse. Because I think that gives you one perspective. One of the things that many people now are experiencing is family members or parents with Alzheimer's.
Starting point is 01:30:33 So they're dying, but they're not necessarily getting the wisdom from them that you received. They're not getting the, you know, the life philosophy at the end because some of the mind or some of the personality that we have known and associated with that person is no longer there. So I guess I'm really interested in how your experience might help someone. If there's someone listening who is in that situation right now, let's say their mum or their dad, has Alzheimer's and they're not the person they used to be.
Starting point is 01:31:14 Is there anything in your experience, do you think that could help them? Firstly, I just, my heartaches for them because that's almost worse than losing them suddenly to actually watch the demise of someone you love. But in my experience, I actually had a patient who I was looking after and she was all mumble, tumble, you know, and the words don't make sense at all. They're not even words anymore. They're like syllables from one word matched with the syllable of another. And she hadn't been coherent at all for well over a month that I'd been working with her. And then just one day I was with her and I used to always put lotion on my patient's hands and give them foot and feet
Starting point is 01:32:00 massage and brush their hair and that sort of thing. And one day I was walking her back to the bed and she had a bed that had the walls up so she couldn't get out like she was pretty much locked in the bed in the hospital bed at home and we were getting her back I was getting her back from the shower and we're walking along and I had some cream that I was going to do her feet and I dropped it and I bent down and I sort of laughed and said oh hang on a sec hang on and I've picked it up again and she just looked at me as clear as you and I just said I think you're lovely and I just said I think you're lovely too and she gave me a hug and she gave me a hug and and then I said, well, shall we get you back to bed?
Starting point is 01:32:38 And within two seconds, she's blah, blah, blah, la, back to the Alzheimer's language. So I guess what I would say to anyone is that even if they can't express themselves in a clear, coherent way, and maybe they can't always receive what you're saying, don't stop saying it because there could be a moment of clarity that they actually hear, you say I love you or or they're very present with you even if they can't articulate it. And so don't stop loving them and don't stop communicating with them just because they can't reply.
Starting point is 01:33:22 Yeah, that's beautiful advice. And it also, I think, speaks how little we really know about the minds and what it is this makes us who we are. Like, are they still the same person? Well, to the outside, maybe not, but maybe in their own experience they are. Who knows? Who knows? It's an endless fascinating field. It isn't. Yeah. I don't want to speak too much about my mom, because I don't feel it's my place to say. But one thing I will say is that this year is probably been the most difficult year I've had in over decades because mum was admitted to hospital on Christmas Day night last year. She was in for three weeks and, you know, she's back at home, but she's not the same
Starting point is 01:34:16 person that she used to be. And I found it really hard, particularly in the early part of this year, I would even go as far as to say it's only in the last two or three weeks that I feel a degree of acceptance and peace with the new normal. But I've been asking myself these questions. a lot. You know, what, what is it that, what is it that makes up, mum? You know, is the fact that she maybe can't articulate herself in the way that she used to, does that make her any less? Does that make her different? And I think half the time it's our own issues we have to get over. And I say that with compassion, because it's hard. You know, I went through all kinds of stuff. Will I ever have a a conversation with mum again in the same way that I used to.
Starting point is 01:35:08 And then some days, you know, I've made some changes. There's some really quite remarkable improvements. But maybe that's for another podcast. But, you know, Wimbledon's on at the moment. And mom is a mega tennis fan. And so on Saturday, I just went around and she wasn't talking that much. She was actually a little bit, to be fair, but nothing like she used to. Yes, yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:29 I would just sat there when I held her hand and we were watching her game together and I just don't know how can I know what impact that is or is not having on her but I think it speaks to what you're saying it's kind of like don't don't stop loving them yeah don't write them off
Starting point is 01:35:52 don't write them off yeah yeah while you're saying that I also thought about do you know the book My Stroke of Insight by Jill Baltie Taylor. She was a brain, some sort of brain specialist and she had a stroke and she said her mum was coming in to visit her and she didn't know everything that was going on at the time. She's since become a highly creative woman. She's gone from science into creativity. But she said she remembers that everyone was getting excited about her mum coming in to visit her in hospital and she also gives like advice.
Starting point is 01:36:30 you know, like close the blinds and how over-sensitive people are in that situation. But in terms of her personal experience, when everyone was getting excited, she didn't know who this person was in that moment, she now does, and she didn't know what the excitement was, but she knew when her mother arrived that she was loved and she felt really safe and loved by this person. And she couldn't conceptualise that that was her mother at the time, but she knew that she was loved.
Starting point is 01:37:04 And it left her feeling really safe when everything else was overstimulating while she was sort of finding her new way forward. And just that feeling of everyone being excited made her happy. And she just sort of thought, okay, this is, and all the energy sort of shifted. Like, this is lovely. And then the love she felt from her mom carried her through to come out the other side. Wow. I think about what, you know, what you just said earlier as well wrong and that sometimes it's
Starting point is 01:37:33 about our own perception of it all and what we have to change to adapt to those changes and it is what it is right now. Yeah. It's a part of life. Yes. Right? Yeah. And what's that phrase?
Starting point is 01:37:47 You know, when you can't change a situation, you're forced to change yourself. Yes. Or your perspective of that. Yeah. Yeah, and again, just referencing that DACA Kelner conversation and this kind of idea that we don't have death front and center in a way that possibly we should, possibly if we were all exposed to death a bit more,
Starting point is 01:38:12 that we'd realize this is a part of life. And actually, in DACA's book, he shared the Japanese concepts of Wabi Sabi, which is this idea that all living creatures, living things, go through a five-stage process. Creation, birth, growth, decay, death. And I was reading that in February this year, so things were very, very raw for me.
Starting point is 01:38:43 But I've got to say, reading that, help me. Yes. Because there was a brutality, there was a brutal honesty to it. It was like, oh, decay. Yeah. Mom's body and brain is starting to decay. And so you could start accepting the changes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:58 And it's slightly counterintuitive because you're like, oh man, that's too much. But I actually found it really helpful. I thought by putting words to what this is, I was like, yeah, mom's had creation, birth, growth. Now she's on the final path of decay before at some point it will be death. Yeah. Doesn't mean I find it easy. No, but it helps you. But it has helped.
Starting point is 01:39:21 Intextualize it a little bit. intellectualize it. Yeah. I mean, Broni, listen, there are just so many concepts that come up from your work
Starting point is 01:39:31 we could speak for five hours. I know. I know you've fled to the UK for just a few days. I don't know how you're dealing with jet lag given that you come from Australia. Yeah. How are you doing with your jet lag?
Starting point is 01:39:41 Oh, not too bad. I'm just going to bed a bit earlier and still waking, you know, about five, whereas I normally would wake about six. But I'm okay.
Starting point is 01:39:49 You're okay. Australians have, Australians have a different. concept of distance and because towns are a long way away and, you know, like for me, I think, oh, yeah, mum lives just down the road. It's an hour and a half drive down the road and we'll drive down just for lunch some days and come back. And so I won't say I'm invincible, but, um, yeah, I mean, the second leg is only from Dubai to England. So that's like six hours after a 14 hour first leg. So it's like, ah, it's all relative, isn't it? Yeah, it's like, I'm fine. I survive
Starting point is 01:40:22 that one, I'll be right. So, yeah, I'm doing okay. And I do live very gently. I very much honour my limits and without using them as an excuse for laziness or anything like that. But knowing that, okay, if I'm going to show up, well, I have to have a good night's sleep or I have to not overload my days and that sort of thing. I'm very, very, I've learnt to be very good at honouring limits. Yeah. The intention at the start was to unpick each one of those five regrets and we got wheylades. Maybe it's my fault, but that's the way these conversations go. I kind of feel, though, we pretty much covered them all through our wandering conversation.
Starting point is 01:41:06 I think so. And of course, the books there where people can read about them in detail and the various people you sat with and the things you learned. It's an incredible book. I can see why it's been so impactful and continues to do so. This podcast is called Feel Better Live More. When we feel better in ourselves, we get more out of our lives. Now, of course, when we can appreciate, like really appreciate the idea that we're going to die, arguably that's the most important thing we can do to help us be present and get the most out of our life.
Starting point is 01:41:48 So right at the end, Bonnie, I always love to leave a few actionable ideas that people can think about. Maybe they can't apply them straight away, but at least if it helps them change their perspective a little bit and just encourages them to reflect on maybe there's a different way of doing things. I wonder right at the end then, you know, do you have any final words of wisdom for people who may feel a bit stuck and a bit lost? Yeah, I would just say that they're allowed to be happy, that they deserve their own permission to be happy, and more than anything to realize that they are going to die,
Starting point is 01:42:33 that you are going to die, and every single day is a gift. There's people that can't even get outside today, they're not well enough and they don't even get fresh air. So if you can find gratitude in whatever is going on, find some sort of gratitude in your life right now, then you're already on your way to living a regret-free life. Bronny, you're doing incredible work. Thank you for coming on the podcast.
Starting point is 01:43:02 It's been an absolute pleasure, Ongen. Thank you. Really hope you enjoyed that conversation. Do think about one thing that you can take away and apply into your own life. and also have a think about one thing from this conversation that you can teach to somebody else. Remember when you teach someone, it not only helps them. It also helps you learn and retain the information. Now before you go, just wanted to let you know about Friday 5. It's my free weekly email containing five simple ideas to improve your health and happiness.
Starting point is 01:43:41 In that email, I share exclusive insights that I do not share anywhere else, including health advice, how to manage your time better, interesting articles or videos that I'd be consuming, and quotes that have caused me to stop and reflect. And I have to say, in a world of endless emails, it really is delightful that many of you tell me it is one of the only weekly emails that you actively look forward to receiving.
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Starting point is 01:44:33 So please do take a moment to check them out. They are all available as paperbacks, e-books, and as audio books, which I am narrating. If you enjoyed today's episode, it is always appreciated if you can take a moment to share the podcast with your friends and family or leave a review on Apple Podcasts. Thank you so much for listening. Have a wonderful week. And always remember, you are the architect of your own health. Making lifestyle change is always worth it because when you feel better, you live more.

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