Think about the worst decision you’ve ever made — the one thing you know you should have done differently.
“If only someone could’ve warned me,” you might think. “If I had just known, everything would be different today.”
I’ve thought things similar to that. After things end in ways that make me unhappy, I tend to go back and find the one moment — and there usually is one moment — when I made a decision or took an action that caused what I’m unhappy about.
I’m prone to thinking how different things could be if I had a time machine to go back to that moment. But I wonder whether that’s true.
I found out this evening that a young woman who I casually know has gotten engaged. She hasn’t been dating the guy very long — and everyone who knows her seems to have very negative impressions of the way he treats her.
As she stood there this evening showing me her ring, I knew better than to express my misgivings. She wouldn’t listen — just as I suspect I wouldn’t have listened if someone had warned me before my own major mistakes.

Nine years ago, he asked her, ‘Will you take a chance on me?’
If you’re still able to read this site, Harold Camping is wrong yet again
Will better marketing make you love state-controlled medical industry?
If ‘bigots’ can lose their rights, will your rights be next to go?
Idiots in Congress haven’t heard of ‘law of unintended consequences’
Why can we sabotage ourselves?
Reading people is a survival skill which all children need to learn
Without God, my unloving heart can’t truly love unlovable people
Italy sending seismologists to jail for failing to predict big earthquake