What if you finally realize what you should have done years ago? Is it too late to change things?
I get a lot of email — quite a bit of it asking for advice — but this one seemed especially urgent. Lori read what I wrote last night about how we measure success. She said she couldn’t stop thinking about the last lines of that piece, in which I said, “But most people learn [about their misplaced values] too late to make any difference. I hope it’s not too late for me. And I hope it’s not too late for you.”
Lori is 42 years old — and she’s afraid it’s too late for her.
I’m sharing some of her words — lightly edited with her permission to protect her identity — because I have a feeling a lot of people are in the same position.
“I got married when I was 28, but it was pretty clear soon after that I made a serious mistake,” she wrote. “I wasn’t mature enough to know how shallow he was. I guess I was shallow at the time, too, but I kept growing and he didn’t, so I outgrew him. I chose my husband over another man (and I’m embarrassed about the reasons now) and I’ve been unhappy with my overgrown juvenile husband for years.”
She told me a lot more details and then ended with her real fear.
“I understand all you’re saying, but what if I’ve waited too late?”

Dickens’ ‘David Copperfield’ far superior to postmodern novels
If your own life is all messed up, lecture others about fixing theirs
Aren’t you thankful for the right to vote before they take your money?
We’re neither friends nor enemies, just strangers who share the past
Midlife becomes big crisis when our self-deception stops working
Envy drives hatred for the wealthy, but I want to earn my way to riches
When times turn too dark in my life, I’m grateful for furry antidepressant
We often act like madmen who’re eagerly bent on self-destruction
If romantic love is mental illness, do many of us want to be cured?