Op facebook circuleerde laatst een post
uit Buzzfeed
genaamd: 'Things you'll regret when you're old'. Bij het lezen
daarvan bekroop me steeds meer het gevoel dat dit geschreven moest
zijn door een jong mens. De schrijver Mike
Spohr leek echter best oud op zijn ava – in
ieder geval 40+, oud genoeg om te weten dat dit lijstje lariekoek is.
Zou hij een verzameling cliché's hebben opgetekend? Mijn commentaar
op alle 37 items uit deze lijst 'Things you THINK you'll regret when
old'.
1. Not
traveling when you had the chance.
Traveling becomes
infinitely harder the older you get, especially if you have a family
and need to pay the way for three-plus people instead of just
yourself.
Travelling is completely overrated.
Besides actually wrong because of environnemental issues.
2. Not
learning another language.
You’ll kick
yourself when you realize you took three years of language in high
school and remember none of it.
This one is sooo wasted on the Dutch.
3. Staying in
a bad relationship.
No one who ever
gets out of a bad relationship looks back without wishing they made
the move sooner.
Which era does he have in mind? In view
of the divorce rates, the opposite is pretty obvious. People never
stay in a relationship anymore. Let alone a BAD relationship. They
certainly don't need help there.
4. Forgoing
sunscreen.
Wrinkles, moles,
and skin cancer can largely be avoided if you protect yourself.
Has this come from a different list?
Like a prospectus from the Association against Cancer? Have the two
lists been mixed up?
5. Missing the
chance to see your favorite musicians.
“Nah, dude,
I’ll catch Nirvana next time they come through town.” Facepalm.
Facepalm dude. As you say.
6. Being
scared to do things.
Looking back
you’ll think, What was I so afraid of?
That's an easy one: when you're old,
you will thank heaven on your bare knees you are still alive, whilst
many of your reckless mates left their young lives going the rough
track.
7. Failing to
make physical fitness a priority.
Too many of us
spend the physical peak of our lives on the couch. When you hit 40,
50, 60, and beyond, you’ll dream of what you could have done.
You regret this now (but still never
put yourself to doing it), and you'll regret it every day till you're
old. Then you will not give a flying damn.
8. Letting
yourself be defined by gender roles.
Few things are as
sad as an old person saying, “Well, it just wasn’t done back
then.”
What is he on?
9. Not
quitting a terrible job.
You gotta pay the
bills. But if you don’t make a plan to improve your situation, you
might wake up one day having spent 40 years in hell.
Read my lips: you will absolutely
regret having quit a perfectly fine employment out of sheer
expectation something fantastic was waiting out there just for you to
grab it.
10. Not trying
harder in school.
It’s not just
that your grades play a role in determining where you end up in life.
Eventually you’ll realize how neat it was to get to spend all day
learning, and wish you’d paid more attention.
Hell yeah, if you barely managed 5th
grade. But if you studied till the age of 30 and graduated with
honors in two majors, let me tell you: BOY WILL YOU REGRET THAT. A
complete waste of your precious youth. You should have been dancing
in the streets and having fun. Or have taken the first job you could
lay your hands on and start making a living early in life, buy a
house, things lots of people do with their modest salaries, and are
settled much sooner than you were, being awfully poor till you hit
40.
Life is really, really short. Too short
to be spent inside four walls cramming your brains with useless
stuff.
11. Not
realizing how beautiful you were.
Too many of us
spend our youth unhappy with the way we look, but the reality is,
that’s when we’re our most beautiful.
Fact: the great majority of us are
indeed blazing beauties. Especially in the States.
12. Being
afraid to say “I love you.”
When you’re
old, you won’t care if your love wasn’t returned — only that
you made it known how you felt.
When you're old, you look back on the
many times you said I love you to complete morons with utmost shame.
13. Not
listening to your parents’ advice.
You don’t want
to hear it when you’re young, but the infuriating truth is that
most of what your parents say about life is true.
Fact: the great majority of parents are
complete idiots. Especially in the States.
14. Spending
your youth self-absorbed.
You’ll be
embarrassed about it, frankly.
Sure.
15. Caring too
much about what other people think.
In 20 years you
won’t give a damn about any of those people you once worried so
much about.
No you won't, that much is true, but
you won't regret having done it neither. You just won't give a damn,
period.
16. Supporting
others’ dreams over your own.
Supporting others
is a beautiful thing, but not when it means you never get to shine.
Fact: the great majority of people's
dreams suck big time. So if you hang up with folk who do have
realisable dreams, you will most certainly never regret having taken
a ride on the wild side helping THEM.
17. Not moving
on fast enough.
Old people look
back at the long periods spent picking themselves off the ground as
nothing but wasted time.
No they don't. They never give it a
second thought. They have other things to do: enjoying their present
life for example, knowing it will all be over and done very soon.
18. Holding
grudges, especially with those you love.
What’s the
point of re-living the anger over and over?
You will certainly not long for the
times you forgot how badly you were treated and went back for more.
19. Not
standing up for yourself.
Old people don’t
take shit from anyone. Neither should you.
Old people hold their tongue wisely
when outnumbered, and only regret the times they didn't.
20. Not
volunteering enough.
OK, so you
probably won’t regret not volunteering Hunger Games style, but
nearing the end of one’s life without having helped to make the
world a better place is a great source of sadness for many.
The Christian
Youth Association speaking? My god, this is too easy.
21. Neglecting
your teeth.
Brush. Floss. Get
regular checkups. It will all seem so maddeningly easy when you have
dentures.
That kind of sounds like one of the few
of these 37 warnings an elderly person genuinely could tell the
young. Left unsaid the dramatic improvement in dental techniques,
going exponential every year. Implants rock.
22. Missing
the chance to ask your grandparents questions before they die.
Most of us
realize too late what an awesome resource grandparents are. They can
explain everything you’ll ever wonder about where you came from,
but only if you ask them in time.
When you are, say, 30, a portion (say,
0,01%) of you could think that. But when you hit 60, it will not be
any concern of yours, trust me. You'll be too busy desperately trying
to transfer some of your own memories unto the next generations.
About which no one gives a fuck.
23. Working
too much.
No one looks back
from their deathbed and wishes they spent more time at the office,
but they do wish they spent more time with family, friends, and
hobbies.
Could be. Could be that you got real
depressed when you went into retirement, because you happened to
really like your job and miss it like hell.
24. Not
learning how to cook one awesome meal.
Knowing one
drool-worthy meal will make all those dinner parties and celebrations
that much more special.
*bonkt hoofd tegen muur*
25. Not
stopping enough to appreciate the moment.
Young people are
constantly on the go, but stopping to take it all in now and again is
a good thing.
Well, I have to admit it, if not
reluctantly, that Mike is right here. He has worked very hard to
amount to this awesome truth. Carpe diem. Live every moment fully.
That's it. That's the receipe folks. Forget about the 36 others.
26. Failing to
finish what you start.
“I had big
dreams of becoming a nurse. I even signed up for the classes, but
then…”
Depends highly on what you start. If
it's crap you'll regret having sticked to it. Like having had the big
dream of becoming a nurse.
27. Never
mastering one awesome party trick.
You will go to
hundreds, if not thousands, of parties in your life. Wouldn’t it be
cool to be the life of them all?
I will give 5 bucks to every reader who
finds me an oldy who regrets that. I will.
28. Letting
yourself be defined by cultural expectations.
Don’t let them
tell you, “We don’t do that.”
Remember that time you ran stark naked
around the busiest city square shouting “Indigenas!
Indigenas!”?
29. Refusing
to let friendships run their course.
People grow
apart. Clinging to what was, instead of acknowledging that things
have changed, can be a source of ongoing agitation and sadness.
This kind of interferes with 18.
30. Not
playing with your kids enough.
When you’re
old, you’ll realize your kid went from wanting to play with you to
wanting you out of their room in the blink of an eye.
When you're old, you'll have exquisite
grand children to dwell on to expurge your mistakes of the past and
plenty of time on your hands on top of the bargain. You will be so
blissfully thrilled that you'll never take a minute to think about
their boring parents.
31. Never
taking a big risk (especially in love).
Knowing that you
took a leap of faith at least once — even if you fell flat on your
face — will be a great comfort when you’re old.
See 12. And 6.
32. Not taking
the time to develop contacts and network.
Networking may
seem like a bunch of crap when you’re young, but later on it
becomes clear that it’s how so many jobs are won.
That's a good one. I'll have a rain
check on that, and come back when I have asked a thousand oldies, see
if I finally find one who can corroborate this assessment.
33. Worrying
too much.
As Tom Petty
sang, “Most things I worry about never happen anyway.”
*Yamn* Are we done already?
34. Getting
caught up in needless drama.
Who needs it?
At this point the writer was getting
desperate.
35. Not
spending enough time with loved ones.
Our time with our
loved ones is finite. Make it count.
When you're 20, hanging round with
mates is about the only thing you do anyway, so no advice needed
here. When you're 60, you have plenty time to spend with loved ones.
When you're 30 with spouse and kids you haven't. That's a rule. Every
60-year old knows that.
36. Never
performing in front of others.
This isn’t a
regret for everyone, but many elderly people wish they knew — just
once — what it was like to stand in front of a crowd and show off
their talents.
Have I said something like *writer* and
*desperate* earlier? If not, time to say it now.
37. Not being
grateful sooner.
It can be hard
to see in the beginning, but eventually it becomes clear that every
moment on this earth — from the mundane to the amazing — is a
gift that we’re all so incredibly lucky to share.
Okay, so we have to be grateful for
life itself right? Sounds good to me. Because regretting not having
been grateful to other people... Write me a post card when you will.
Really looking forward to it.
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