The Mel Robbins Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast

What Makes a Good Life? This Study on 26,000 Regrets Will Guide You for the Rest of Your Life

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When was the last time you thought about something you wish you'd done differently?  A relationship you let drift apart. A mistake you wish you could take back. A conversation you keep putting off. A...

Transcript

EN

"Hey, it's friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.

Today, you and I are talking about a global study that completely changed the way I think about my entire life. This study is called the Global Regret Survey, and it analyzed more than 26,000 regrets from people in 134 countries.

Now, when I read this research, it stopped me in my tracks. You know what it made me realize?

I need to call my dad. I need to take my health more seriously. I need to stop beating myself up over the stupid things that I did in my 20s, my 30s, my 40s, and just move on. I was so moved by what I learned that I invited the director of that study, Daniel Pink, to be here in Boston for a life-changing conversation about regret. Daniel Pink is going to teach you that after analyzing regrets from all over the world,

there are four types of regrets, and based on what kind of regret you're dealing with. There's very specific strategies that you can use based on the research to process the regret, to learn from it, and more importantly, move forward. Second, we're going to talk about three steps based on research that you and your loved ones need

that are proven to help you break free of that heavy judgment that weight that you feel

when you regret something. This isn't going to be depressing. It's going to be liberating, because Dan Pink and I are going to go toe to toe and teach you how to use this groundbreaking research so you can free yourself of the weight of regret and turn toward your future and create a better life. Hey, it's your friend Mel, and welcome to the Mel Robbins podcast.

I am so excited that you're here. I never thought I'd say I was excited to have a conversation about regret,

but I am. You know, it's an honor to be together and to spend this time with you, and I also want to take a moment in case you're a new listener. I just want to take a moment and personally welcome you to the Mel Robbins podcast family. You have picked a winner. I cannot wait for you to meet and learn from today's extraordinary guest, Daniel Pink, who is here to share all kinds of mind-blowing insights from the global regret survey,

which is the largest study ever done on regrets. Daniel Pink is one of the most influential thinkers of our time. He's a multiple New York Times bestselling author.

His TED Talk has been viewed more than 12 million times.

Dan Pink has spent decades translating behavioral science into tools that work in real life, but today you and I are diving into what is his most powerful and personal work yet. Daniel Pink led one of the largest studies ever conducted on the topic of regret. He and his team collected more than 26,000 regrets from people in 134 countries, creating one of the most comprehensive, emotional databases ever assembled.

And what he discovered is extraordinary. What Daniel will teach you today about regrets is going to help you move on from the past and live a better life. Please help me welcome the brilliant Daniel Pink to the Mel Robbins podcast. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. It's great to be with you. It's so great to see you. So I have here in my hands a huge stack of regrets.

That is a huge stack. We pulled our global audience. Yeah. I want to read some of these to you. Okay. Here we go. I'm just turning to a page, not talking to my father before he passed. We weren't on speaking terms for over two years. Quitting my career due to burnout instead of asking my family for help. Okay.

Oh, not being more patient with my kids when they were younger. Why was I always rushing?

Not standing up for myself or listening to myself, allowing others to influence my choices. Not prioritizing my children choosing a relationship over my kids. Not believing in myself when I was younger, not going to medical school. I regret not realizing my worth and allowing this respect because of it.

Wishing I did better in high school dating the wrong men. I always sort of knew it.

I didn't have therapy sooner. The career I loved I wanted to pursue. I didn't. It just goes on and on and on and on. And where I want to start is if I take everything to heart that you were about to share with us, that you have researched regarding regret, what it can teach us. How might my life change? Well, first of all, you're going to know what to do with that kind of emotion. You're going to take that emotion which feels bad. You're going to be able to take that negative sentiment and turn it into something positive.

When you do that, you do some other things.

You actually find more meaning in life. But wait. There's more. For some of those is actually some evidence out there in the research that says that you can become better at your job.

You can become a better negotiator. You can become a better problem solver. You can become a better thinker. So the key here is to look those regrets in the eye, not to flinch from them, not to ignore them, not to wallow in them, but to look them in the eye. And those, that pile there, Mel. Yes, it isn't heavy, Dan. But you know what? It's heavy, but it's also positive. Let me tell you why. Because what we think is we think that and this is how I got into this topic. We think that nobody wants to talk about regrets.

Yep. That's proof that that's wrong. People do want to talk about regrets.

Everybody, I think, wants to talk about regrets. We quietly carry them with us.

And I just want to hover on something that you just said that we can't avoid it. We can't run from it. We need to face it and that there is something that regret is trying to teach us about how we should be living our life. And I love that. But when I read something like, marrying my first husband after he cheated on me, I really regret that not talking to my mother and then she died. You know, just all this wishing I should have. Can you really flip this weight and turn it into something that makes your life better?

Yes, you can regret clarifies what we value and points us how to do better in the future. This emotion that these people are expressing here is one of the most common emotions that human beings have. Regret. Yes. It is ubiquitous in the human experience. People talk about say, I don't have any regrets. Everything happens for reasons. That's utter BS. The only people who don't have regrets are little kids because their brains haven't developed the cognitive capacity to do it.

People with certain kinds of neurodegenerative disorders and sociopaths. Otherwise, everybody has regrets. Okay. So the question is, why? Why would something that makes us feel so bad?

Be so widespread. And the answer is, 'cause it's useful if we treat it right and here's the problem. Here's the heart of it.

No one ever told us how to do that. So what happens is that we basically plug our ears and say, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. No regrets or we get buried by it. What we want to do is just chill out. Look at it. Think about it, stare it in the eye. And when we do that, it's transformative.

I believe you. And when you read these, you feel the weight letting my best friend and I drift apart,

not taking chances, playing secure, not staying longer and holding my dying gram as hands, securing financial freedom for my future, wishing I got to lump in my breast, check out sooner instead of feeling like I was just overthinking it, staying in a relationship longer than I wanted not having more kids and my husband runs my face in it.

And I want you as you're listening to Dan or you're watching right now to think about some regret that you have.

And we're going to get into these frameworks in this research. And I want you to be selfish right now. I want you to really hold on to that regret that you are not wanted to talk about, you try to push off in the past. And I want you to use this conversation to set yourself free. Dan, what made you want to lean into and do the biggest research project ever done on regrets?

Because I had regrets. Really? Yeah. And I had a moment. This is, I've lived six decades without a Piffinese, except for one case. One time where it sort of, I felt like the universe was opening up to me. And that was a few years ago at my elder daughter's college graduation.

Okay. So it's a long day graduating from college. And I'm sort of having an out of body experience. I'm watching her in the cap and gown. And I started thinking about my own college experience, which was actually quite positive, but I had some regrets.

I wish I were kinder to people, big time. I wish I had taken more risks. I actually wish I had worked a little harder. And so it sort of stuck with me, came back to Washington where I live. And I knew that nobody wanted to talk about regret.

And I was like, very sheepishly said, "Hi, you know what?

I just want to suffice graduation." And I was thinking about my own college and, you know, I kind of regret this. I kind of regret that. And I realized that everybody wanted to talk about it. That once I sort of let loose, they let loose.

And you ended up having these very rich, generative conversations. That people were bottling these things up. And so, to make a long story longer, I actually was working on an entirely different book at the time. And so I took this other book, put it aside. I spent a month like just doing the basic research on regret.

I spent another month writing an entirely new book proposal, which I sent to my very surprise editor who thought I was working on this one book. And said, "Hey, I think I want to write this book." Now, there's also a personal side of this. It only was the impulse, me. But also, there's this stage of life thing going on here.

You know, I am 61 years old.

I am in the, to use a golf term, the back nine of life. All right? I got more of my life behind me than I had. So there's more to look back and regret. But also, there's a sense of urgency going forward. And so, this is not a book.

I would have written when I was 31. But at this stage of my life, there's something about it that felt kind of inevitable. Because I'm at the perfect point because I got a lot of them to look back. But not wood, room to look forward and do better.

I love this. First of all, he's the perfect guy to talk about this,

because even in the example that you just sort of dropped in there about sitting at a graduation. And automatically, time shrinks. Yes. You start to look at time through different lens. I'm sure as you were listening, you were thinking back to moments in your past,

where you wish you wouldn't have wasted time or you wish you would have been kinder. Or you wish, I felt the same thing about college. I drank too much. I didn't like take advantage of the opportunity. I didn't seek help for the mental health issues because I didn't know what they were.

Like just the way I treated people on and on and on and on. I also loved and I want to make sure you caught it. Whether you're in your 20s or your 60s or 70s or 40s. We're going to benefit from what Dan's talking about, which is, there's something funny about what happens when you get older.

The aperture of what you're looking ahead at suddenly comes into focus. And all of the crap that you put up with the things you wasted time on, also coming to focus. And you say, well, if I only have 10 years or 20, you're heading to even another 50, I want to do it differently.

And so if I'm hearing you correctly,

the first thing to really embrace is that as much as regret may be crushing you

or you're dragging it around like a 20 year old suitcase that it has something to teach you that can put more life into the years ahead. Absolutely. Open the suitcase because there's a gift inside. You're freaked out by that suitcase even, but open it up.

It's less menacing than you think. And that's true at any stage of our lives. So let's start with what the heck is. Yes. And what's the difference between something you regret versus something

that you kind of feel sad about and kind of wish didn't happen or those the same things?

They're not the same thing. So regret is a terrible feeling. It's a feeling. This is really important. It's an emotion.

It's a feeling we have when we look backward and wish we had done something differently, wish we hadn't done something which we had done something in a different way. All right. So we look backward and we think about a decision or action and it makes us feel bad. Right?

That's what regret is. Now, it is very different from other kinds of emotions. So you can have an emotion like disappointment. If you wish something didn't happen. So I was on a trip last week and there were on the East Coast.

There was a massive snowstorm.

And I basically had to leave early and I can't regret that.

I didn't make it snow, you know? But I can be disappointed. And so regret has to have agency. It's something that you did. You can't regret something someone else did.

It's all about agency.

That's why it feels so bad because we know deep down.

It's your fault. It's on you. That's why it feels so bad. But that bad feeling is a signal. It's data.

It's information. It's not at the door. Okay. So what are we doing? There's not going to door.

You can say. I don't hear anything. All right. What? What not?

All right. Or you can say, oh my god, a knock on the door. And you can dive under the couch. Or you can say, huh. I wonder who's there?

Clint. Oh, it's over grit. What do you got to tell me?

And so that's how we have to start thinking about it.

The other thing that comes out in these regrets, though, Mel, which is interesting, is people sort of between lines. You almost hear them saying or feeling that there's something wrong with them because they have that. Yes.

That is, that's a huge mistake because everybody has regrets. Everybody has regrets. It doesn't make you bad. It doesn't make you weak. It doesn't make you broken.

It makes you human. I want to just talk first about this research. Yeah. Because you've done the biggest research study on regrets. 26,000 regrets, 134 countries.

What shocked you the most when you dug into the research? Yeah. We started something called the World Regret Survey where we invited people around the world to submit their big regret. As you say, we have a very large database of regret.

And I think the most surprising thing about it is how much they sound. Exactly like the regrets that you got and exactly like the regrets that other people got. If I were to say to you, Mel, one of these regrets is from Milwaukee. Another one is from Copenhagen. And this one is from Taipei, which is which you wouldn't know.

If I say, I had a chance to take a really challenging demanding job, but I didn't believe in myself.

I regret not taking the shot.

And I say to you, is this person a man or a woman? You don't know. And so it's a universality of it that surprised me the most.

And what were some other things that popped up to you other than the fact that we all live with and feel burdened by regret?

And none of us have been taught how to flip regret as a very universal experience being human into something that can change your lives for the better. I'll give you one small example of this, which is that similar to your pile right there, as I mentioned. I wanted to give people anonymity, because I felt like they were going to be more forthright about it all. But I also said, if you're interested in doing a follow up interview, leave your email address.

I figured maybe maybe 5% of people.

We had nearly a third of people leave their email address and say, yeah, it's like not only do I want to tell you,

as a complete stranger, my big regret, but here's my email address so you can talk to me some more about it. Why did that surprise you so much? There is this kind of yearning to unburden yourself, to make sense of it, to talk about it, to, you know, I like your metaphor, to open up that suitcase and actually see what's in it. And when people do open that up, the act of opening it makes it less menacing.

You know, given that you are the director of the world's largest study and database on regret is regret for teaching. What is it for exactly? It is for understanding what we care about and telling us how to do better in the future. You know, this is not only research that I've done social psychologists and neuroscientists and other cognitive scientists. I'm studying regret for 60 years and they found again regret is one of the most ubiquitous emotions that human beings have.

But we also have data showing that when you actually systematically interrogate your regrets, think about your regrets, try to learn from your regrets, it makes you better at stuff.

I mean, at the very least, we have all kinds of evidence from negotiation.

You go into a negotiation session, right? The people come out, the researchers say, "Tell me what you regret doing or not doing in a negotiation." So they invite the bad emotion, then they go to a next negotiation, they do better. And so this is actually regret is actually a tool. And it goes back to the idea that negative emotions have a purpose.

They're there for a reason and if we try to extinguish them. Forget about them, we're making a colossal mistake. And I don't think we would do with other negative emotions. I don't like feeling frustrated or pissed off or disappointed. I definitely do not like feeling regret at all.

Nobody does. You're not supposed to like it, but learn from it. What is the point of a negative emotion? You don't like, okay, here we go.

Here's what we're going to do.

We're going to do a little experiment here. You don't like your negative emotions, okay? You don't like feeling sad. Do you like feeling grief? Well, no, but I--

Okay, talk to me. Do you like-- Well, I don't like feeling grief, but if I don't feel grief, then I'm not like that's part of loving somebody that's gone, I guess. Oh, there you go.

How about that? All right? So I could say we could bring in some neuroscientists down the road at MIT and say we're going to give you a magic pill. And it's going to extinguish your ability to feel grief.

Would you want that? I don't think so. I don't think you would. I thought about that actually. I would.

I don't think you would because grief is that grief feels terrible. Grief is a terrible emotion, right? It makes you feel bad. But it's there because it reminds us that we love and why we love. Let's take fear.

Another negative emotion. Yeah. I don't like being scared. But you know what? I don't want that MIT magic pill.

Say, oh, take this pill. You never feel fear. The rest of your life. You know what's going to happen? I'm going to be in a burning building and everyone else is going to get out.

Because I'm not scared. These negative emotions are there for a reason. They're adaptive. They help us evolve. Now you don't want a lot of negative emotions.

No. All right. But you want some. You want more lots and lots of positive emotions. You want to feel love and awe and excitement and growth.

And you want to have a lot of those. And you actually want a decent amount of regret because regret helps you learn. Well, I'll give you one that can prove this. Like I was ridiculously irresponsible with money. You know, we, you and I went to college when you would check into.

Registration and there were tables with credit card companies just passing them out. And I just spent money. Yeah. And then I developed a habit where I just spent money that I didn't have.

And I entered my marriage with like $20,000 in secret credit card debt.

That I couldn't pay off. Yeah. And it became this thing that I deeply regret. Yeah. And when I listen to you now, I'm realizing I hit and shame and embarrassment.

For probably 20 years through my 20s and 30s and continue to make stupid decisions.

Which ultimately led me to being in a situation where my husband and I were $800,000 in debt in our early 40s with leans on the house.

That was so painful that it fundamentally altered the way I approached money ...

There you go.

But I dragged it around for probably two to three decades.

Dan before I unpack that and said, okay, it's gotten painful enough. I can let it get worse before it gets better. I mean, we can analogize to going to the doctor. You know, you say, oh, I've had a really bad headache for three weeks.

Or do you wait till you're two years from now when you're doubled over and can't breathe?

No, you address it then because that's because it's like a headache. A headache is a signal. Hey, something's off. We have a lot of regrets in the database that are very much that are very much like that. And I think that part of it in your case and in the case of these other folks is that when we don't talk about a regrets, when we don't share them, when we don't actively try to make sense of them,

we feel like we're the only one and we're not. That's the thing. Remember, it's universal. Can you talk to the person listening who just heard you say we feel like we're the only one? And it's they're saying to itself, but the thing that I did is really bad. This is I am a horrible person.

What is your data say and what do you want to say to them? Okay, so what I want to say to them is practice self compassion. This is actually, there's a powerful strain of research on the need to be compassionate to ourselves. This is not some kind of gooey, woo, kind of thing.

Essentially, here's what I would tell you.

Treat yourself with kindness rather than contempt. The way we talk to ourselves internally.

You, you know, swearing at ourselves internally is lacerating and mean-spirited.

Don't do that. There's no evidence that. It's easier said than not. What would you say to a friend in that situation? And say, would you say, you frickin' idiot, you're a moron. You don't know what you're doing. You're a terrible person.

You wouldn't say that. I mean, it's preposterous. You wouldn't say that to a friend. So treat yourself with kindness rather than contempt. Treat yourself the way you would treat a friend. Second thing is what often happens is that when we make a mistake,

when we screw up, when we do something that feels shameful,

we think that it constitutes the full measure of our life.

And it's not, it's a moment in your life. It's not the full measure of your life. If you think about this timeline, it's like, okay, during this period, you messed up. But this rest of the stuff you're a decent person. You're just seeing in the movie.

Yeah. It's a scene. It's a scene in a decade-long movie. And it doesn't fully, it doesn't fully define it. Unless you keep replaying this scene. Exactly. Unless you keep rewinding and watching that scene over and over and over again. Well, Dan, I'm just going to keep on dragging around the suitcase.

I cheated. I squandered my finances. I was a jerk to people. I was unkind. And I was too, if I just showed up earlier, I regret not showing up earlier, picking up the phone because then the person died. I've been dragging this, or I just keep replaying the scene.

Is that the biggest mistake that we're making? That's wallowing in it and replaying it. Absolutely. We make two different, different kinds of mistakes. We ignore it, or we wallow in it, and both are really bad. What we should be doing is like, oh, wow, this feels crappy.

What is this regret telling me? And if we treat ourselves, you know, the other thing that I would say with a little bit of tough love on this is hit me. Let's go. You got to read like any of these regrets? I mean, I'll be a compassionate person, but you're not that special.

I mean, you know, it's like, you tell me about it. Give me one of these regrets. It's like, oh, wow, you're the really only person in the world who's smarter than money. Oh, wow, you're the only person in the world who's cheated on the world. It's like, you're not that special.

Like, it's part of the human experience. You're a human being. And it's not like you're like, you know, narcissists believe they're singularly excellent. But some of these people are almost reverse narcissists being like they're singularly bad. It's like, you're not that special.

You're a human being who's living in experience. And at a moment, you have a scene where things went off the rails. All right, that feels terrible. I get it. Treat yourself with kindness rather than contempt.

Treat yourself like you would a friend. And recognize it's a moment in your life, rather than the full measure of your life. And when we do that, we can begin to make sense of regret. We begin to draw lessons from it. I love that because it doesn't it certainly defines how you handled yourself in that moment.

But if you really are willing to use the research that you're about to unpack with us, you can allow it to teach you to become who you want to become in the future. I'd love to hear more about this huge research study rather than you did on regret.

Dan, what's the most common type of regret that you found when you dug into the research?

What we discovered is that around the world people seem to have the same four kinds of regrets. So these fallen buckets. Right. So they're four categories all over the world. Foundation regrets of only a done the work. Boldness regrets of only taking the chance.

More regrets if only a done the right thing and connection regrets if only had reached out.

The most common regret was a regret of connection.

All right. And so typically the story was this.

You had a relationship or should have had a relationship that should have been intact.

And it comes apart. Usually in undramatic ways. There's very little, there's like less drama than you would think. Hey, I have my, hey, I went to college with my friend Mal and we were really tight. And then, but I haven't seen her for 10 years.

I should really give her a call. See how she's doing. Oh, no. It's going to be so awkward. And she's not going to care. So I don't do it.

And sometimes it's too late. There's a one woman I interviewed who had a friend who was who was deeply ill. And she hemmed in hot about reaching out to her because she thought it was going to be awkward.

And when she finally did call, the friend had died that morning.

That morning. There are other people who one woman named Cheryl who I interviewed had this great friend from college. Actually, who she drifted apart from and she for 20 years, 25 years. And she didn't call her. She wanted to call her but she didn't call her. And what happened next?

So I got kind of frustrated with her because it was a classic example of a connection regret. But as I have these interviews, I'm getting to know this person better. And I'm thinking to myself, Cheryl, you know what to do here. And so finally, I get an email maybe five days later. I sent an email to her, her friend's name was Jen.

I sent an email to Jen and she was so happy to hear from me. And then they ended up having a phone conversation. And then they ended up meeting up. And now I swear, I get a photograph every six months of, hey, I just saw Jen. Here's a photo of us together.

And so, you know, that's what happens. And this woman was living with this regret for 20 years. And all she had to do was reach out. And once she did, things were better. So I've got a story like this.

So when you and I were in elementary school and high school, we're talking 70s and early days. You got it. No social media, no cell phone. Absolutely not. I went east for college.

I grew up in the Midwest. My best friend, Jody Bricken. Stayed in the Midwest. And our two past separated. Okay.

And I stayed out east. She moved to Chicago. She then moved out west. We spent the next 20, some years not talking. For no reason.

Right. For no reason. We just had no cell phones. Like, you know, I didn't even think the follower because once I got social media, we hadn't talked in like 10 years just because we didn't see each other again.

Because I moved far away. She moved far away. And then we ended up bumping into each other one summer. Mm-hmm. And I think I mid 40s.

And I immediately was flooded with how much I missed her. And we started making these dates, Dan, that whenever we would both travel for work, we would try to line up our calendars. And then we'd stay in a hotel room together.

And she'd be at her business conference. I'd be at mine. It's one of the greatest choice of my life.

It just took a second, Dan.

It takes a second to reconnect. And what I have found in interviewing people like this is that the relationship restarts almost instantly. Oh my god. We text every week.

I talked around the phone. We see each other many times a year, even though we live nowhere. We live in completely different parts of the country. I'm in Vermont.

She's in Arizona. But it is brought so much joy to my life.

And that's how a lot of these relationships come apart.

There's like, you know, it's like, we think that relationships come apart because there's some kind of explosion. And in this case, and in many cases, it's just a drift. That was a case with Cheryl and Jen. That was a case with you and Jody.

It's just a drift. And only have to do. Reach out. I cannot tell you how much joy it will bring you. If there's somebody on your mind that you're thinking about

as I tell you the story of Jody, call them. Text them. Send them this episode and say, you just listened to this episode

with Mel and Dan and you were the first person that popped into my mind.

And I would have, and I just had to reach out to you. I miss you. I just was thinking about it. It's a life lesson when and out reach out. When and out reach out. Let's hit the pause button.

I want to give our sponsors a chance to share a few words. And I also want to give you a chance to share this with people in your life. I'm sure there's somebody that has popped up in your mind because I promise you, when you reach out to somebody based on what you're learning, you're going to feel better in your relationship too.

And while you do that, don't go anywhere because Daniel Pink is just getting started. And as you can tell, he is so much more to teach you and me about this topic. So stay with me. Welcome back at your friend Mel Robbins. Today you and I are here with Daniel Pink. He's a New York Times bestselling author.

And he is the author of this global study on regret that fundamentally changed.

How I think about my life, the past, future, things I've done.

I know it's really making you think differently. Here's my next question.

Why are we so hesitant?

Like why do we wait so long to reconnect Dan? Okay, because we are, here we go.

I'm going to, I'm going to just drop another nugget of tough love here

because we think we're more special than we really are.

Okay, so here's what I mean by that.

All right, we think it's going to be awkward and we think the other side's not going to care. That's the most important thing. And then, but if you give it a reverse, you would say, suppose that my old friend Mel called me after 15 years. Would you say, that's really weird? I can't believe she did that.

I was thrilled. Exactly. So why wouldn't the other person be thrilled? Because somehow, we're entirely different from everybody else. Of course, we'd be thrilled if somebody reached out,

but no one else would because we're so special. And so there is a great degree, particularly in connection regrets. This is actually a big lesson for me personally about feelings of awkwardness as a barrier to doing things.

Awkwardness is the most papery of paper tigers. Awkwardness, I mean it. I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I love the paper. A paper tiger. Awkward. Well, you said, it's a paper tiger.

It's not a real tiger. It's a paper tiger. But it's really paper. You go, and you go right through it. It's like those things and like those, it's like in those, those cartoons where somebody comes and sees this giant shadow and the person looks like huge.

And then you realize you just a little bit of thing right there. Yeah.

That's what that is. So, so, so there's awkwardness

and thinking about the reconnection and we over what am I going to say? It's going to, I haven't talked to them. I don't know what they're like. We, we overindex on the words we use and don't realize that simply the warmth and the overture, which what matters.

There's research on this. Vanessa Bonzic Cornell has done a lot of this research on compliments. It's the same thing with compliments. We don't give enough compliments. And the reason we don't give compliments is we say,

oh, it's going to be really awkward if I give a compliment because I'm not going to say it right or and the other side's not going to care. When in fact, it's not awkward and they do care. So, push past that.

So awkwardness is not cringe is not excuse. Call whatever you want guys. It is not excuse. So, I think that's the reason why. Well, I love this topic and let me tell you why.

Yeah. As you were just talking and I'm sure as you're listening or watching, you're probably thinking about people that you really miss or you haven't thought of and you just kind of, or think, well, maybe I should reach out.

Like I have a friend that I regret having a falling out with. In college, right after college it was due to my mental health issues and I like lie that I, or it wasn't a lie. It was gossip that I engaged in and I really regret it. And it's the awkwardness in the cringe and also this fear of rejection

that keeps me from reaching out. And what I'm getting in the middle of this conversation is I need to because I know I value connection. I know I value acceptance. I know I value these things.

And I, too, and guilty, we're talking 30 plus years of missing that connection or at least just not ever checking back in.

Can we unpack this regret of not saying I love you?

Yeah. It's very striking to me. Yeah.

How many people have either never heard one of their parents tell them

they love them? Yeah. Or you hear it on the deathbed? Yeah. Or you're waiting for somebody to say it to you.

Yep. Can you talk a little bit about this particular regret? Because I see it a lot. I didn't tell my mom or dad how they felt or my brother or my sister and then they died.

The solution is very, very simple. Say it now. Period. Pull stuff. That's all that it is.

And if it feels a little awkward, fine. Push past that awkwardness. The feeling of awkwardness you're experiencing now is nothing compared to the feeling of regret. You might feel five years from now, ten years from now. And just and just said.

And the thing is, like this also learned behavior. Because once you do it, the next one becomes easier. Yeah. Once you do that, it becomes easier and easier and easier and easier. Listen.

Listen. Listen. Listen. This is not natural. Okay.

I'm like a straight white man in my early 60s. It's not natural for me to text a buddy of mine and say, hey, I'm thinking of you. All right. That is not that is learned behavior. That is not natural behavior.

But you know what?

When you do that the second time.

It's not as awkward. And there's not been a single time up done something like that. Where someone said, oh, that's weird. Instead, it's the exact opposite. Oh, my god.

So nice of you. Fantastic. Get it for me. That was so nice of you to text like what's going on with you. I love that.

But one of the other buckets is foundation. Yes. What are those? You're regret about debt as a foundation regret. I mean, I was like spending too much.

I was very irresponsible with money.

Spent money that I didn't have wrecked up.

That's a foundation regret.

Yeah. I'll tell you why. Because each individual act of spending was not itself cataclysmic. It's small decisions that you make early in life that accumulate to terrible consequences later on. So I spent too much and saved too little.

Now I'm broke. hugely common regret. I didn't exercise or eat right now. I'm profoundly unhealthy. You smoke one cigarette.

It's fine. You do it for 20 years. It's not so fine. And so these are regrets that accumulate and then have terrible consequences.

And that's how these things catch up on us.

I had a guy who talked about this guy leveling guy from Tennessee who had a tough background. But did very well in his career. But never saved money. Because he ate out all the time. And he felt good about taking people out the dinner, picking up the check all the time.

And you go out to eat five times a week for 10 years. It's going to add up, man. And so suddenly he's like, oh my god, 40 years old. I have no savings. And I'm like living pay-tech to pay-tech even though I have a good job.

So it's this kind of thing. So that one time you go out to dinner and treat your friends, it's all cool. It's the accumulation of it all that really does it. And again, it erodes the foundation of our lives. And one of the things about regret is that regret is telling us what constitutes

a good life. So these four regrets are telling us what makes a good life. And one of the things that makes a good life, but I think sometimes get short shrift, is that a good life has some stability. A good life has a foundation to it.

A good life is not precarious. We can talk about actualizing and feeling a sense of purpose and meaning.

But if you can't pay your rent, your life is less good.

So it sounds like foundational regrets. These things that sneak up on us and all the sudden we fall off a cliff and our health is terrible. We have no money. We're addicted to alcohol and smoking.

We've been a workaholic and never made time for friends.

And now I have no idea where all our friends are. Yeah. That these are kind of like the little daily habits that either lead you to building the foundation of a good life or that have you constantly putting it off for a rainy day. In that famous fable, you had the grasshopper who was spending all summer playing the fiddle and dancing around.

Or you had the ant who was a seduously gathering food for the dark winter. And here's the thing. It's like you don't want to live your entire life as an ant. You don't want to always prepare for a gloom or doom. But you want to be a little ant like because your life is going to be better if you take responsibility

if you build that foundation. Let's talk about one of the other categories of regrets, which is boldness. Yes. What does that mean? It's a really big category and it spreads throughout all of our lives.

And I think it tells us something really, really important.

Both of your regrets are this. You look back on your life and your two choices. You play it safe. Take the chance. Play it safe.

Take the chance.

Hey, I can study abroad even though I've never been out of the country.

Or I can just go and do my thing for another semester. Hey, this person is I'm really attracted to. I want to ask him around on the date. Or I can just went about and not do it. I'm so dead in by this job.

I can either stay in it and continue the dead in it or I can take a risk and start a business. Overwhelmingly when people don't take the shot, they regret it. Overwhelmingly. And it doesn't matter the domain of life. It's like when we look back on our lives.

What really bums us out is not taking the chance. Not speaking up for something. We care about not standing up for ourselves. Not starting that business. I got hundreds of regrets about dating.

It's like, oh my god, there was this guy or this guy and I really liked him. And there's 30 years ago and I really wish I'd asked them out on the date. So we've got a boldness. If only I'd taken the shot. I'm so happy that you said it was overwhelmingly focused on things that you didn't do.

Because I do believe it's kind of two ways to go through life. You either are going to be saying, Boy, I wish I had or boy, I'm so glad I did. And as I went through even our own like thousands and thousands, I didn't really see a lot of regrets saying,

I really regret quitting that job and starting the business even though it failed. I really regret, you know, like selling everything and figuring out how to travel full time. I really regret moving. I didn't see really anybody reporting that boldness when it was a decision aligned with something that they yearn for ended up being a regret. Amen on that one, man.

Can we talk about a common phrase that we saw and I know it showed up profoundly in this massive research study that you did on regrets, which is I wish I had done this sooner. So it's almost like this two-pronged regret where you regretted something and then you have the double regret of wishing once you caught it that you caught it sooner.

What keeps people in this waiting period?

Because I do feel like there is at least in the I wish I'd gotten out of the relationship sooner.

I wish I would have quit this run. I wish I would have gone back to nursing school sooner. I wish I would have that it's almost an admission to yourself. That those years you spent talking yourself out of it, you knew the truth all the time. You might have, but sometimes the timing isn't right.

I'd give yourself a lot of grace on that. How come? Because you did something. You took the action. You know, you took the action.

There's old Chinese proverb, which is, you know, the best time to plan a tree was 20 years ago. Second best time is now.

And so that's what you had to think about it that way.

So if you stopped smoking, that's fantastic. Yeah, maybe you should have stopped five years ago. But you didn't. And so give yourself some grace. Because you did something really hard that is actually valuable for yourself and your family.

I really think you got to treat yourself with grace and not obsess over doing something sooner. A lot of us are like kind of risk averse. And Daniel Conem in the great Nobelist. He has research basically the stealing to this.

Quitting at the right time always feels like quitting too early.

That's just the way that it is. I think it's really helpful to hear that when it's time to quit, you're typically not going to feel ready. Exactly. So if this is too early for me to quit, oh, I might be signal that it's the right time. It's almost how we gain surety in the decision is by kind of knowing, okay, it's time.

But you build up a little bit more friction and then just say, now it's time. Right, right. Here's here's how I kind of think about it. If I'm trying to extend myself some grace, is that when we look back on decisions that we've made and then we regret not making them sooner, we forget that we're looking back from our future self.

And we did not have the information that we have as we're looking at the past. Like what I know about myself and what I'm capable of is a 57 year old woman. Is very different than what I knew about myself and the resources and understanding that I had when I was in my 20s, 30s, 40s. And it's not very fair to hold the 57 year old version of me who, by the way, is different because of the things I regret. Good point.

And hold that knowledge over myself 20 years ago. And so when we scrutinize our past behavior, we have to think about that person.

Not this person today, but what did that, what did, what did that person know?

Daniel, these four categories that regrets fall into are so helpful to understand. And it's also helpful to understand that this is universal. We all experience regrets and we can learn from them. It's helping me see that I'm not alone. And it's also giving me the sense that there's something you can do.

And I'm sure as you're listening right now or you're watching, there's something in this conversation that's just making you feel lighter. You're nodding your head or perhaps you're thinking about people in your life who really need these tools and these frameworks. I want you to take a minute and share this episode with them. Drop it in your family group chat. Send it in an email to a bunch of colleagues.

Send it to that friend of yours that's constantly beating herself up because I'm going to tell you something. This research could fundamentally change how they see their entire life. And don't go anywhere because Daniel Pink has specific recommendations for how to turn regret into your biggest teacher when we return. Stay with me.

Welcome back. It's your friend Mel and today you and I are diving into one of the most powerful studies I've ever read.

It's all about regret and how you can use regret to be a signal and a teacher that improves your life and who you become in the future. Daniel, here's my next question. One thing that really strikes me is how many people talked about how they stayed in relationships too. For state and relationships with somebody that was disrespectful or abusive or treating them poorly. And when you are in a relationship where you're being disrespected or worse abuse.

Oh, my God, yeah. You don't feel safe. You don't have the perspective that you will be able to leave it, which explains why you hedge on the decision to do so at the time.

So I love that piece of this Dan to help relieve you of continuing to make yourself wrong for not being ready or able at the time that you now think you should have been.

Absolutely right.

Because of what you know now.

Yes.

And remember regret requires agency.

And what does that mean? A agency means you have control over what you do. Okay. I can't regret that it's raining outside. I can be disappointed if I want to go outside.

I can't regret that because I don't know if I don't have control over that. But if I go outside on the rain and don't bring my umbrella, I can regret that. And there are people in relationships out there. We actually don't have agency. Yeah.

And so you can't beat yourself up for not making decisions when you didn't have the agency. It'd be like beating yourself up for running outside.

So you have to scrutinize the person that you were at that time.

And treat that person again. Not better than anybody else.

But not worse than anybody else.

This is the thing that this is the mistake that we make. We treat ourselves worse than we treat other people. We shouldn't do that. Let's talk about the big regret of worrying too much about what other people think. Lord have mercy with so many of those.

Let's talk about that. There are a lot of people who have those kinds of regrets. And it is another case where our view of the world is distorted. Actually, when I was younger, I actually cared whether people thought in a way that was probably not particularly healthy. And then I actually discovered what people thought about me.

And it was this. Nobody was thinking about me. They were thinking about themselves. No one was thinking about me. And it's like, it's like, it's like what's in social psychologists call the spotlight effect.

We think that we're constantly in the spotlight. Everybody's watching us. And they're not. So go do your thing. Go do your thing.

And the other thing. Okay. I'll give you something. I'll see you in raise you. If they do care, there's a two-word answer.

Let them. Well, you can't control. It's been very liberating to create that theory and use it and recognize how much time and energy I've wasted and how much power I gave away. To worrying about what other people were thinking and how that helped me back from doing things that I wish I had done sooner. Absolutely.

And it's true for most human beings who walk the planet that is true of. And if we can get people past that, people are going to act more boldly. They're going to speak up for things that they care about. Why do we regret the things we didn't do rather than the things we did? That's a huge, really important question.

And this is a big, big deal. There's a lot of existing research on this. In the architecture of regret, there are two kinds of regrets. There are regrets of action, regrets of inaction. I regret something I did or regrets something I didn't do.

Now, what you see over and over again is that with action regrets. I regret something I did. If only I had married Fred instead of Ed, how would be much happier.

So we say if only. So that's what's called in the literature and upward counterfactual.

We think about how things could have been better. And that's the dating one. Well, yeah, that's if only I had married, if only I had married Fred instead of Ed. But with action regrets, we can do what's called a downward counterfactual. We imagine how things could have turned out worse.

And there's some really super cool research on this. But here's where it comes up in the database. Allegiance of people all women saying, I shouldn't marry that idiot. But at least I have these two great kids. There's a famous piece of research.

I love it. They showed photographs of the three medalists on the Olympic metal stand in a number of different situations. But they didn't show what metal they got. And they asked people based on their facial expressions. How happy are they? And so not surprisingly, the happiest looking people were the gold medalists.

The second happiest people were the bronze medalists.

Not the silver medalists, right? Because the silver medalists were doing an upward counterfactual. If only I had peddled four tenths of a second faster, I'd have the gold.

The bronze medalists were doing a downward counterfactual.

At least I have a bronze, not like this schmoo, who's fourth tenths of a second behind me. Who's like, doesn't get a medal at all. And so for action regrets, we can at least them. So I married the wrong person and I regretting that. But at least I have these two great kids. All right. So it makes us feel better.

Doesn't necessarily do better, but it makes us feel better. With inaction regrets, we can't do that stuff. That's true. You can't do it. You can't undo something you didn't do.

You know, it's metaphysically impossible. You can't do it. Let's say the person who's listening or watching right now is sitting on a big decision. Maybe it's about their career. Maybe it's about a big move. Yeah.

And they're stuck in that overthinking. Not quite sure what to do in terms of taking this risk or making this decision.

What does your research suggest?

Yeah. So if you're thinking about that, you're not sure what to do. You can imagine having a conversation with someone who you haven't met yet. But who cares deeply about you. And that is the you of 10 years from now. So 10 years from now. So imagine having a conversation with the you of 2036.

Okay. What does that person want you to do? It's pretty freaking clear to me with what that person's going to want you to do. Because it's what all the people in your list and all the people in my database want you to do. They want you to build a solid foundation for yourself and for your family.

They want you to take that shot. They want you to do the right thing and they want you to reach out. And it's pretty clear. And so have that conversation. You know what that person 10 years from now wants you to do.

And you don't want to have the conversation where 10 years from now. You have to tell the you of 2036. Hey, I whipped out. I blew it. I blew it.

I checked it out. I love that. Let's move on to the final bucket of regrets that you found in your research. We have talked about connection, foundation, boldness. The fourth one is moral.

What is moral regret? You're at a juncture in your life. You have two choices. You can you can take the high road. You can take the low road.

And when you take the low road, when you do the wrong thing, most of us most of the time regretted. And in this category, it was a small category, but very, very, very deeply held. And this is sort of the weird thing about this topic of regret is that the more you go into it, at least for me, the better I feel about human beings.

Because what the suggest to us is that most of us are good. Most of us want to be good. And most of us feel shitty when we're not good.

I think that like 95% of 98% of us are good people who want to do the right thing.

And when we don't do the right thing, we feel bad about that. 98% of people like want to do the right thing, you feel bad. That's good. The just 2% mess things up for everybody else. So more regrets are, if only I'd done the right thing.

And so if the person who's listening right now is feeling that way,

what's the first step to take in order to free themselves of this burden that they've been carrying around?

So one thing, as I've mentioned before, is to treat yourself with kindness rather than content, treat yourself with compassion. You are not the only person who has a moral regret. Every single human being has a moral regret. It doesn't mean that you're a shameful terrible person.

It means that you might have done a bad thing. And so it's also kind of a moment in your life, a scene in your life, rather than the full measure of your life. So there are different things that you can do. If you've heard somebody, right?

If you have cheated somebody, if you have harmed somebody in a way, go make a mens. Why do you do that if the person isn't here? And you cannot forgive yourself. You play it over.

You hold on to the regret about what happened. First of all, you can talk about your regret and the other thing, especially as we get older, we can instruct other people who are younger, how to live better than we did. So let's talk about how we deal with the regret we haven't dealt with.

Let's go through the process based on this research. So now that we know that we're dealing with whether it's a connection or foundation, or boldness, or a moral regret. Right. Let's look at your research and unpack for a stand.

How do we actually face a regret that we haven't dealt with?

Okay. So I look at it as three stages. Okay. Inward outward forward. Inward outward forward.

Right. So inward is what?

Inward is basically how you treat yourself.

And as I've mentioned, the way we talk to ourselves and the face of screwups is brutal and cruel. If you were to sort of implant in my head and like broadcast my self-talk out there, if I would do that in a workplace, HR would be intervening immediately. I drive you to the seventh floor of a mass general break.

I'm right. Exactly. He's like, he's not. Get him out of here. Get a list of this is the madman, the way he's talking to other people.

Yes. So don't do that, please. And here's the thing. It's not only because it's not nice because we have piles of evidence showing that that kind of horrifying, last writing self-criticism doesn't improve your performance.

What doesn't improve your performance is self-compassion, which is treating yourself with kindness rather than contempt, treating yourself the way you would treat a friend. And when we do that, okay, so that's inward. Treat yourself with kindness rather than contempt.

Recognize that regrets are part of the human experience. IE, you're not that special.

And also, and this is, I think, super important is that it's a moment in your life.

It's not the full measure of your life.

And so when we do that, that opens the way to the second stage,

which is outward. It's a very, very strong argument here for writing about and talking about our regrets. Why does writing about or talking about your regrets help you? It does a few things. First, it's an unburdening because we're carrying something.

You sort of say, oh, I got this heavy backpack on.

Let me just put it on the table here.

You're putting it on the table, right?

So, but more important than that, I think this is the really interesting thing.

There's a guy at the University of Texas. Jamie Pentebakers and a lot of research on this. If you write about a big regret, you have for 15 minutes a day for three days, you feel better about it. It's why do you think that works?

Because what you're doing is you're taking something blobby. You're taking this like phantom that is like stalking you. And you're saying, okay, come here. Sit down here. Let's see what you really made up.

Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh. And you're converting this blobby thing into concrete works. And that helps you make sense of it. It makes it less menacing. We go from abstract to so much more concrete.

So we start with the inward, which is you got a shift yourself talk. And one of the ways to really leverage his research is to say, I'm not the only person who's done this. So wait. And if I can really embrace that I did the best that I could at the time.

And I'm going to stop beating myself up. But the inward is how you talk to yourself. Exactly. It's like dropping the sword against yourself. Outward is get it out of your head.

Exactly. And get it on paper or go talk to somebody about it. And that I love the exercise of just three days in a row for 15 minutes right about it. And suddenly based on the research, you're going to have this shift where you're like, well,

okay, but what happens after you write about it? Okay, this is the case.

So the third part is forward.

You got to actually think hard and draw a lesson from it and say, what does this lesson tell me in what should I do next? There's some interesting research about self-talk, where we're actually more clear headed when we talk to ourselves in the third person. It's the third person.

It's crazy as a sound. So instead of me saying, what should I do? What should Dan do? Oh, so use your own name. Yeah, use your own name.

Now what should you do? Right.

And so, but you should reach out if you can get it back.

But also, but on the lesson, it's like, okay, what lesson is this teaching mel? What lessons is teaching mel? All right. Explain it in a sentence.

And in most cases, people, in most cases, people know. Because none of this is, I don't think any of this is super complex. Okay, what should mel do next? So what is this? In a sentence, what is this teaching mel?

Jose Fred Maria, whoever. Right, so use your name in it. Use your name. Use your name. What lesson is this teaching?

Fill in the blank. Okay. What should fill in the blank? Okay, so let's go back to, I don't give me any kind of, give me any kind of regret. I am just flipping through a hundred plus pages,

marrying the man who left me and my kids in a terrible divorce. Okay. Okay. I'll give you a couple more. Living with so many limitations.

Waiting for a better time to call my best friend. She passed away. Oh. I regret living away from my parents and siblings. Not trusting myself, not taking my small children to see my parents more.

Fell in love with a married man. Thought he'd leave his wife. We're not working harder in my 20s. I'm reading through all of these regrets. Okay.

So let's take anyone. Okay, so let's take. Okay, so let's take. We all know they're not unique and you're not special. Let's take the, let's take the, let's take the, I didn't call my friend.

Then they passed away. Yeah, and here's, yes, absolutely. There's that one. Letting my best friend and I drift apart. Okay, here we go.

Let's think that one. That's these one, all right. I love that. It dance like that's an easy one. So let's try yourself for a decade, but that's an easy one.

They're all, they're all relatively, they're all, they're not easy. They're simple. They're, they're simple. But here's the thing. It's much easier for me to look at it from the outside than it is for the person who's had, who's inhabiting that body and soul and part.

Yes, yes, see that. And so one of the things you want to do is you want to kind of get outside of yourself. This is why this is why the, you know, the way we talk to ourselves is, is incredibly important. If somebody comes to me saying, can I need advice? I don't know what I should do. I say, what would you tell your friend to do in that situation?

You tell your friend, another friend, pick up the phone, send a text, send an email. Well, you know, every time I go to a funeral when somebody dies, unexpectedly, or they die young, I sit at their celebration of life service. And I think about how I wish I would have stayed in closer contact. I think about how I wish I would have reached out more. And it was attending a number of funerals that made me start this habit where I just have a habit of texting a friend every day, just randomly.

A great, I mean, I think that is a, I think that is a great strategy. Now, here's the thing.

I think it's great for your friends. I think it's great for you. Of course it is because I feel like, even though I can't reach out to everybody every single day and I can't, I'm not the greatest in getting back on text right away. But I feel like I'm the kind of person who makes a effort to proactively reach out because connection and friendship matters to me.

Have you always done that?

No, I've let work and I've let worries and I've let feelings of being like a ...

Keep me from doing that or I've let what allowed you to push past it.

Sitting at funerals and feeling like I wish I would have reached out more or like sitting, you know, even things stand like and it's weird because I don't know that I regret it.

Maybe actually here's what I'm going to say.

I don't regret it now because I've moved through it. So when my career really began, it was beginning kind of like a Phoenix rising from the ashes of financial distress. And I've often joked that I'm not positively motivated. I made a negative motivation like it's pretty amazing how talented you can be when you got problems to solve like paying your bills and putting food on. The necessity is a mother.

Yes, it is. I worked and worked and worked and worked and worked and worked and worked because my highest value was safety and security. And I basically missed out on our daughter's middle school in high school. And at the time I regretted it. And at the time it was painful to see how much I was missing out on and all the games that I missed.

But I've really looked at that period of my life and said to myself, yes. And I am so glad I put my head down and got us out of debt and I did what I needed to do. And knowing what the situation was. I could have made a different choice, but that would have come with different consequences. And so I can see it fully which relieved me of the burden. And so I used to make myself wrong for having quote, let friendships go or not quote being a good friend or not keeping up with friends.

But I just looked through the last couple two decades of my life as, well, you had a lot going on. And it wasn't your top priority and that's okay. But now you realize that this actually really matters to you. And so you got to figure out woman how to insert this in small ways, because this is a core value. How was your relationship with that daughter now? My daughter's fantastic and it was good then because dad was staying at home.

And so they have an amazing relationship with both of us, but I just felt like I was missing out.

I had this at night around it and I felt like I couldn't be everywhere at once. And so I sort of regretting how much I know what you felt that way. Because you couldn't be everywhere at once. And so you applied a lesson going forward. And so now that I'm at a different point of my life, I can actually have the freedom to bandwidth the wherewithal to reach out.

You have to do that. You know, Dan, I would just love for you to talk to the person who's listening or watching right now. And if they're thinking of somebody that they care deeply about who is really struggling with regret. What do you want them to do or know? I want you to convey to the person who is struggling with regret that number one, they're not alone.

That this is one of the most common experiences that human beings have. And it's telling you something important. And if you just listen to it, you're going to be better off. That it's not something that can bring you down that when you do it right, it's something that can lift you up. Well, what I love about the fact that you made time to come here today is that one thing you can do is share this conversation with them and let Dan get through to them with the research.

Because I think, you know, it's one of those things that you sit with the loan. But when you hear the research and these frameworks, you immediately feel a little lighter.

Because here's the thing, no one's taught us this.

This is the thing, somehow we've been taught the idea that as I said, you should be positive all the time and never be negative and always look forward and never look back.

And that's bad advice. That's bad advice. What you should be doing is saying regret is part of the human experience. It's a signal. It's a knock at the door.

Answer the door. See what it has to tell you. And in the systematic way, approach it, draw a lesson from it, and you're going to be better off. You're going to find more meaning in life. You're going to be happier in life. And for a lot of stuff on the job, you're going to perform better on the job, too.

Whether that job is being apparent or being married. I don't know if you can do this because you poured so much into us today and taught us so much. But if you had to distill everything down about all this research on regret, Dan Pink.

What do you think the single most important takeaway is for the person listening?

Regret makes us human and regret makes us better. Dan Pink, what are your parting words? I thought those are pretty good parting words. You know, I was ready to, I mean, if this is a handheld mic, I would have dropped it. The parting words are regret is part of the human experience.

It's one of the things that makes us human. Everybody has regret and you have a choice. You can ignore your regrets or you can wallow in your regrets or you can confront your regrets.

When we do that in a kind way toward ourselves, it makes us better.

We get more out of life. We deepen our relationships. We find a greater sense of meaning.

And we don't waste our precious time on this planet.

Dan Pink, thank you for all the work you're doing. Thank you for this research. Thank you for making the time to come to Boston. What a pleasure to come to Boston. It was--

And come here and talk to you. Well, thank you.

And here's what I appreciate about you.

I appreciate that you took a topic that most of us don't know how to talk about. That is universal. And you didn't just come in and tell us about it. You gave us a framework to better understand this universal human experience. To put our regrets in these four buckets of boldness, foundation, moral connection.

And then based on understanding what we're dealing with, you gave us very specific tools based on the research. To set ourselves free from the prison that we put ourselves in. And on behalf of the person that's listening, on behalf of everybody that they will share this with. I want to thank you for the gift of all these tools. And for giving us a way to think about process and move through one of the most common and universal experiences that we will have as human beings.

Thank you. It's been a joy. Thank you. You're welcome. And thank you.

It has been a joy to be here with you. I'm so excited for you. And I'm excited for everybody that you share this extraordinary conversation research with.

I mean, just imagine how incredible it's going to feel to relieve yourself of the burden of carrying these regrets.

And instead, use the research you just learned about, to learn from them, to create a better future, to continue becoming the kind of person that you really want to become. I loved this. I loved being here with you and one more thing. In case nobody else tells you this today. As your friend, I would regret not telling you this.

I want you to know that I love you and I believe in you.

And I believe in your ability to create a better life. And one of the reasons why you just had to talk about this extraordinary research is because everything that we learn today. Using regret as a teacher, as a signal, to help us make changes that will make our lives better. And that is how you create a better life. Alrighty.

I will see you in the very next episode. I'll welcome you in the moment you hit play. Because it sounds like it might be one of those things that you regret not doing. 100%. Which brings us to our conversation.

What a segue. So, Brian, how are we doing? We got awesome. Happy birthday again. Okay.

Here we go. God dang. This kid was just like born. Wait a second. Well, I have a kid who's 22 years old.

I'm like 26. You know what I mean?

You feel like you're way younger than you really are.

My wife allows me one sports metaphor a day. And so, I'm on a very strict diet. And I don't think I've used one yet. There's a baseball metaphor here where, you know, there's a picture in the picture is getting clobber.

The manager always says I kept the picture in too long.

This way sounds like a really, I don't know, obvious or dumb question. It's been a joy. Thank you. How do you feel? I feel good.

I was a good conversation. It's super interesting. Yeah. Yeah. I have to say.

I am sort of blown away by the intentionality of how you guys approach this. It's not the norm. You know that. Thank you. Oh, and one more thing.

I know. This is not a blooper. This is the legal language. You know, what the lawyers write and what I need to read to you. The podcast is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.

I'm just your friend. I am not a licensed therapist and this podcast is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist or other qualified professional. Got it? Good.

I'll see you in the next episode. [BLANK_AUDIO]

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