Passion Struck with John R. Miles - Bronnie Ware on Harnessing Joy in the Little Things EP 449
Episode Date: May 2, 2024https://passionstruck.com/passion-struck-book/—Order a copy of my new book, "Passion Struck: Twelve Powerful Principles to Unlock Your Purpose and Ignite Your Most Intentional Life," today! The book... was picked by the Next Big Idea Club as a must-read for 2024, the winner of the Business Business Minds Best Book 2024, and a finalist for the Eric Hoffer First Horizon Award for best debut novel.In this episode of Passion Struck, host John R. Miles interviews Bronnie Ware, author of "The Top Five Regrets of the Dying." Bronnie shares insights from her work in palliative care, emphasizing the importance of courage in living a fulfilling life. The discussion delves into facing the fear of death, making courageous choices, and learning from past experiences to shape personal growth. The episode highlights the significance of small choices and moments in shaping one's life, Full show notes and resources can be found here: https://passionstruck.com/bronnie-ware-harnessing-joy-in-the-little-things/In this episode, you will learn:Courage is the superpower that enables individuals to overcome fear and pursue their dreams.Every choice, big or small, shapes our lives and leads us towards personal growth.Confronting and healing from past experiences is essential to understanding oneself and reaching one's full potential.Real-life connections and meaningful relationships are sources of joy and fulfillment in life.All things Bronnie Ware: https://bronnieware.com/SponsorsBrought to you by Indeed. Head to https://www.indeed.com/passionstruck, where you can receive a $75 credit to attract, interview, and hire in one place.Brought to you by Nom Nom: Go Right Now for 50% off your no-risk two week trial at https://trynom.com/passionstruck.Brought to you by Cozy Earth. Cozy Earth provided an exclusive offer for my listeners. 35% off site-wide when you use the code “PASSIONSTRUCK” at https://cozyearth.com/This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at https://www.betterhelp.com/PASSIONSTRUCK, and get on your way to being your best self.This episode is brought to you By Constant Contact: Helping the Small Stand Tall. Just go to Constant Contact dot com right now. So get going, and start GROWING your business today with a free trial at Constant Contact dot com.--► For information about advertisers and promo codes, go to:https://passionstruck.com/deals/Catch More of Passion StruckWatch my interview with Daniel Pink On Why The Power Of Regret Can Transform Your LifeCan’t miss my episode with Sharon Salzberg On Building Equanimity In A Chaotic WorldMy interview with Sharon Rolph On How To Find Your Essence In RetirementListen to my interview with Dr. Michelle Segar On Why We Need To Shift To The JOY CHOICEMy solo episode on Why Your Micro Choices Determine Your LifeLike this show? Please leave us a review here-- even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can thank you personally!How to Connect with JohnConnect with John on Twitter at @John_RMiles and on Instagram at @john_R_Miles.Subscribe to our main YouTube Channel Here: https://www.youtube.com/c/JohnRMilesSubscribe to our YouTube Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@passionstruckclips
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up next on Passion Strike.
We can come up with a million reasons to stay in the wrong job.
Well, of course, there's responsibilities and the fear of what happens if I can't feed my child or what happens if I fail and what are my family going to think of me or what are my friends going to think of me.
It's really just fear of failure. But one of the tools I use, I've always used
to build my muscle of courage, which I actually think courage is my superpower now, is to
face the fact that you're going to die. And when you do that, you end up using death as
a tool for living because you realize how precious your time is and how every day it's reducing.
Your life is getting closer to the end,
whether you've got five years or 50 years left.
Welcome to Passion Struck.
Hi, I'm your host, John R. Miles.
And on the show, we decipher the secrets, tips,
and guidance of the world's most inspiring people
and turn their wisdom into practical advice
for you and those around you. Our mission
is to help you unlock the power of intentionality so that you can become the best version of yourself.
If you're new to the show, I offer advice and answer listener questions on Fridays. We have
long-form interviews the rest of the week with guests ranging from astronauts to authors, CEOs, creators, innovators, scientists, military leaders,
visionaries, and athletes.
Now, let's go out there and become Passion Struck.
Hello everyone, and welcome back to episode 449
of Passion Struck, consistently ranked the number one
alternative health podcast.
A heartfelt thank you to each and every one of you
who return to the show every week,
eager to listen and learn and discover new ways and Starter Packs, which are collections of our fans' favorite episodes that we organize in a convenient playlist that give any new listener a great way to get acclimated to everything we do
here on the show. Either go to Spotify or passionstruck.com slash starter packs to get
started. Are you curious to find out where you stand on the path to becoming passionstruck?
Dive into our engaging passionstruck quiz. Crafted to reflect the core principles shared in my latest
book, this quiz offers you a dynamic way to gauge your progress on the PassionStruck continuum.
Just head over to passionstruck.com to embark on this insightful journey.
With just 20 questions in roughly 10 minutes of your time, don't miss this chance to
gain valuable insights into your PassionStruck journey.
Take the quiz today.
In case you missed it, I had a phenomenal interview earlier in the week.
It was with astronaut Steve Bowen.
We explored his path from the Naval Academy to becoming a Submariner and how his travels in space
so closely resemble his experience of being on a submarine. Plus, we go into his space walks,
the fragility of Earth from space, the differences between flying up on the shuttle and being a crew
of SpaceX,
and so much more. Such a fantastic interview. And if you liked that previous episode or today's,
we would so appreciate you giving it a five star review and sharing it with your friends and family.
That goes such a long way in strengthening the PassionStruck community. And I know we and our
guests love to hear your feedback. Today, we have the distinct honor of delving into the profound
insights of Ronnie Ware, the profound insights of Bronnie Ware,
the esteemed author of the international bestseller, The Top 5 Regrets of the Dying.
Bronnie has touched the lives of millions globally, and that's why I wanted her so
much to come on this podcast.
Her words transcend language barriers and cultural divides.
Bronnie's journey from an unfulfilling career to becoming a pivotal voice in palliative
care has been nothing short of transformative.
Her experiences at the bedside of the dying led to revelations about life's true value
and the common regrets that many harbor as they reach life's twilight.
Residing in the serene backdrop of rural Australia, Bronnie continues to champion the virtues
of simplicity, courage, and the space to breathe,
guiding us towards following our hearts with daring resolve. Today, we'll explore the
quintessential themes of her work, the essence of mattering, the quest for our ideal selves,
the perils of silent desperation, and the transformative power of intentional living.
Brani's narrative not only provides a roadmap for living without regrets,
but also integrates
a collective yearning to lead a life replete with purpose and passion.
Prepare to be inspired as we embark on this journey with Ronnie Ware.
Thank you for choosing Passion Strut and choosing me to be your host and guide on your journey
to creating an intentional life.
Now let that journey begin.
I am absolutely honored and thrilled to have Bronnie Ware on Passion Struck. Welcome Bronnie.
Thank you John, it's a pleasure to be here. Thank you.
I have been wanting to have you on this show for such a long time. You have had two amazing books
over the years, but before we get into either of those,
I wanted to explore your earlier background so that the audience has a bit to go from.
So your career path took you from banking.
And I was telling you before that I was involved with Australia.
I worked for Lendlease.
And when I was there, we still owned MLC before they sold it.
But then you sold photographs, you were in hospitality, etc.
And you did all this before you found your calling.
How did those early struggles and a principle that I've read you like to use around starting small
influence your path to success?
I think the pain of being in the wrong job gave me the courage to keep going. So they influenced it in that way definitely. But also I think as a creative person having a background really helps
me be efficient running my business and being an author, because I don't think I'm the best
author on the planet, the best nature photographer on the planet, but I have Mac together.
And there's a lot of brilliant creative types that never get their work outside of their
lounge room because they just don't have it together in a business sense. So I'm always grateful for that and for those 15 years in the banking industry.
And yeah, I think that every role we do plays a part in the next one.
I think all of them are preparing us in one way or another for the next role.
I liked some of the experiences that I read about with you being on islands and I lived in Key West
So I absolutely know what it's like to be on island time and I live here in st
Petersburg, Florida right close to the beach so I can still get that a little bit
but as you found sometimes you get a transition out of it and
For you transitioning into palliative care marked a real significant shift in your career.
However, I want to ask this question a little bit different way.
What guidance would you offer those who feel like they're trapped in unsatisfying roles
and they don't know how to get out of that to embrace the change that might lead them
into something that might be closer to their heart?
I think you have to allow it to be a step-by-step process rather than spend all your time trying
to work out how because that is enough to stop you even taking the first step because it can be
overwhelming thinking how am I going to do this and what if it succeeds then how am I going to do this? And what if it succeeds, then how am I going to manage it?
Whereas if you just consider it as a step-by-step process,
then you dare to take that first step.
But one of the tools that actually got me on my way
was an old book now by Shakti Gawain,
it's called Creative Visualization.
And it was long before the word manifestation or manifest
was in common use language and there was an exercise in that said write down five things you're
good at and five things you love to do and that's what I did and that's what helped me realize even
though I was still in banking then I was a quite a young bank manager I just I realized I was still in banking then, I was quite a young bank manager. I just, I realised I was a creative
person but I wanted to work with heart. Like I loved being connected to people but I was a
creative person. So I had things that landed in both columns and that really helped me define
my way forward. And so even though it took a lot of years to actually start making an income
creatively, I realized that I had to start taking the steps to do that. So I think it's about getting
clear on what really lights you up and where your skills are and seeing how you can overlap those.
Because I really think that, as I said in the previous question because I really think that as I said in
the previous question I really think that no skills are wasted but it is a
step-by-step process and so we have to get out of our own way and stop trying
to work out the how of every single thing and just have the courage to take
the first step and then trust that the next step will reveal itself when we're
ready because that's the process, that's the way I live and it certainly is how it works. If you
dare to not think too far ahead you're obviously pulled forward by your vision but we can get in
our own way by over complicating our thinking and trying to work out all all the answers too soon. So, I just think get clear on what
lights you up. Get clear on what you're good at. Find a way
to overlap those and then what is a step that you can do
right now and or or prepare for and then do and and that will
at least get you on your way.
I really like that answer and I just put out a solo episode on an action oriented mindset.
One of the things I have often heard people say is that they feel
that they need to understand what their passion is before they start taking action and I think it's the inverse. You need to start taking action and exploring new things.
And that's how you expand yourself and passion eventually starts entering your
life through those different explorations.
I'd like to hear your thoughts on it.
Yeah, I think that passion can also come through confidence.
And so what you've just said John to take action
it can be scary because you're not sure what you're doing or where the action's leading but
the more action you take yes that's going to give you confidence and the more confidence you have
the easier things become so that does can become a passion and I think for me it was definitely working out what my passions were
and then taking action. But I've also learned that if you put too much pressure on the things
you're passionate about, they can lose their passion. And so I think that it's probably
finding that dance in the middle or that balance in the middle of taking action.
And yeah, I do think that passion can come through confidence
and that can only come through taking action.
So let's meet in the middle on that one.
Well, I think it's interesting because people get really perplexed when they're not finding
that passion, that inner drive for what they feel like they should be doing.
But I like to remind people that if you look at notable figures like Brad Pitt and Abraham
Lincoln, I'll just use those two as examples, Brad Pitt, long before he was an actor, was actually a limo
driver. And then he was actually wearing a chicken suit at a fast food restaurant and doing odd jobs.
And I think it was this struggle that he was going through that kind of convinced him to
start taking some acting classes, which then led down the path to where he is now.
And Abraham Lincoln, I think people remember him for the last years of his life, but for
80 to 85% of his life, he was going from odd job to odd job, even describing himself as
a piece of driftwood, just bouncing off the shores because he had no direction in life. But then when they both found it, you
see how they double down similar to you and their life
just explodes in fulfillment and success. So, any thoughts
on those two examples or other ones that you've seen that are
similar to those? I think they're common examples in the
sense that most successful people have to spend a lot of time
working out what they don't want before they work out what they do. And so when I left the banking
industry, I went and worked on a tropical island for two years, but I also wrote in my application
letter that I was willing to do anything, because I knew that I just couldn't be happy in banking.
I've given it all my all the best I could and so I was willing to take on any job just to give
myself some thinking time and to get myself out of the secure banking career that everyone said
I should have stayed in and that was a fantastic time. From that I ended up
And that was a fantastic time. From that I ended up
talking my way into volunteering and talking my way into the cocktail bar. So I became really confident working behind the bar. That got me work overseas, which then,
surprisingly, led me to, once I had the confidence to travel overseas as a backpacker,
because I had all those skills from the island, which was Dunk Island, a beautiful island up on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia. Those
hospitality skills gave me the confidence to go backpacking overseas
and it was through that time that I then and took a live-in job as a carer and so
that led to my full career to looking after dying people, which then enabled me to also involve my passion of writing
and being a messenger for something more important
than just trying to sell insurance
to people banking their paycheck in the banks.
And so I think we have to trust that all of those roles
that may seem mundane or seem like the wrong jobs,
at least they're giving us time to
clarify the way forward and so at least they give you a way out of what you don't want and
it's okay as long as you don't see it as a failure, as long as you just see it as a stepping stone,
then there's no such thing as failure anyway, it's all just learning and part of the journey of life.
I agree with what happened with Brad Pitt
and Abraham Lincoln, and it happened to me as well,
that I stepped out of that life that was expected of me,
the banking career, and I went and washed dishes,
and it was hard work.
It was really crazy washing up and commercial kitchen
in the tropics, like full on tropics,
with no air conditioning.
It was hard physical work and lifting 20 litre buckets of water and oil and we'll fit 20 year
olds in those days. Oh my goodness. But it played a role and I think that's what we have to do,
not see anything as going backwards or as a failure, but see it as a stepping stone.
or as a failure, but see it as a stepping stone.
Yes, similar to you, I got into the corporate world myself, unintentionally, because I came out of the military,
I wanted to be an FBI agent, my class got recycled.
By the time I was able to go, it was three and a half years later,
almost four years, and I had a child on the way.
So I went down this path that I don't think I ever
anticipated going down, which I think happens to a lot of people. And then you're 10 years into it
and you start looking back like, how did I get here? I was great at what I was doing, but I found
that I wasn't inspired and I was caught in this endless loop of meetings and
that I wasn't inspired and I was caught in this endless loop of meetings and HR issues and just going through the motions and I think it's what Henry
David Thoreau refers to when he says that we live lives of quiet desperation
and it intrigued me because in your own book you write I finally came to the
conclusion I would have to eventually work from the heart
as working only from the intellect left me empty and not satisfied. And I think that's
exactly how I felt as well. Why do you think so many people fall into this trap of what
Henry David Thoreau calls quiet desperation?
I think we can justify anything to ourselves. So we can come up with a million reasons to stay in the wrong job and I think well of course there's
responsibilities and the fear of what happens if I can't feed my child or what happens if I fail
and what are my family going to think of me or what are my friends going to think of me. It's really just fear of failure and but one of the the tools I use, I've always used to build my
muscle of courage which I actually think courage is my superpower now, is to face the fact that
you're going to die and when you do that you end up using death as a tool for
living because you realise how precious your time is and how every day it's reducing, your life is
getting closer to the end whether you've got five years or 50 years left and everyone thinks they've
got 50 but it doesn't work out that way if you look at the odds. And so by facing the fact and accepting the fact that we are going to die and every single one of
us is going to die, then you treat your time with a lot more reverence and see it as sacred. And
when you do that, you find the courage to make changes because you realize, okay,
I do have these dreams.
I may be caught in this 10-year loop or whatever, but I do have these dreams.
And I keep figuring that one day I'm going to get around to them.
But you may not get that one day if you don't get on with it now.
And it doesn't necessarily mean doing what I did and quitting the
banking job and going and washing dishes on an
island. It doesn't even mean quitting the big job to
start with. For some people it's about starting a
side hustle or just creating three or four, five
hours a week on the weekend or whatever to start
taking steps towards the other direction
that your heart is calling.
And at least then you know that you're giving it a go
and then there will come a time
when it just pulls you so far forward
that you find the courage to let go of the old job
and take that risk.
And no one successful has not taken risks. I mean that's how life rewards us
when we show our commitment and our bravery. We have to go through hard times, well we don't have
to but most of us do go through a hard time because we're having to go through our resistance,
we're having to eradicate our resistance and that resistance is just fear and the more love we can
treat ourselves with and treat our time with the more courage we find to actually make those lasting changes.
Ronnie, thank you for sharing that. I have unfortunately over the past few years watching this firsthand because my
sister has pancreatic cancer and it's just been the ups and downs of it
initially being stage one, thinking that when she had the Whipple procedure, that
was going to give her this long, maybe decade or long elongation of her life.
And then 18 months later it came
back and now she's just continuing to try experimental trial after experimental
trial but in observing the way that she's living her life it has completely
changed meaning she prioritizes the most important things she prioritizes friends
and she has moved anyone out who is not bringing
her joy or fulfillment or positive constructive feelings. Is this something as you were doing
palliative care that you also saw some of the patients that you work with do as well,
concentrating on the most important things in their life and getting rid of the things that were ancillary?
Most of the people that I was looking after, John, were already at stage four.
And so they were really just prioritizing their time in the sense that they wanted to
be with family and friends.
And a lot of the other people had fallen away. But I have witnessed it a lot in life since,
and even during those years of other people
that I've been with, friends who have died
and being diagnosed with terminal illness.
And this was with the palliative patients too.
The nonsense falls away.
And so even though the people I was looking after
for those eight years were already dying
and had gone home to die, they certainly didn't have the energy for nonsense.
And so they weren't interested in small talk and or gossip or that sort of thing.
They wanted to talk the real stuff and have quality time with the people they loved.
And but then I like I say, I've also had
quite a few friends who have died and that's the moment they are diagnosed with any sort of
potentially terminal illness and some have died and some have not and they're still going years later.
They do absolutely exercise their priorities. They just say, what am I doing? And it's such a sad part of
society really that it has to come to that before people take the courage to make the changes
because society sort of dictates that all these other things are important, but those things,
when you're looking at life from a real perspective, a lot of those things like career status
and stuff like that, they're shallow,
they're not, they're so irrelevant
on the soul's journey and on the big picture.
So it does take that.
And that, unless we can face the fact
that we're going to die before we're diagnosed with illness
and then we find the courage to make those changes.
But even facing the fact that you're going to die
before you're diagnosed with an illness,
even that takes courage and most people don't.
Don't wanna talk about the word deaf in any way whatsoever.
You would love the work that my friend Scott Simon is doing.
He started a movement called,
Scare Your Soul in a book on the same name, but
what he really encourages his community to do is every week do a boundary expanding challenge
that just makes you think differently about how you're approaching your life. And I do
think courage is so important to being the fuel along with our intrinsic motivation that makes us take action to do
things in different ways.
So I wanted to just go into the book a little bit before I explore some other topics, but
for those who are listening or watching, I'm holding up the book, The Five Regrets of the
Dying, which Brawny is most well known for.
It's sold over a million copies now.
And if I have my math, it's been translated
into about 40 different languages.
As I understand it, this came out of your work
in palliative care, but not only that,
many of the patients that you worked with
asked that you share aspects of their life and their regrets and to pass it on.
Is that kind of the correct understanding of some of the background behind it?
That's right. Yes. Yeah. It was people realizing the importance of their mistakes and saying, please tell other people this because they,
I guess they wanted to leave some sort of legacy
of importance, but proper significance,
not just a legacy of financial significance
for their family or whatever.
But yeah, there were a few patients that said,
please don't let this anguish of mine
and this lesson of mine be one that you,
and that other
people may please pass this on and I just realised that I was being called to
be the messenger for these regrets and or for regrets in general and I guess
my from my perspective witnessing their utter heartache and anguish is what gave
me the courage to then honour those requests
and write about it and pass it on because I'm the messenger, I'm not the one who was
lying on my deathbed with that anguish and pain. So yeah, it was horrific to see what
had happened and your friends write, scare your soul because the only way we're not going
to have regrets is to get scared and get on with it because if we
don't want to be scared and we want to avoid fear, well two things will happen. We'll stay in our
comfort zone which means we won't grow but the other thing is life will throw us unexpected
curveballs because you can't avoid your growth either way. You can't avoid it.
So isn't it better to at least take some steps and get on with it and have a chance to see your
dreams realized rather than be thrown a curveball and then think holy do we how am I going to deal
with this. As I was researching you I found that you and I had a couple things in common.
I just published my first book, and I love how your story would call you an instant success,
yet it was 14 years or so before you actually wrote the book.
But what you and I, in addition to that length of time, what you and I both had in common
is, people see the book now and they think that the path to publishing it was an easy one.
And what they don't know is all the rejections that I faced even to get an agent.
And once I got an agent, it was like every publisher in the world was turning me down,
which was one of the most humility driving exercises I've ever been through and
I understand you were rejected yourself if I have the number correct by like 25 or 28
different publishers.
Yeah 25 times yeah.
I've come to two sort of conclusions on that and one is that by being rejected we get to
show life our commitment.
We either quit or we keep going.
And I think there does come a time
if we're going to really go for what we want,
we have to prove our commitment.
And so those rejections, they can be heartbreaking
and certainly a lesson in humility.
But they're also just one person's opinion
or one team's opinion and publishing is a business.
So publishers need, that's all it is.
It's a business to make money and I love my publishers
but it's not a friendship, it's a business agreement.
And so they need to see that you're a good
investment. And so often one of the reasons I was rejected, and
this is through a publisher in Australia who I came to know the
woman later and she said we don't have any space in our
catalogue for a book about death. And I said, well, it's more about life than death.
And she said, we couldn't market this. And my publisher in Australia, Hay House, but the
director of Hay House Australia, he's friends with that woman. And he loves to wind her up all the
time about it. And so she was just coming at it from a business perspective saying it's not going to fit in our catalogue
and hey, how's rejected it? My my main publisher, they were
one of the twenty-five rejections. And so maybe my
proposal wasn't clear enough for them to see but either way,
I just thought, okay, well, I've been an independent singer
songwriter along the way as well. I'll be an independent
author. And so I put the book out independently. And then in the same 24 hours as I was becoming
a mum and I was in labour, my article about the five regrets just went crazy. And then the book
went, it had already been going crazy. And then the book got mentioned in the major UK newspaper.
And I was doing interviews while in labour.
And within 24 hours of my daughter being born,
I was offered a deal with Hay House.
And my book went on to become,
and Hay House is the global leader
in personal growth books.
And my book became the fastest foreign rights seller in
Hay House history and so that's after 25 rejections. So I wouldn't, if you're going through a lot of
rejections, absolutely think about is there a reason? Could I improve this book? And I actually
have a small book, independent book, I put out called From 25 Rejections to a Million Readers.
And what I do say in that is that, be honest with yourself,
could your book be improved?
And I think that Five Regrets could have been improved
in the format it was, and it's since being improved.
There's a second edition, that yellow cover you have
is the second edition, which is an improvement on the first. But beyond that, if it's
the best that you can do at the time, then that's the best you
can do. And so keep in mind it's not personal, it is a
business and if your book's meant to get out there and if
you can show life the commitment, you'll find a way,
even if it's self-publishing which is no longer a category of failure like it was back in my day if you self-published half the
bookstores didn't even want to publish your book whereas a lot of published authors are now choosing
to self-publish because the technology has advanced so far and there's plenty of great
ways to self-publish and make some
really substantial income from it. So a lot of people are actually choosing self-publish now.
So it really is a matter of perspective and how you want to frame the rejections. It may not fit
one particular publisher or 25 publishers or whatever but that does not mean there's not an
audience for it because clearly I've proved that wrong.
Yes Hay House is one of my favorite publishing houses and I mean I just look
at you, Gabby Bernstein, I mean so many of their authors are just incredible. I saw
that they were acquired not too long ago by Penguin Random House,
which will give them a larger footprint as well.
So, and they just put out a great book by Jamie Kern Lima,
which is skyrocketing as well.
So I, unfortunately, not only did I not get rejected,
I didn't get a response at all from Hay House.
So I don't know which one is worse, but I always feel like if it's meant to
be, it's meant to be and the time will come and I just keep working it. Yeah, I can see you still
taking it personally there, John, but please don't. I mean, there's a million reasons you may not have
heard back and it's probably got nothing to do with the quality of your book. It was in a, the
company was in a transition. They may not get
back to everyone now. I mean, I had an agent who tried, 24 of my 25 rejections were through an
agent. And even then it's, she went into bat for me, a great woman. And even then I didn't have
success, but that is no reflection of the quality of your work. It just means it hasn't found its place within a publishing house at this time. Yeah
No, I mean you're bringing up something very important. They're very concerned about your overall platform because I think the thing that
People don't understand is in the publishing business
The author is the one who has to do all the leg work to get the book out there and most of the houses
are completely downsizing their promotional staffs, unless you're one of their top 5% authors and you're Susan Cain or Dan Pink,
they'll support you.
But other than that, almost every author I know is having to get their own
publicity team to help support it.
So I don't take it personally. and the more I learn about the industry,
it was just shocking for me to go through the process.
Sure, especially when you create a work of art and everything.
I'll just quickly tell you, do you know Wayne Dyer's story about him getting published?
He was rejected and so he did a tour with his boot full of books and went into went all over America and
went into all the bookstores and said do you have Wayne Dyer's book and this is before the internet
so they couldn't look up that it was him and they're like no and he's like oh it's a fantastic book
like you really should order it in can you order it in and it's something along these lines and so
they'd order it in and he'd go and buy them all
which would then make them order more and so he ended up
having this boot full of books that he started giving out to
fans when they would write in and say well your second or
third book has changed my life. He would send them a copy of
those first books that he had bought himself just to get the
book noticed by booksellers.
So then they would order enough,
and once they were ordering enough,
then obviously that leads to publishing
and all sorts of things.
He had a huge career in book publishing.
So he actually just did the legwork
and went and appeared in all these bookshops
and asked for his book.
And when they didn't have it, they'd order it,
he'd buy them all and say, "'It's such a good when they didn't have it they'd order it he'd
buy them all and say it's such a good book I'm buying it all for my friends and so then the
bookstore would order more copies in for the customers. I love the story of Robin Sharma too
who I think he had self-published the book or it was a very small publishing house that did it
and it wasn't selling at all and he happened to be in the bookstore signing copies of it.
When a gentleman came in and asked him about the book and he started to talk to him about it.
And it was his book, something about the Ferrari.
And I think he's with Hachette or Harper, but whoever was the president of the publisher.
And it just happened to be the right timing and off it went.
Yeah, there's a lot in readiness and timing, but it also comes back to what you said before about taking action.
So he was out there taking action, signing books.
If he was sitting at home, not taking action, he wouldn't have
got that opportunity.
You're absolutely correct about that.
And I want to go down this path a little bit about taking action, because one of the main
things that I talk about in the show is the power of choice.
And so much of our life is dictated, I think all our life is by the choices we make.
And it's the small, what I call micro choices
that end up determining the path of our lives.
And I believe you share the same viewpoint.
Can you discuss your thoughts on it?
Yeah, absolutely.
It all comes down to choice.
We're completely on the same page there.
Because every choice we make,
whether we want to spend time with a friend
who's going to bring us down
or whether we're going to go and hang out
with a group of people that will leave us inspired,
that's going to shape how our day turns out,
that's going to shape how our energy levels are,
that's going to shape how we show up at home,
that's going to shape how we sleep,
that's going to shape how we wake up at home, that's going to shape how we sleep, that's going to shape how we wake up the next morning. Every single choice we make has an on-flow effect, has a ripple effect,
and I completely agree with you. Every choice, big or small, and we think that the big ones are the
ones that that actually shape our lives, but it's the everyday, well what you just said about the
micro and macro ones, that it's those small choices that build up over time that shape our
lives. It's got very little to do with the huge choices
because it's those small choices that lead us into
readiness for the big choices anyway. Yeah, I refer to them as
the choices we make and the transition points in life
because a lot of people do think it's the big things that really make the most.
And it's not, it's these things that happen along the transitions between the big ones.
And the way I liken it is when I was in the military and we were going on an operation.
Oftentimes, when we face the biggest issues on an op, it wasn't in the heat of the op
itself.
It was either going to or coming back from it when you're either a little bit off guard
or you're thinking so far ahead, you're not in the moment at that time, and that's when
you get caught off guard.
I think so oftentimes we look forward to the big things that we don't think about the incremental steps that
we're taking on along the way to get there and being intentional about it. Yeah and it's not
just the choices it's the moments as well you know a lot of life can be lived for these big moments
but the big moments are probably five or six big moments in your life. And so a lot of people are striving for those big moments
and making all their choices for these big things.
And they're missing life in the process
because life is happening now
and it's in the small moments and the small choices.
And the more present you can be,
the more mindful you can be about life right now,
then the more you're actually going to enjoy your life as it's
unfolding and not end up at the end and think oh I missed my
life. I've got a lot of regrets here and so it's those small
choices but it's also the small moments that make life rich.
Ronnie before I ask you this next question, I wanted to understand if you were
familiar with the work of psychologist Tom Gilovich. No. So Tom is a Cornell University
psychologist. He's now in his 70s and after your book came out, he and his team interviewed thousands and thousands of people who were in their, I guess you could say, third component of life.
Let's just say they were 60 and up. And they ended up asking them about the biggest regrets they had in life.
And what's interesting to me is their research coincided with your book in many ways.
And the number one regret, which came up 76% of the time, was that it wasn't the mistakes
that people made in life that haunted them.
It was the what ifs, the should haves.
It was the lasting regrets that stem from not pursuing becoming our ideal selves and rather deciding that we have to chase our
odd self and meet the obligations that we feel are thrown upon us. And this is really similar to
the first regret of the dying that you talk about in the book and I was hoping through that lens
you might be able to discuss this interplay
about living a life true to our deepest aspirations.
I think that research along with my experience
and mine wasn't formal research.
Mine was just lived experience by the bedside
of dying people and recognizing common themes.
But they both come down to courage
and it all comes down to courage.
All of the regrets, any regret you're going to have
will come down to a lack of courage.
And it just means you've given fear more power
than it deserves and fear has a place
in a primal way to protect us,
but it doesn't have a place in holding us back from our dreams.
So absolutely I agree with that research because what I witnessed was always about a lack of
courage. Like in not living a life true to yourself, it means that you haven't had the
courage to speak up, take action, be kind enough to yourself to honour your own dreams as well.
And if you can see, recognise that something as heartbreaking and huge as lying on your deathbed
with regrets, when you can recognise that it really does just come down to courage or a lack of
courage, it can help you understand the importance of courage and courageous action.
Courage is not enough.
You've got to take the action with it.
It's got to be supported.
The action has to be supported by courage.
If you recognize that you have the power to take courageous action, then you're heading
down a completely different road.
And even if it doesn't turn out exactly as you'd hoped,
because it really does,
it often turns out even better than you've hoped.
And the things you learn about yourself on the way
just turn you into such a more powerful person
and more grounded in your sense of self.
And that in itself is a massive reward for courage to know yourself
on that level and know your potential and know that even if things scare you you're still going
to get on with it because each act of courage has rewarded you with that sense of self and the
satisfaction that you had ago and I think that as ever expanding beings, we'll probably never see every single dream realised.
Also, some people are happy with one or two big dreams
and then they ticked off their list
and they're fine with that.
But I think for those of us who are driven by courageous action,
we'll probably never see every single dream realised
because we'll still be dreaming when we're 95 or you know at what you
know whatever age and so I think that those regrets that have been studied and the regrets that I
witnessed they all come down to courage but they are all regrets that can be avoided simply by facing your fear, daring to grow through your
healing and your resistance and it is scary and it brings up a lot of primal wounds and
a lot of old beliefs from your childhood that need healing but having done that myself repeatedly,
I can only say the
freedom that comes on the other side is worth every amount of
anguish and pain that you've gotta go through and it's
certainly is never going to be as difficult as lying on your
deathbed with the regret of not having tried. Yeah and to to
me it's that and the other thing that I have found is
profound fulfillment now that I've shifted my
work so that it's really about helping others and helping others to also become their best that they
can possibly be. It's really brought so much more contentment in everything I do. And I wanted to
talk to you a little bit about learning from what happens in our past. In the
book you write, working through my own stuff was teaching me gifts and learning. I was actually
coming to find a lot of blessings through my past. Strength, forgiveness, compassion, kindness,
and many other lessons had been offered to me through my circumstances,
which shaped me into a better person every day.
Through that passage, can you elaborate on why confronting and embracing our past is critical
to personal growth and your advice for someone in approaching this?
Well, all of us have ended up in a family that's imperfect. Even our children have ended up in a family that's imperfect.
And every generation evolves more and heals more than the previous generation. You look at the kids
coming through today, they're so much wiser than my generation on Generation X. And I think that we have to go back to heel in order to find out who we really are, because
who we become as young adults is really just a product of our conditioning.
And there's not a lot of leeway and freedom to truly know yourself in those earlier years,
because you're still living under your parents' roof or you're
influencing adults' roof. And it's really not until you start stepping away from that and
seeing that some of those beliefs and patterns and behaviors are not actually yours,
they're family beliefs and behaviors and And they don't necessarily fit you,
it's probably the main instigators of what brings unhappiness. And so it is essential to go back and
remember who you were before all of that. And that takes a lot of work and a lot of healing.
and that takes a lot of work and a lot of healing. And it's probably a lifetime process in a way,
but the freedom that comes from that
is absolutely worth it.
And so I think that in order to know our full potential,
even if we've had very little trauma in our upbringing,
and say you've had very supportive parents
and you've had a happy life and you can't
really fault your parents' efforts and this does happen sometimes. There's children that come through
that and still as young adults take their own lives and yet they've been raised with nothing but love. But there's a Buddhist word called sankaras
and it means reactions.
And so you can have an incident happen in a family
and in that family say, you know, you've got three or five,
say for example, there's five siblings.
And of those five, three nights sort of never think
about that incident again.
And two might process it in
completely different ways to each other and one of them may carry that incident, their
framing of that incident, they may carry that as a trauma right up until they're ready to
heal or if they don't have the courage to heal right through to their death.
And so there's no guarantee that even perfect parents
are not going to trigger some sort of reaction in a child. And same goes for those who are raised
in dysfunctional families. My dad was an alcoholic and quite a volatile alcoholic.
And I can recognise in hindsight his brokenness and the ancestral pain that was handed down
and just how little love he received as a child. So of course he was going to be broken
and as the child who was most like him, I triggered a lot of that for him. He was highly
sensitive, highly creative, but he couldn't honour that. He had to give up his music to raise us kids.
And so for me, I caught a pretty hard childhood and a shocking childhood really.
But it taught me compassion and forgiveness.
It also taught me who I didn't want to be and what I wanted to heal in the family patterns.
And I just think that we can't be the,
and I hate to use these words, the best version
because it's just such a cliched sort of overused term,
the best version of ourselves,
but we can't reach our potential as who we're here to be
if we don't venture back into the pain and loosen it up and let it out because it will hold us
back forever otherwise.
I'm glad you ended up bringing up the topic of Buddhism
because the person I was going to bring up next is a Buddhist.
Uh Bob Wallinger uh wrote a great book last year called
The Good Life, and he currently
leads the Harvard study of adult aging, which revealed that our relationships had the biggest
factor in us feeling we actually have a good life, which reflects on one of the regrets that you
outline in the book, I wish I'd stayed in touch with my friends. I want to explore this through a
different lens. In the book, you share the story of Doris's experience
with loneliness, which is something
that has become a societal epidemic across all countries.
And I think we all now have these busy lives,
and we're not doing as good a job even
with social media of cultivating meaningful relationships.
In fact, I think in some ways it hinders them.
What are some of the observations that you had by observing the dying and what would be some of your recommendations as people are living out their lives on how they start thinking about loneliness so that they avoid this emptiness that can really
get into the hearts and
destroys both mentally and physically.
Well in looking after the dying people it was
obvious that their joy was in connection, real-life connection.
They had plenty of time for sleep because that's all they could do really and to sleep and have reflection but
the joy that they held on to from their visitors was just beautiful and it was obvious that real
life connection is a source of joy and I have a friend called Marcus Pearce and he has a book
called Your Exceptional Life and he's basically a longevity coach. And what the research he's done as well is that
it's not about, I mean, it's good to eat healthy
and everything else, but he always says,
it's not about your diet or how many ice baths you take
or everything else.
It's much more about social connection,
real life connection.
I'm actually seeing him tomorrow.
And it's very easy with social media to stay in touch
with your friends, which was one of the regrets that the dying habit, they wish they had stayed
in touch with their friends. But a lot of that was before social media became so prevalent in everyday
life. Those years were and so it's very easy to stay in touch with your friends through social media or a quick DM on messenger or whatever, or even a quick text.
But it's nothing compared to a real life hug, connection, share food, that sort of thing.
And even a phone call with face to face, a voice to voice phone call.
So I have Australia is a big country. I have friends in the state who I can't see regularly.
But to have a real life phone call every six months
brings us up to date on each other
and always leaves us feeling better.
So I think that in terms of a quality life
and to address loneliness,
we actually need to get off social media more.
And social media is positive in a lot of ways.
I've made real life friendships through connections
initially made on social media.
And it brings your community to you.
And there's a lot of positives,
but none will ever be as beautiful as real life connection.
And so if someone's going through loneliness,
it's probably the least, the worst time
to feel like getting out because when you are lonely,
you're just not in the mood for socializing
or you're not always capable of socializing.
But that's where you have to have the courage
and push through that resistance.
And it may mean joining a club or forming a book club that meets in person once a month
or something like that, reconnecting with old friends, joining a sports club or a walking
group.
There's always opportunities and there's always excuses, but you either live in the excuses or you push through the fear and say
I'm worth more than this, I want to have a laugh today or I want to smile or I want to
have a conversation with a stranger today and just find a way to make that happen whether it's a
shop assistant who serves you or however it has to happen, push through that fear
and it is scary putting yourself out there especially if you've been lonely for a long
time and isolated for a long time. But I mean it affects health on so many levels and all this
the proper research is showing that loneliness isn't just about breaking your own heart,
it affects your health on so many levels and so for our well-being but also for our reverence of
this gift of life we've got, it's really important to get out socially and connect with people and
it's okay if some of those people are not your people. It's they play the role they're meant to but
there are good people wanting to meet other good people out
there and so it's our job to make sure we're out there to
do that. And uh Barani before I get into these other
questions, do you have time for two more questions? Sure.
Absolutely, John. It's a nice conversation. I'm enjoying it.
Bronnie, I wanted to jump into your newer book, Bloom.
And unfortunately, I can't share it because I
bought a Kindle version of it.
But one of the things you really go into it discussing
is our upper limit capacity.
And I think we all have this internal thermostat that regulates the amount
of love, success, creativity, what have you that we permit ourselves to experience. And
often when we surpass this set point, which is often dictated by what you talked about
earlier with your father, things that happened in our past, we end up self-sabotaging ourselves.
Can you explain from your perspective why we do this
and how it ends up affecting our growth and our happiness? I think sabotage is a primal thing.
It comes down to our sense of belonging and our need for belonging. And so if we outgrow the family
dynamic or dare to step outside of the family dynamic we risk losing that sense of
belonging. Even if that sense of belonging was never that nurturing there's something
primal within us that needs to find the sense of belonging and so yeah as I write about in Bloom
that when my daughter was born so I was blessed. I conceived naturally at 44 and became a first-time
mum at 45. Healthy pregnancy, healthy baby. I did, I'm a child's father and I separated during that
pregnancy during that time. But I was blessed with a beautiful baby in the 24 hours that she was born.
I was offered the international publishing deal with Hay House. So they were two hugely wonderful things to happen. Within a week of that, I was also
diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. And so you could look at that and say, well, you're unlucky,
you pushed your health a bit far, you're too old to become a mom, whatever. But on a growth level,
I can recognise easily how I was scared to have that much good fortune in my family dynamics because sort of being mocked and ridiculed was a part of the family dynamic.
And so if I was proving them wrong, I was on some level, I was scared of the attacks that would come from that.
And so by getting a disease that was just so horrific when it first set in,
no one was attacking me about the book
or about the book success or the baby.
And they just let me be.
I think that this is something I thought about
when you mentioned your sister's health journey as well,
that I don't know who said it first,
but sometimes the disease is the healing.
It's not always about healing the disease. Sometimes the disease is the healing. It's not always about healing the disease.
Sometimes the disease is the healing.
And I think that the disease that I've learned to live with
has healed me on so many amazing levels.
But I do believe that we sabotage ourselves
often unconsciously, probably 99% of the time unconsciously
because why would we do it otherwise? We do
it because of a sense of belonging and that need for approval and to be loved within our
family unit or within our social tribe and we don't want to outgrow that. But we have
to outgrow it all because otherwise we're going to be held back and we're never going to know
not only our potential but we're never truly going to know ourselves as who we are.
Well, no, I agree with you and I read yours and then I also read a Hendrix book which
I have here called The Fifth Leaf.
That's fantastic.
That's a life changer.
In it he writes that the upper limit problem cannot be resolved through conventional
problem solving methods, such as acquiring new information instead.
It requires a focused awareness, something that I call conscious engagement to uncover
and address the false foundation supporting it.
Do you concur with what he says?
Yeah, I do.
I think that it's all well and good to say,
I'm gonna get through this.
I am going to break through this upper limit
and jump into that bigger fish bowl.
And bigger gold fish bowl is his book cover shows.
But it's not just a matter of saying it
or a conscious thing like, okay, I'm gonna do it.
And you just do it.
It takes healing.
It takes massive healing.
And so we can choose it
consciously but the work we have to do to break through that upper limit is really tapping into
the unconscious and healing that. Yeah. Ronnie, the last thing I wanted to ask you about which
is something that I'm really focused on is the topic of mattering. I look at all these feelings that
people have globally and the mental health issues, etc. And I think a lot of it comes down to
so many of us are waking up in the morning and we don't feel like our lives hold significance,
either through our work, it feels unfulfilled, or our relationships, what have you.
Considering your experiences and insights
into the different lives of the dying,
how do you think the need to matter and to be valued
influences the choices that people make
throughout their lives?
And how might this relate to common regrets
that you documented in your book?
I think the need to matter is huge, but I do also think it's distorted.
So it all comes down to society's interpretation of success,
that a lot of people feel they don't matter if they're not successful in their work
or something like that.
But if you can reframe it,
then you're not going to have a regret
because you realize that you do matter
no matter what you do.
I think the best way to understand that you do matter
is if you've had the courage to follow your heart,
then the heart always guides us to serve in one way or
another. And so if that's the case, then you matter. So an
example is there was this lovely elderly lady called Yvonne
and I was living over in Perth at the time and I was in a
banking job and I hated it. It was around the time I did that
list from Shakti Goen's book and it was a long time ago and I was really searching for purpose and
certainly I didn't feel like I mattered at all in the banking industry and I may have mattered to
the friends I had lunch with and that sort of thing but I was I just didn't feel my heart was
in it. So every day I used to I was in the the dregs of routine for a job I hated but I would
walk past Yvonne's garden and she had long long white hair down to her backside and she'd wear it
up and twist it up in a bun and she had the most beautiful flower garden and every morning at 7.35 or
something I would walk past her place and she would be out in the garden and we'd stop. At first it
was just a little bit of hello and then one day I put a note in her mailbox and said how much I
loved her garden and how much it lifted my morning and then one day we got chatting and she realised
it was me and and we became friends and she realised it was me and we became friends
and she showed me then her back garden which I didn't even know existed. And I think about her
often in terms of what matters and it's very easy to define our importance based on society's version
of success but that isn't what makes us matter. It really isn't. I mean, if we're following our heart,
it may guide us into a public role
where we serve publicly like you and I are doing.
But mums matter.
I'm a mum, I'm a single mum.
And I spend a lot more time in motherhood
than I do in my professional career
because I want to be present for my child
and I want her to leave the family nest
with the confidence to be herself.
So for me, that work matters much more than this work,
even as much as I'm grateful for this work
and I enjoy this work and I'm honored by it.
So I think it's about reframing whether you, how,
like why you think you don't matter
and how you think you could matter.
And if you're doing that, if you're following your heart
and your heart calls you to grow a garden,
that is your act of service.
That is your service.
Or becoming a better cook
and feeding your kids healthy food.
That is service.
And so if you have the courage to follow your heart,
no matter what it looks like,
regardless of how it's perceived by others,
you know your heart's own truth, the heart's voice,
which is your intuition and your yearnings.
If you have the courage to honor those,
then you matter, you already matter
because whatever your heart is going to call you to do,
even if it's just to go traveling,
well, you're going to inspire someone else to do that
who hasn't got the guts to do it.
So then you're not going to create that regret.
So I really think, John, that it's just a case
of reframing how you matter in order to find peace with it
because we all matter, we all matter.
And those that feel they don't maybe just a
little bit disconnected from their heart at the moment or a little bit scared to act on it.
Yeah I completely agree with you and it's something that I try to keep putting out there is that we all
have significance in the world. Every one of us matters in very big ways and I think
it's such an important message to get out. Well, Bronnie, I
so appreciate you being here today. Can you share with the
audience how if they wanna learn more about you? Obviously,
I'll put the books in the show notes. What other ways can they
connect with you? Well, Bronnie Ware is my mothership. So, it's
Bonnie with an R in it, Bronnie, and then
Ware, and like Warehouse, W-A-R-E, BronnieWare.com. And I also write a weekly story on Substack,
which is Life and Wonder with Bronnie Ware, but it's, there's links via BronnieWare.com.
I'm on social media, I have a bit of a vlog for a wild acreage that I bought and put a tiny home on.
And I'm all over the place, but not hugely.
I don't have, for the level of publicity my books have, I don't have a huge presence on social media
because it's never been my priority.
I value my audience, but I also value my time in my life.
And so I spend much more time offline than on, yeah.
Ronnie, thank you so much for being here.
It was such an amazing honor
and I'm so glad we can bring this episode to our audience.
Thank you, John.
You're a lovely host
and I really enjoyed this conversation.
Thank you.
What an incredible honor that was to interview Ronnie Ware
on Passion Struck, someone I've wanted on this show
for such a long time.
And links to all things Ronnie are in the show notes. Please use the links in the show notes to purchase any of the guests that we've wanted on this show for such a long time. And links to all things Brony are in the show notes.
Please use the links in the show notes to purchase any of the guests that we feature
here on the show.
Videos are on YouTube, both our main channel at Sean R. Miles and our clips channel at
PassionStruck clips.
Please go check it out and subscribe and join over 250,000 other subscribers.
Advertiser deals and discount codes are in one convenient place at passionstruck.com slash deals. Please consider supporting those who support the show. If you want to expand
your courage muscle and you want to start signing up for the passion struck weekly challenge,
then please consider joining our newsletter, which is entitled live intentionally. And
you can do that at either passionstruck.com or johnrmiles.com. And if you want to know
more about the show, have more
inspirational content, then follow me on all the social platforms at John R. Miles. And if you want
to know how I book amazing guests like Bronnie Ware on this podcast, it's because of my network. Go
out there and build yours before you need it. You're about to hear a preview of the Passion
Struck Podcast interview that I did with Jerry Hussey, Ireland's premier peak performance coach.
In this inspiring episode
of Passion Struck, Jerry shares his journey from preparing Olympic athletes on the world stage
to writing his acclaimed books, Awaken Your Power Within and The Freedom Within. His insights into
self-discovery and the art of living fully are not just for elite athletes, but anyone who's
looking to overcome adversity and to harness their infinite potential. I want you to ask yourself a question. Are you living life from a place of fear or a place of
love? And now that you see the way you're living your life, your lifestyle, the style in which
you're living your life, ask yourself if nothing changes. If you continue to live your life the way
you're living, if you continue to eat the food you're eating,
if you continue to say the things to yourself
that you say to yourself,
if you continue in the same way,
what does that look like in 15 to 20 years time?
What does it look like in good health?
What does it look like in mental health?
What does it look like in relationship?
And if that's a picture that inspires you
and makes you very happy, fantastic, change nothing.
If it's not a picture, the good news is,
tiny changes every day can change that picture completely.
Remember that we rise by lifting others.
So share the show with those that you love and care about.
And if you know someone who could use the inspiration
that Bronnie shared on today's episode,
then definitely share it with someone that you care about. In the meantime, do your best to apply
what you hear on the show so that you can live what you listen. Until next time, go out there and become
passion struck.