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The good days
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Hi Joya,
I don't think there is a person alive that doesn't have regrets. (Maybe aside from the very young, some mentally ill such as psychopaths – although maybe they do, subject for another day – and those with dementia.) Still, to use an Arabian proverb, "Four things come not back: The spoken word, The sped arrow, The past life, The neglected opportunity."
No matter how much you dwell on the past, it is done. I guess it is those regrets that help up make better decisions in the future. One of my bosses was talking to me once about life. He said that he saw it like trying to juggle balls. One ball being finances, one being career, one being family, one being hobbies, one being personal health and so on. You get the idea. He said I should think of all of these balls as being made of rubber, except the one around personal health. I should treat that as though it were made of glass. He said that if I dropped one of the rubber balls, it wouldn't break and would bounce back.
He said if I dropped the personal health one (looking after myself) it would not bounce back and juggling the other balls would become increasingly difficult. I don't mean to wax lyrical and I certainly cannot claim to always prioritise my health, in fact I don't, which is why I think I struggle with other stuff. I just wanted to encourage you to not keep punishing yourself for the things you cannot change and to work on the things you can – your future.
Kind regards, John.
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