Yesterday when I was young
So many happy songs were waiting to be sung,
So many wild pleasures lay in store for me
And so much pain my dazzled eyes refused to see
— Charles Aznavour (English translation by Herbert Kretzmer), “Yesterday When I Was Young”
Few things in life are as useless as regret, but few things feel as meaningful as my regrets. That’s a contradiction which I don’t quite understand.
When I was a boy, people warned me that my years would start flying by before I realized it, but I never quite believed that. Maybe nobody ever believes it until it’s too late. I’m not sure.
Some people say they have no regrets, but I suspect they’re either fooling themselves or else they have very selective memories. I’m burdened with a vivid memory. My mind can’t help drawing connections between my decisions and the emotional pain which I later experience.
I have a lot of regrets, but they serve a purpose. If I look at them in the right ways, they’re warning signs that allow me to adjust my decisions — while I still can.

How do we often know things which we shouldn’t really know?
End of life brought cancer patient to baptism six days before death
Missing childhood connections leave us longing for missing love
Not voting makes a statement: ‘You don’t have my moral consent’
Google’s geeks offer future vision that leads toward inhuman world
Taking Donald Trump seriously means ‘Idiocracy’ is already here
Without motivation, dreams fade,
I can’t get over this terrible feeling that I need to talk to you on video