We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - REGRET: What if we’d done things differently?
Episode Date: March 15, 20221. Amanda shares the biggest regret of her life: the one that still wakes her up in the middle of the night. 2. The five biggest regrets of the dying—and how to make the necessary changes to avoid t...hem. 3. Why we should reframe regret as proof of a life well-lived. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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And it took some time, but I'm finally fine.
Whoa, hello! How are my favorite people?
Hi. Hi, sis.
Hi.
How are you doing today?
We are so like coffeeed up and wired
because we've been up since so early, 540 or something.
It was, it's Tisha's birthday today.
So when we're recording this, so we had,
we do breakfast in bed over like four,
four whoever kids' birthday it is.
We all just walk in with a plate.
Happy birthday to you. And they were Craig's this morning. So we went over there to just 16.
Sweet 16. That's a big deal. How does that feel for you?
It feels weird since she was born like two weeks ago. I am that mom now who's like, what happened?
It went so fast. But because it's true, there's this weird thing that is two things are true at once.
Like the first decade with children is so freaking slow. That when anyone who has a 16 year old says, oh, just it goes by so fast,
you want to stab them in the eyeballs because you think this is the longest day of my life every day.
But there's this thing, it's the roller coaster. It's like the first 10 years are
10 years or, chick, chick, chick, up the hill. And then you hit this part.
And it's like when they're 11 or so.
And then it's, whoosh, just down the hill.
And you just have to hold on.
I don't know.
It's awesome.
She's so cool.
All the people who, I think that, you know,
there's, I have this theory that there's one zone that you feel awesome
about when you're a parent and you just only get one.
Like some people love pregnancy and then after the kids
born, it's all over for them.
Some people are awesome baby parents.
I'm really liking this teenage part.
I am.
I feel like I don't know when teenage part. I am.
I feel like I don't know when they go do their things.
I constantly feel like that scene from Pinocchio
where Jepetto makes Pinocchio and then just watches him come
to life and dance about and just says, oh my God,
like that thing that we raised is animated and moving with its own energy.
I like it. I like the teen years so far.
Would you say that you have any regrets?
And with that incredible segment.
Master of Segway.
My wife is telling me that I'm talking too much about the topic that is not our topic
for the day.
That's right. And the topic.
Just try to stay on task here, babe.
Thank you.
I love you.
And that story was beautiful, but we're here to talk about something else today.
Okay.
Beautiful, but irrelevant.
Both things can be true.
All right.
I'm sorry, I regret that I took up so much of a time with that sidebar about parenting
and our daughter.
But today we are here to talk about regret.
Regret. And it's really got us thinking and talking to each other. When I think of a memory,
my regrets come back to me in flashes of memory. Because I, first of all, because I have suppressed much of my life,
but also because I was drinking for so long that I actually did live a lot of my life
in this eternal blackout.
So I have flashes that attack me.
A memory will flash into my mind of something that I did,
and I will actually shake my head to get it out.
Do you know what I mean? You've done lots of research for us to see something that I did and I will actually like shake my head to like get it out. Yeah. Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Shake it off.
Yes.
Yes.
You've done lots of research for us to see about what regret isn't isn't.
What is it?
Regret is something we say all the time.
So what are we talking about today?
Like what is regret and what is regret not?
So regret is the emotion that you experience when you think your present situation would
be better or happier if you had done something different in the past.
That's a very specific thing.
Like we use regret in a lot of context.
You know, we'll say things like sending you deepest regrets at the passing of your grandfather. But presumably you didn't have any role
in your neighbor's grandfather passing.
So if I killed your grandfather, yes,
I wouldn't necessarily regret that that would be like
remorse, I'd be apologizing, right?
If I killed your grandfather purposefully,
that would be remorse.
Well, presumably it would be both because your life would presumably be happier where you
not incarcerated for killing someone's grandfather.
Okay.
So you would have both remorse and regret in that context.
And you also would likely feel the pangs of feeling like maybe that was not your best
self.
Right. So I think that one kind of covers the field as a word.
But the reason it doesn't make sense to say,
I regret your grandfather's passing
is because your grandfather's passing
had nothing to do with me.
It had nothing to do with an action that I took
or didn't take exactly.
Okay.
So the regret we're talking about right now
has to do with our decisions.
And then there's I regret treating that person like shit, which is your life wouldn't
necessarily be different now.
Had you not treated that person poorly, but you do feel this paying a remorse, which is
a little bit different.
I think that that's how we kind of commonly think of regret.
I regret having done that bad thing.
But that has more to do with remorse and confusion about ourselves
than it has to do with how our present situation would be different.
Okay, so is remorse like,
remorse is I've wronged someone else.
And I think their life would be better if I'd chosen differently. And regret is I feel like I've wronged someone else and I think their life would be better if I'd chosen differently.
And regret is, I feel like I've wronged myself and I feel like my life would be better if I'd
chosen differently. Interesting. Yes, but I also think there's this crossover between
remorse and regret, which is kind of, they've done research on this where there's kind of two types of regret, exactly like you've just said.
And one is that idea of wronging yourself.
You made a decision or you failed to make a decision that you believe had you made the other choice,
your life would be better now.
And those emotions are trickier because they describe them
as kind of cold.
You know, it's this kind of,
uh,
so what?
Aiki, Hollow,
Empty.
And wondering.
Yes, longing.
It's so, yeah.
So there's the regret that's like,
out-shot searing.
And I have,
I think that I live with all those kinds of regrets. Most of my regrets are white-hot searing and I have, I think that I live with all those kinds of regrets. Most of my regrets are white
hot searing. I just touched a hot stove because I remembered this thing that I did.
Some way I treated someone, some way I acted that is so discordant with who I believe I am now.
And the other one is what if I would have?
And of course, that's empty because you don't have any evidence for it.
It's just a what if?
Like the road not taken or something?
Right.
Exactly.
Oh.
The road not taken.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
And I think that that hot searing thing you talked about, the way that overlaps with regret
is it's so painful.
It kind of knocks the wind out of us to remember the
people that we were who did those terrible things. There's a lot of remorse because a lot of people
were in pain because of the way we acted. But there's a lot of regret because that person who did
that thing does not match who we believe we are Yeah. It's the pain of that.
It's kind of having to come to peace with the fact
that you were different then.
Okay, but isn't that-
I believe you're now.
Isn't that in some way?
I feel like I want to get to what our regrets are in a minute,
but like it feels like regret in one way is tied to triumph.
In one way, it's tied to progress. It's tied to a human who is better today than she was
then. We're all doing the best we can, basically, right? So if I am feeling searing regret from
something that I did before, that's because now I can see,
now I'm the type of person who would never do that, which is proof of growth. If I were the same
person back then, I wouldn't have that searing regret because I'd have the same consciousness that
I had back then. So in that way, isn't even having that bucket of regret, proof. That's good.
Of growth.
Yeah.
And yes, I love that.
And I think that in fact, the only way to not have regret is either to never examine your
life, to never look back and see is any of that out of alignment with who I am, or
to never realign your life, to never be
changing, because then the person that you were then is still the person that you are.
So the whole idea of the whole like cultural idea of I don't live with regret or no regrets
is basically like, well great, like you are sociopath.
It is one of the diagnostic indicators of a sociopath is the inability to experience regret.
The other people who don't experience regret are the people who have had prefrontal cortex
brain damage.
It's actually an indicator of a mind and a life that is working well.
It's proof of two things, one that you've grown,
because of the searing thing,
and two that you made some freaking decisions.
You made some decisions in your life.
That's what I'm gonna say.
Like, how many freaking decisions
is a human being making in the course of a day?
And we are not 100% all the time.
Ever, like every day we're making decisions that are wrong.
Now they might not be earth shattering or like life altering, but they do change the
course of your life.
But I want to learn about what your specific regrets are.
So I have never felt less prepared for a podcast because I was thinking a lot about what I would say and I realized
that none of what I was preparing to say was actually as real as what a tiny little bit
ago I decided that I was going to say.
Regret is something you can talk about at a pretty surface level or you can kind of make
it tidy,
or it's something that in some ways is the most painful thing to talk about.
And I was imagining a listener listen to some of the things that I was going to say and
feeling shitty because feeling like, oh, regret is worse than that regret. So I just
decided to talk about one of the things that like, you know, will wake me up in
the middle of the night and still makes me feel like pretty ashamed. So when I was in middle school and high school, I had a pretty
dysfunctional long-term relationship, and it wasn't yet at the, you know, it wasn't like
social isolation abuse, but it was pretty, it was on that spectrum sort of where
he didn't like my friends, wasn't consistently kind to me. It was kind of withhold sort of where he didn't like my friends.
Wasn't consistently kind to me.
It was kind of withholding.
We didn't have shared friends.
And I'm not trying to excuse my behavior, but I'm setting the context of for some reason
I believed that I had to have like fidelity to him over the other things in my life.
And I remember I had been best friends with my best friend since we all through elementary
school all through 17th and eighth grade and she was just the best.
I mean, she was fiercely loyal,
she was better to me than she should have been.
She was just radically wonderful.
And I loved her very much.
And I started to her like shit.
I remember it all came to a head when I was in 9th or 10th grade at this point.
I was in a friend's basement and my best friend was in the bathroom with me trying to talk to me about why I was treating
her like shit.
And she was just trying to get me to basically give any indication that I valued our friendship.
And I, and I just remember her, she was bawling, and she was so sad, and she loved me so much.
She was talking to me, and being so vulnerable and honest. And I, for some reason in my head, believed
that I had to declare my undivided loyalty to my boyfriend. And it was almost like it
was a grand inquisition. And he was my God. You were like denouncing everything but him?
I was like denouncing everything but him.
And I remember over and over saying,
almost with the pride of a zealot, right?
Saying, I will always choose him over you.
I will always choose him over you.
Literally saying those words as she wept with nothing,
but the last, you know, years of treating me 100 times
better than he ever treated me. And I remember walking out of that room, feeling like I had
fought the good fight, like I had done what I was supposed to do. And I can see her face perfectly. And when I think about what she deserved, just
as a human, but what she had earned from me for everything she did for me and the way she loved me. It was cruel. I was cruel. I just can't even identify
with the kind of person that would be so cruel and so confused about what to value in life
and so misguided. And there was another friend outside the door who heard the whole thing. And obviously, my mistreatment of my best friend changed us,
and it changed my relationship with all of my friends.
I eventually went off to college, and there is...
I got uncomfused about things.
You know, my entire world became centered around my friends,
and none of my identity had anything to do with boys or men at all. I got uncomfused about things. You know, my entire world became centered around my friends and
none of my identity had anything to do with boys or men at all. And some part of me kind of
always thought I'd have time to make who I was now redeem who I was then. And then the year after I graduated from college, you arrived at my doorstep from
three hours away. And you had driven there to tell me that she had died. We were 21 years old. She had been struck by a drug driver and she died. And that was 20 years
ago last month that you came to tell me that. And I just, I think about that a lot because she, you know, one of the best people to love me the
best in my life was one of the people that I treated the worst in my life.
And she died without me never having acknowledged that or made a man's for that.
And I just, I always thought I'd have time to do that and I didn't.
And there's nothing that I can do about it.
And I never, you know, it's just,
death makes it so clear.
It's like regret is when it feels like
there's no more redemption possible.
There's no way to redeem it.
Is that how it feels?
And is there anything about that regret?
How does it feel like your life would have been different and better had you not done
that?
You'd still have those friends maybe.
That whole thing wouldn't be like a...
Yeah, I mean, regret I guess is...
Sometimes it has that remorse about the way your cruelty impacted others, but it always
has a sense of loss for yourself.
And I think that I didn't know then
in that room that day,
that the best thing I'd ever have
was the love and loyalty and devotion of my friends.
Mm-hmm. And so I was staring at that and telling her
no and that I didn't want that and that I declared this other thing more valuable. And as a result,
I lost that gift from her and that gift of friendship. I mean, that whole group of
friends is still very, very close and they have a beautiful relationship that I will never have
with them because I chose not to. And they rightfully chose not to do it with me because I was incapable of it.
And so I'm very thankful that those are the kind of relationships I have with my friends from college.
But it is a loss.
You know, I don't get to go back and recast that history.
And I think we just think there's an abundance of time to make things make sense.
And that is a thing that will never make sense.
The only good part about it is the regret we feel most when we are just baffled at thinking about something we did,
is the fact that we're baffled about thinking about it.
You know, the person that we were then who could do such a thing is not the person we
are now who couldn't.
Yeah.
It's so interesting because, and weird, and I don't know know why this is and I don't have any reasons for it, but
when I think of my most searing
regrets, their flashes and
one of them is a time when you told me something in high school, you came home from a
thing and you were sitting on mom's bed and you told me something and you were
really, really hurt and hurting.
And it was like a time where you like sit down and you stay for hours and you talk it
through and you would ever.
And I was like, okay, great.
I'm sorry.
I'm going to pick up my boyfriend at the airport and I'm going to get wasted and just left
you to deal with it on your own. And then another one I was thinking
is one time when you visited me in college and I was wasted and just left you with this
dude who was totally unsafe and I knew it. And a third that I woke up last night thinking about was in a fraternity basement where this
freaking jackass said something horrific to one of my dearest friends about the way she
looked.
And I looked at her and looked at him and just said nothing.
Like it was a lie, it clearly aligned with this dude.
And I just think it's interesting that all of these regrets
have to do with abandoning the love of our sisters
or women and aligning with men who didn't deserve it
and abandoning the women who did. And I don't know.
When you talk to me about her looking at you and say, it's like you were in a cult.
Yeah.
It makes me think of all of the poor parents who look at their kids or all their whatever
and are like, where are you?
And you're like gone.
Allegiance is over here and any connection with you.
By the way, sister, that's like classic abuse behavior.
Like that's like people who are abused
do think that their loyalty to the abuser
is everything.
And that any connection outside of that is disloyalty. But I just
think it's strange that both of us were so willing to abandon love for that
kind of protection. I don't know. It's interesting.
Yeah, it is interesting.
I'm Jonathan Menevar. I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing, and strangely intimate things about
what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now, wherever you get your podcasts.
One of the regrets I have is I kicked my very best friend out of a house that he was living in,
back when I was living in Los Angeles, and you know, this is when I was still using, and
he was the most important person in my life. And I was screaming, and I was yelling, and I was throwing
things. And I was doing it in this like dehumanizing way. And it was about power.
And it was about my inability to properly communicate.
And so I didn't say any of the things that bothered me
for the year or whatever leading up to this moment.
I didn't do any personal work.
And so it just like came to a head and I just blew up.
And he literally had to get into a car that day,
pack his shit up and drive to Florida from California
because he had nowhere else to go.
Have you guys ever talked about that?
No.
Is there anything that you feel like,
I just wonder, is there anything you haven't done?
Because I have never talked to you about those things
that I just brought up.
I have these regrets that I truly am just hoping
that no one remembers.
Yeah.
That is my, like maybe people don't remember that thing
and maybe, but do you, is there anything in your mind
that you feel like might relieve some of the regret from that situation with your?
Yeah, well, that's friend because it's interesting that you've never talked about it that I've never talked about it that you've never I just wonder is there something like you know that idea that these feelings that we have inside of us are so scary when we keep them in, but then when we let them out in the light, do they lose it?
Like will they, is there anything that you think you can do
that you haven't done that might,
that would be a release valve for the pressure of that regret?
Well, I think part of it is right now.
I mean, the fact that she has passed is kind of like that temptation to hide from it and to not take account is even more
possible to try to recast that whole situation rather than what it was. And so I think part of it is
and so I think part of it is saying it out loud. I have thought about the woman who was the friend who and say I know how awful it was. I
think that we say like had we not gone through that how good we would have been
like I think about that with her too. She was so deeply good and had such a short, tremendous
life. And I think, what if I had been good to her? You know, like, what if I had been the
way, the friend that she deserved to her in her short life? how would her life have been different? Because no doubt she made beautiful friendships and beautiful love and impact in her short
life, but I wasn't part of that.
Part of me thinks in the redemption of it, it's acknowledging the fact that hopefully, in the best case, we are evolving folks whose
ability to be in alignment with ourselves is increasing over time.
Is increasing, yes.
And that's all we can hope for. That's right.
And also acknowledging that if that is the case,
then the integration that we have now
is not the integration we will have in five years and 10 years and 15 years.
So what is what I'm doing right now,
in my life right now,
something that in 10 years and in five years and 15 years,
I will say, I don't even recognize myself in that.
And how do I expedite that change now?
Because if there's anything that that story tells me is that we can't count on the five and the 10 and the 15.
That's a tough enough time.
That's an amazing way to use regret as a guiding principle for now.
Because there's this one way of dealing with regret
where it's just directionally unhelpful.
It's like this playing of an old song over and over again,
like a security blanket that keeps you from engaging in the now,
that keeps you from singing a new song that is too safe,
that is too comfortable, it's too easy. Or it's the wrong kind of hard.
It's like, repret from the past keeps you from even this moment and then this moment will
become the past and then you will regret this moment and then your entire life you're
living not now.
But there's a way to use it that's like, I do wonder.
It's so, it is curious, sister, that I think if people would list three things
about you, like fiercely, almost insanely loyal, is probably one of the things, and to
your, to the women in your life, and it's just interesting that maybe that searing pain
has informed you. Informed you. Yeah. Yeah. What a beautiful way to look at life in terms of evolution.
And like to prepare ourselves for a future of regret because we have chosen to truly evolve
to become more integrated with ourselves year over year over year
because who we are today is hopefully different than who we are in a year, five, ten years.
And so I guess it is the hope for me that I'm going to regret a whole bunch of shit in
ten years that I'm doing right now because I am not the evolved person that I dream of
becoming in those 10 years.
Yeah, absolutely.
And keeping in mind the finality and like the brevity of life, it's actually an ancient
spiritual tradition.
Many cultures keep skulls everywhere.
Keep a skull on their desk.
Keep a skull.
It's seated in this idea of regret.
Keep in mind that this will all end.
And so don't wait because right now,
and then I think about this idea of regret
as being kind of perverted by like,
capitalistic ideas too.
It's like, we think of regret as like,
I have to do the big thing.
Right now.
I have to do the big thing.
I have to like, am I successful enough?
Am I whatever enough?
And I was thinking this morning about this poem that so many people
over and over again reference because it's the seed of regret. And it's the Mary Oliver. I won't
read the whole thing, but she's looking at a grasshopper in the grass. And she says,
now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face,
now she snaps her wings open and floats away.
I don't know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention,
how to fall down into the grass, how to kneel in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed,
how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.
Tell me what else should I have done?
Doesn't everything die at last and too soon? Tell me what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life? And over and over again, this poem is used to like make people feel like
they should have gone to college or they should have like gone to this one thing or they missed their
opportunity to be a famous singer, whatever, and marry Oliver.
It's like our friend Jessica Faith Cantrowitz talks about so beautifully.
This poem is used to shame people into doing more.
And what Mary Oliver is saying is that your life is too important and wild and singular,
not to do less.
Her answer to what to do with your one wild and precious life is to walk around a field
and stare at grasshoppers.
Exactly.
That's what Jessica would say.
Right.
It's to be idle and blessed.
Did I notice how beautiful everything is right now?
It's that idea of how do we avoid, you know, at the death bed, there's these studies about what people
most regret on their death bed.
And it's never, I didn't have enough money or I didn't do the big career.
Like, I wish I had let myself be happy.
Yeah.
I wish I could more myself.
Ronnie, what are they?
Do you have them?
Yeah.
Ronnie where she is at an Australian palliative care nurse and she
A walked a lot of people to their deaths and she she wrote five regrets of the dying and those
Those five regrets were I wish I'd have the courage to live a life true to myself
Not the one others expected of me. I wish I hadn't worked so hard
Mm-hmm. I wish I'd't worked so hard. I wish I'd
have the courage to express my feelings. I wish I'd stayed in touch with my friends,
and I wish that I had let myself be happier.
Yeah.
And that's a gut punch.
All we can do is try that today.
That's all we can do.
The only way to avoid deathbed regret, right, is just try to avoid bedtime regret. Let's go to a question.
My name is Eany.
I love this podcast.
The reason we got divorced are my husband.
I have almost 10 years and we share two small kids.
I immediately started dating a woman for the first time and felt we're really hard.
There's a long distance relationship that somehow we were able to make it work for at least
a few months. I was reading Unte team at the time and felt really connected to your
story. I just kept coming back to the same thing. I kept missing my husband, our family,
our life together. The woman and I broke up. It was clear I wasn't ready but my friends
remind me over and over again the reasons I left my marriage. I'm just really in my feelings right now.
Can't tell.
I'm feeling compelled to run back to my old life
as if that's even possible.
I guess my hard question is, when you leave something
that didn't feel right, where's the line
between missing something and regretting something?
This feels too hard to be right.
It feels like regret, but I know we can do hard things. I would love your thought
Oh, Amy
I
Love this question so much for me. I hate this for me because you could just feel the pain. You could just feel
doubt doubt pain. Oh God, the road not taking, you know,
there's two roads and you take this one. And then you spend so much time imagining what
life would look like, how'd you take in the other one? And replaying it, replaying it.
And Karen Schultz has a TED talk called,
don't regret regret.
And she talks about how the,
I, the just even the concept of regret requires two things.
It requires agency, right?
So you go back, there's that fork in the road,
and you have chosen one.
You have made that choice
that's your agency. And then it requires imagination because in order to regret, you have to go back
into the fork and the road. Imagine having taken the other road and then fully play that out.
And so you are necessarily comparing your reality in the pain that you're in right now,
with the imagined reality of where you would have been in the other road.
Yes.
Imagine reality.
And I think that we have to really think carefully about misconstruing our pain and our loss and even our remorse
for the pain we caused other people and just generally how conflicted and shitty reality
is with the idea that if we were on the other path, we wouldn't have any of those things. Yes.
Because we have to be humble enough
to admit that the imagined reality
is not actually reliable.
And we likely would have a lot of the same pain
and confusion and hurt.
Were we on the other path?
Yeah.
Yes, and I'm imagining myself as Amy, so I'm trying to think of like this would be like if I divorced
Craig, fell in love with Abby and then the Abby thing and then Abby and I broke up,
right?
Yeah.
And the story.
I know, but like I'm trying to put myself in.
I know what I mean is.
I'm just saying, this is a terrible alternate reality.
And in this all terrible alternate reality
I could imagine looking at Craig in the kids and being like what did I do?
There's this picture that somebody sent me
My friend Sarah sent me actually and it's like this this woman and
She's just jumped off a cliff, okay, and there's this big hand, and it's like the universe,
and the universe is the one that pushes her off the cliff.
And then there's this big hand underneath her
that she hasn't hit yet,
and that is also the universe.
So the universe is gonna push her off the cliff
and the universe is going to catch her
at the bottom of the cliff,
but the fall is so effing scary. And you don't know that
the universe is going to catch you. So when you're in the free fall, the temptation is to turn around
and climb, like claw your way back up to the cliff that you just got, that you just got pushed off
of. And right now, Amy is in the free fall. She jumped, she pushed her for a reason.
She left that cliff for a reason. That's what her friends are trying to tell her. Like, remember, remember, remember.
But it's just, she hasn't been caught yet. But I think that what I would say to Amy with
humility and fear and what the F do I know is what I really want to say to her is just keep trusting the fall.
Yeah.
And trust that the universe is going to catch you, not that it's somebody else.
Exactly.
Exactly.
She's anticipating a person, whether it be her husband or ex-husband or the girlfriend or somebody else
or some other thing in the future, to catch her, it's herself the universe.
She is going to be able to stand on her own two feet.
You know, one of the things that you said is people always asked early on like, well, if
this doesn't work out, you know, would you consider going back to Craig?
And you always said, you know, I can't unknow what I know now.
The climbing back to the cliff is trying to unknow.
The moving backwards is trying to unknow what became clear to you at once.
But the knowing has led you to do something so scary and hard
that you really do believe that it would be easier and better not to know.
But the thing is, you go back, I did that, you go back, and you're still effing now.
Yep.
And so then it's the wrong kind of hard.
And I think people think if they have pangs of the regret, that's an indication that they
made the wrong choice.
And I think that that is not, I think that's unhelpful to us.
It's unnecessarily confusing because if we view regret as an inevitable consequence of making a tough decision, then we won't
confuse regret with the fact that we made the wrong decision. There's this reality that say
you miss your flight. If you miss your flight by three minutes, you will regret
by three minutes, you will regret your decisions that morning leading to the misflight more than if you miss that flight by 45 minutes. And the reason is you were so close. So you miss the flight either way.
It's irrelevant. It doesn't matter. You're not getting there. But you have so many more
emotions around the three-minute miss than the 45. And that to me is evidence that for Aimee,
that's just all of your big pangs of fear and discomfort and anxiety are proving that that was a hard decision that you made.
Yes. All of these things that pointed, but this was a good guy, but this was
whatever it was. Oh, but this didn't work out over here ultimately. So that
indicates I made the wrong choice. No, what you're looking at is the three
minutes. That's right. The plane was leaving anyway. You were flying off that
cliff. That was your decision. That's right. The pain was leaving anyway. You were flying off that cliff.
That was your decision.
The pain that you're feeling is the fact that it was a three minute miss.
That's right.
I have a 45.
And that doesn't make that decision any less correct.
It just means it's harder emotionally.
That's right.
And I want to just emphasize that there's a difference.
I think when I'm figuring out right now that there is a difference between pain and regret.
All pain is not regret.
When I see my kids struggle because they're going
between two houses.
When I watch them get packed up and I'm like,
they are, it sucks, it's sad.
You think, and this could be my conditioning,
but you think like this is not the way kids are supposed to live.
They're not supposed to be trekking back and forth
and all their stuff in there. They're pain. And there's a pain, but I have
had to learn that it's not regret that I'm feeling. It's not, oh, I wish I would have done
it differently. It's just the acknowledgement that things can be hard and painful and still
be right.
We are in a culture where we feel like if we have made the right decisions, everything
will be easy and pain-free because we're imagining the other path as pain-free.
But like that idea that you can aim, you can be in, it can hurt and that hurt can still
not be regret.
Both things can be true at the same time here.
The only things that are pain-free are the imagined things.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah.
It's so good.
Which ones are you going to trust?
Yeah.
That's good.
My love, man.
Your real experience or your pretend imaginary experience. Let's hear from Beth.
Hi, my name is Beth, and I had a question for Glenin.
I was Belenick for about four years from freshman year in high school until freshman year in
college. And then after that, I had probably a little bit of anorexia
and then a lot of healing and recovery.
And during that time, I just probably made
not the greatest decisions or followed my heart
or probably wasn't great at relationships.
So it was like a 10 year period
where I felt like I just missed out on life
and all the things that people go through during those years
about learning about themselves.
So I just have a lot of guilt and remorse for those years
and I struggle with letting that go.
And I also feel like I want to explain to people
for by past what I was going through,
but I think that's more just like validating that I made mistakes.
So I'm just wondering what you did to let go of that time where you were
Belenic and just to forgive yourself and move on and let that go.
So I love your podcast and I love listening. And thank you for doing this. And it makes the light in my day.
Everything that Beth said except for the last sentence, which is what Beth is trying to get to
because someone has told her the words,
let go and move on.
Those are two things that somebody told us,
we have to get to.
I don't know how to let go, I don't know how to move on.
I'm just like trudging along with my whole entire self
all the time every day.
What I do know is that, and I don't know how relatable this is going to be for people who weren't lost to addiction for so long, but I became believe I'm going to lose 10,
and then I didn't get sober until I was 25.
And so most of my formative years, I was just lost to addiction.
My whole life was this little like world that I created
that I could control, which was addiction.
And so I was basically dropped out of life.
And so what I have figured out in the second part
of my life is that I missed a lot.
Okay, like to the point where it's I feel embarrassed
a lot of the time.
Like I don't know, I don't know a lot of things that other people know.
And I mean that in terms of facts, like facts, right?
Like I don't know a lot about freaking geography and science and history and all that stuff
that people were learning during that time.
I also don't know a lot about like, French, like all of the, a lot of things
that, you know, how many times a day am I to you
in a joking way?
But I'm like, when did people learn this?
Like when did everyone learn this?
And it's funny on a daily basis,
but on a like spiritual basis,
it's a little bit terrifying.
Because I'm like, no, seriously,
when did everybody learn this?
Now, what I want to say about that is that I have come to value, to find the value in that for myself.
And that is what I believe to be true is that there is something about that negative thing that
people sense and feel in my writing and in my soul and in the way I experience life, which
is this child like not childish, child like awe and beginner's mind, like I'm seeing
the world for the first time. So all I'm saying to Beth is like,
I don't know how we move on or,
or if we didn't do, yeah.
But I do know that there can be something beautiful
and special that comes from that being gone.
And that is being fresh.
It rings really true, the embarrassing bit.
When I was training for the marathon
and running with some of my former teammates
and we would run together.
And then for the actual marathon,
I they would tell stories
and I would just kind of like, yeah,
I didn't remember many of the things that they talked about,
which was really embarrassing.
And I didn't say it in the moment,
but here I am saying it. And then it just makes me think of my time on the national team. It makes me wonder what my life would have been had you been so bad I've been sober during my career.
And yeah, I mean, it's a regret. It's a complete knowing that I would have been a better soccer player.
I would have had better relationships. I would have been a better leader.
I bet our national team would have won more games. Being sober makes me understand that I put up with less bullshit. And I do not accept certain ways of being interacted with, like I know that I did back
that.
I know deep down that I could have done more.
And I feel terrible about that.
And this is not a perfectionism thing.
I just know it.
I just know that I, and in some ways,
I think that I probably was drinking
because I didn't know how to handle all of it.
I didn't know how to handle men talking to me
in misogynistic ways because they thought I was one of them.
I was one of the boys.
I couldn't handle conversations with leaders
with presidents of organizations,
CEOs of organizations talking to me about pay
and equal pay and equitable pay
and me just taking the very least.
It feels like that's what I did. Trying to get
a deal done. Trying to get a collective bargaining agreement done. I just, I didn't fight
as hard as I should have. And it's because I wasn't the kind of person that I am now.
I wasn't sober and I know that. And I do have a lot of regret about that and I'm just so glad that there's
probably some women that are fighting that battle now. Let's go to our pod squadder of the week.
For me it's you. I love you. Hi, Glemen, Abby and sister. This is Sarah and this is Kate. So we are
this there and this is Kate. So we are dear friends and we are both a mental health therapist and we're sitting on the couch right now together, feeling like a man and holding hands.
We work with clients who are dealing with all sorts of things and I mean I'm personally just having a hard
time holding all of it and we were talking and wanted to call you to say hello because
we love you.
Thank you so much for sharing your story.
It means the world to me.
So sitting on the couch holding your hand? I mean, that's what we're doing.
I love that.
I just Sarah and Kate, first of all, God, God, goddess, whatever, bless the people who are the mental health
therapists. I mean, you say you saved my life. Yeah. You saved my
life. Sarah and Kate. And for the people who hold everyone
else's stuff and then have to find a way to hold their own
stuff, I just, I don't know, I don't have anything to say other than thank you.
It's fun, Kate. And to everyone else who is listening,
life is really, really hard. Yeah. Find somebody's hand to hold this week even if it's your own.
That's good. We can do hard things.
We love you.
I give you Tish Milton and Brandy Carlisle.
I walk through fire, I came out the other side
I chased desire, I made sure I got once money
And I continued to believe
That I'm the one for me And because I'm mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurous and heartbreak
So man, a final destination
That we stopped asking directions
And some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do our thing
I hit rock bottom it felt like a brand new star I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers and heartbreaks on land A final destination with light
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard.
This world finished her rose and heart breaks on my mind. We might get lost, but we're only in that.
Stop asking directions.
Some places may've never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
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