The article below was sent by Sari Rangarajan TNC and I felt excellent
analysis. So being sent. Many have the responsibility to regret their past
sins. As a matter of fact, this sent a day before RATHA-SAPTAMI. It is the
washing of the Bhishma SIN-DAY. Many people sit silently watching the
unrobing of Draupadi; because they respect the Duryodhana the minority
villains, because of a Kauravas clan, acceding to the insults heaped over
to a woman; that sin caused all the misery at the death bed of Bhishma. So
was asked to pray being the Rat Saptami Day to SUN who alone may wash off
the sins.  Bhishma too had the regrets. AND ALL HESE DETAILS MAY NOT CHANGE
THE BAD SECTORS AND THE SILENT SPECTATORS WHO WOULD SPEAK FOR THE NATION’S
UPHEAVAL. Now the article:  K Rajaram IRS  3225

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How to avoid the No. 1 kind of regret people have when they die, from an
Ivy League instructor

Published Tue, Jul 9 202410:13 AM EDTUpdated Tue, Jul 9 20245:22 PM EDT

Of all the things I fear — spiders, needles, rejection — regrets take the
cake. I have a deep-rooted fear of getting to the end and feeling woefully
disappointed — not so much by the life I lived but by the life I didn’t
live.

In many ways, I have my mother to thank for waking me up and helping me
course-correct. She died at 58 with a litany of regrets. After losing her,
I was gripped by the fear of dying with my own laundry list of “if onlys.”

I committed to live a regret-free life or die trying. Now I’m hell-bent on
helping us all make the most of our time while we’re lucky enough to be
above ground. I want us to live regret-free lives we can feel proud of.

That’s why I left my job as a corporate executive to become a “stop
squandering your life” speaker and coach. It’s why, while I was in the
University of Pennsylvania’s Master of Applied Positive Psychology program,
I wrote a 101-page thesis about “reflecting on mortality to inspire
vitality and meaning in life.” And it’s why I recently published my book,
“You Only Die Once: How to Make It to the End With No Regrets.”

The 2 major kinds of regrets

As terrifying as regrets are, they can be useful, because they can motivate
us to change our behavior and improve our lives. That is, they can help us
after we simmer in the uncomfortable awareness of what could have been if
we’d only made a way better decision.

We tend to value regret more than any of the negative emotions out there,
studies show, because we understand its value and power.

There are two main categories of regrets you want to pay attention to:

Regrets of commission: These include things we did that we wish we hadn’t
done. We tend to be able to rationalize regrets of commission through the
softening of time.

Regrets of omission: These include the paths we didn’t take, the things we
wish we’d done that we never did. Regrets of omission tend to haunt us.

Regrets of commission ‘cool off over time’

Also known as hot regrets, regrets of commission tend to feel intense at
first. They’re often stupid things we do that make us burn in the short run
with shame, guilt, or remorse, and then cool off over time.

Here’s a true-crime sampler from my clients and workshop attendees:

“Being mean to Kandy on the schoolyard in sixth grade”

“Having an affair”

“Telling that client what I really thought of them”

“Getting a DUI”

“Leaving my vintage baseball card collection at home for my mother to later
throw out”

“Giving Tom the finger after quitting in a huff”

“Eating three-day-old sushi”

Regrets of omission ‘torment us’

Also known as wistful regrets, regrets of omission can torment us until the
end of time.

Real-life client examples include:

“Not backpacking across Europe after college”

“Not running that marathon”

“Not finishing law school”

“Not fixing my relationship with my brother”

“Not writing that children’s book”

“Not ordering desserts just for myself; I wish I’d had more pieces of cake
all to myself”

“Not telling my first crush I loved him”

Regrets of omission plague us mostly because these are paths not taken.
They shine a glaring spotlight on the chasm between our actual selves and
the person we’ve imagined as our ideal self, one that could make our dreams
come true.

How to prevent the most painful regrets

Anticipating our regrets before they come to fruition — or what I call our
“pre-grets” — gives us a chance to live a life that feels right.

In my book, I share several exercises, assessments, and tips designed to
help you identify your pre-grets and figure out how to use them to your
advantage. Here’s one way to start:

Get comfy in bed. Yes, for real — recline your body and take a deep breath.
Imagine you’re lying on your deathbed. You’re not in pain. You feel lucid
and at peace. You’re near the end and reflecting back on your life. Start
to zero in on your regrets of omission — not the things you did do but
rather the things you didn’t do.

Make a list of what comes up for you.

Circle the entries that make your heart beat fast, or make it ache or skip
a beat. Any heart-related reaction is a good indication that this one
matters.

Pay close attention to the pre-grets that want to hide on the page because
they’re fragile and afraid to be exposed. Perhaps you feel fear of failure
or rejection or ridicule. That’s a sign that it’s important to protect and
be kind to those dreams.

Start brainstorming ways to take even one step forward. Better yet, write
one down right now.

An unflinching awareness of your pre-grets can change the trajectory of
your life.

That’s because we don’t have to continue down the paths we’re on and resign
ourselves to regrets of omission. We don’t have to merely imagine the paths
not taken.

We can go down entirely different paths if we choose. We just have to
recognize what matters deeply to us and take action.

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 3 Feb 2025 at 07:24
Subject: Throw off regrets
To:


There are two main categories of regrets
<https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19141626/> you want to pay attention to:

   1. *Regrets of commission: *These include things we did that we wish we
   hadn’t done. We tend to be able to rationalize regrets of commission
   through the softening of time.
   2. *Regrets of omission:* These include the paths we didn’t take
   <https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2394712/>, the things we
   wish we’d done that we never did. Regrets of omission tend to haunt us.

https://www.cnbc.com/2024/07/09/how-to-live-regret-free-lives-from-you-only-die-once-author.html

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