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.

We all see bits and pieces of reality; not a one of us sees whole picture
When you’re finally facing death, how many people will love you?
When does healthy love become nothing but unhealthy obsession?
How could a stranger at sunset possibly know what I had to say?
Rodney Dangerfield wasn’t funny, but tenacity built career as comic
A bully picked a fight that night — and now I’m dreaming about it
Governments can recognize rights, but no government creates rights
You must walk away from the past before you open door to the future