Every New Day (for People with Regret)

Lilpeep

Member
Author
Apr 3, 2018
20
Tinnitus Since
03/2018
Cause of Tinnitus
Noise induced
"Every new day''

Regardless of what you did, you can feel your anxiety like a stack of red hot bowling balls surgically implanted in your stomach. (Dramatic? Yes. Regret is rarely reasonable!)

It's that dreaded "Good God! Oh no! What was I thinking? Why me?" moment when you think one of two things:

  • I did something I shouldn't have and I might not be able to fix it.
  • I did something I shouldn't have, so I'm going to lose something important.
Both of those things might be true. In fact, they often are. Actions do have consequences. We do lose things—all through life. Nothing is permanent, not even the most secure relationship. But none of this has to be catastrophic.

Sometimes losing one thing opens you up to something else. It might be a lesson that helps you be more effective and happier in the future, or it could be a new possibility you never even thought to seek (like that dream you put off to work the job you just lost).

Or maybe it won't benefit you in any discernible way right away. Let's call a spade a spade—maybe you'll wish you went a different way, grieve what you lost, and then eventually let it go and move on.

The point is you will eventually let go and move on.

And because you're a strong, smart, capable person, you'll find ways to make this new direction meaningful for you. To make up for what you lost by gaining something equally important in the aftermath, whether it's a new understanding of your strengths, a new idea of who you want to be, or a new opportunity to try again a little wiser.

It's hard to think that way when you feel your dream job slipping through your fingers, or you miss someone who made your life wider than it could possibly be long. What's important to remember is that no matter what changes or slips away, you can still do something meaningful and fulfilling right from where you are.

That's how I let go of regrets when they start overwhelming my sense of optimism and possibility. Need more ideas to let your regret fade away?


1. The first is to not allow regrets. Make each decision with the fullness of heart and mind. Mistakes are lessons learned; they're not meant to be regrets. (Amber Strange Banchev)

2. It takes time but I try to think of all of the positivesthat came out of that situation. (Ryan Cayabyab)

3. I trust that each experience is a lesson in the journey that I have chosen and embarked upon. I believe that we embrace the light and the dark and trust that we are exactly where we should be on our journey in this life! (Debra Mericantante Anzalone)

4. I don't attach myself to my emotions. I recognize the emotion and then let it go. (Alexandria DaCosta)

5. Time and patience. (Ben DeLong)

6. Breathe, reflect, learn from it, forgive myself, and move on. (Megan Corey)

7. I do it differently the next time, then there is nothing to regret. (Angie Thibault)

8. Regret is a waste of time. There is only the eternal now. (Neme Sis)

9. Find something better to replace it. (Vanessa Sah)

10. Having some regrets is not a bad thing—they make you strive for better. If we didn't have them we wouldn't grow spiritually, either. It is your preconceptions of regrets that determine how they affect you, positively or negatively. (Virginia Kiper)

11. Sometimes life gives you circumstances that simply have to be grieved, with no way around that. (Jacquie Pratt)

12. I simply never hold onto them in the first place… (Martine Eros)

13. Feel it, review it, learn it, shed it. (Susan Miley)

14. Regrets are visitors in the guest house of the mind. They come and they go like all feelings. (Rebecca Tighe)

15. Every time a regret crosses my mind, I put my mind to something positive in my life. (Theja Weeratne)

16. I believe that any bad decision can be rectified, depending on how much work you are willing to put into it. (David Durtschi)

17. Every feeling has a purpose related to survival.You can't hope to "change" this fact because it's part of life. You can instead learn to deal with feelings of regret by reflecting on them and learn from mistakes then letting go. Regret is useful. (Virginia Kiper)

18. We may regret the time spent regretting unless we have learned from these regrets and make a more centered and peaceful now, where we create fewer regrets and more love. (Susan Carol Luddeke)

19. I try not to think "what if." (Karyn Dillard)

20. Just live by all your heart, not by your head. (Yen Mai)

What helps you let go of regrets?
 
I regret the change in ADs that increased my T and given me nightmare anxiety.
IF ONLY I could turn the clock back six months. My quality of life has GONE.
 
I regret the change in ADs that increased my T and given me nightmare anxiety.
IF ONLY I could turn the clock back six months. My quality of life has GONE.

I hope you will take this the right way: I'm a strong believer in "everything happens for a reason." I think this could help you and people like you alot. Think about it like this, in about a year or two, maybe three. You have gone through some very very tough things in life. Most people around you are too busy "chilling" while you are learning how to accept things that have happened. At the end of the day you will be the strongest of all people around you and you will benefit from this more then they will. I know life is not a race but trust me, always driving the easy road will lead to a unexpiernced driver. You are the driver that knows all the bumps and cracks in the road;). Hang in there. Everything will pay of sooner or later
 
My road in life has not been easy by any means I'm afraid.
I understand your sentiments but if I wasn't strong I wouldn't be here now.
Nobody in my family is 'just chilling' and I can't be a support to them. That's just how it is.
BTW someone ran into the back of my car 2 weeks ago a gave me whiplash.
Eve
@steff
@Stef?
 
Excellent post! I really like #16
Regret has been the hardest part for me. I gave myself T by trying to drown out the distracting noise in my office with headphones. So by trying to fix a problem I made it 10x worse... permanently.
I'm usually good at being an optimist and seeing the good in any situation. Unfortunately the onset of T has absolutely nothing good about it!
But T has taught me something new! I can make something good come of it even if it has nothing to do with it. I had to make something good come of it in order to stay sane. So I started working out. I've always known I should.
Now I can say T is what made me get in shape. And it's a great motivator. I have to keep working out or the T will have no positives.
 

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