4 Kinds of Regret – and What They Teach You about Yourself | Daniel H. Pink | TED

118,632 views ・ 2022-03-14

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Let's talk about regret.
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It is, to my mind, our most misunderstood emotion,
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and so I decided to spend a couple of years studying it.
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And one of the things that I did is I went back
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and I looked at about 50 years of social science on regret.
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And here's what it tells you.
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I'll save you the trouble of reading a half century of social science.
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The research tells us that everybody has regrets,
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regrets make us human.
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Truly, the only people without regrets are five-year-olds,
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people with brain damage and sociopaths.
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The rest of us, we have regrets,
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and if we treat our regrets right, and that's a big if,
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but there are ways to do it,
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regrets can actually make us better.
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They can improve our decision-making skills,
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improve our negotiation skills,
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make us better strategists, make us better problem solvers,
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enhance our sense of meaning
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if we treat them right.
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And the good news is that there's a systematic way to do that.
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But I want to take just a few minutes to tell you about another aspect of regret
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that I think is really, really just super interesting.
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As part of the research here,
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I decided to ask people for their regrets,
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and to my surprise,
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I ended up collecting about 16,000 regrets
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from people in 105 countries.
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It’s an extraordinary trove.
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And what I realized when I went through this incredible database
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of human longing and aspiration
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is that around the world,
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and there's very little national difference here,
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people kept expressing the same four regrets.
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Around the world, there are the same four regrets
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that keep coming up over and over and over again.
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So what I want to do is just quickly tell you
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about these four core regrets,
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because I think they reveal something incredibly important and interesting.
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So the four core regrets that I'm going to cover.
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Number one, what I call foundation regrets.
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Foundation regrets.
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These are people who regret things like this:
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not saving enough money,
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which would be like, you know, financial regret,
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not taking care of their health and not eating right, health regret.
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But they're the same.
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Those kinds of regrets are about making choices
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that didn't allow you to have some stability,
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a stable platform for their life.
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I have a lot of people who regret not working hard enough in school.
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A lot of people who regret --
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I got a lot of regrets about not saving money.
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And it reminds me a little bit of Aesop’s fable
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of the ant and the grasshopper,
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where earlier in their life they acted like a grasshopper instead of the ant,
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and now it's catching up with them.
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So foundation regrets sound like this:
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"If only" --
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And that's the catch phrase of regret, "if only" --
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"If only I'd done the work."
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Second category.
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I love this category, it's fascinating.
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Boldness regrets.
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I have hundreds of regrets around the world that go like this:
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“X years ago, there was a man/woman whom I really liked.
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I wanted to ask him/her out on a date,
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but I was too scared to do it
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and I've regretted it ever since."
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I also have hundreds of regrets by people who said:
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"Oh, I always wanted to start a business,
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but I never had the guts to do that."
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People who said: “Oh, I wish I’d spoken up more.
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I wish I'd said something and asserted myself."
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These are, as I said before, what I call boldness regrets.
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And we get to a juncture in our life and we have a choice.
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We can play it safe or we can take the chance.
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And what I found is overwhelmingly
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people regret not taking the chance.
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Even people who took the chance and it didn't work out
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don't really have many regrets about that.
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It's the people who didn't take the chance.
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So this is boldness regrets.
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Boldness regrets sound like this:
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"If only I'd taken the chance."
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Third category.
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Moral regrets.
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Very interesting, very interesting category.
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These are people who, again,
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a lot of these regrets begin at a juncture.
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You're at a juncture,
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you can do the right thing or you can do the wrong thing.
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People do the wrong thing,
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and they regret it.
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I mean, one of the ones that really stuck with me,
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I'm going to try to pull it up here,
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is this one here, this woman.
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She's a 71-year-old woman in New Jersey.
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"When I was a kid,
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my mother would send me to a small local store for a few items.
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I frequently would steal a candy bar when the grocer wasn't looking.
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That's bothered me for about 60 years."
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So 71-year-old woman in New Jersey,
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for 60 years, she's been bugged by this moral breach.
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So moral regrets.
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We have people regretting bullying,
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we have people regretting marital infidelity.
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All kinds of things.
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Moral regrets sound like this,
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“If only I’d done the right thing.”
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And finally, our fourth category, or what I call connection regrets.
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Connection regrets are like this:
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You have a relationship or ought to have a relationship.
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And it doesn't matter what the relationship is.
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Kids, parents, siblings, cousins, friends, colleagues,
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but you have a relationship or ought to have had a relationship,
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and the relationship comes apart.
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And what's interesting is that what these 16,000 people were telling me
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is that the way these relationships come apart
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is often not very dramatic,
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not very dramatic at all.
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They often come apart by drifting apart
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rather than through some kind of explosive rift.
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And what happens is that people don't want to reach out
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because they say it’s going to be awkward to reach out,
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and the other side is not going to care.
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One of the lessons that I learned from this book for myself
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is always reach out.
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So that's what connection regrets are.
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"If only I'd reached out."
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And so over and over and over again, we see these same regrets:
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Foundation regrets: “If only I’d done the work.”
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Boldness regrets: “If only I’d taken the chance.”
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Moral regrets: “If only I’d done the right thing.”
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And connection regrets: “If only I’d reached out.”
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And when we look at these regrets, so that's interesting in itself,
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but what I realized is that these four core regrets
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operate as a kind of photographic negative of the good life.
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Because if we understand what people regret the most,
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we actually can understand what they value the most.
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And each of these regrets, to my mind,
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reveals something fundamental about humanity and about what we need.
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We need stability.
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Nobody wants to have an unstable life.
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We want a chance to learn and grow and do something.
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We recognize that we are not here forever,
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and we want to do something and try something.
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And at least feel the exhilaration of being bold.
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Moral regrets, I think most of us,
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almost all of us want to do the right thing.
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At some level, these moral regrets are very heartening.
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The idea that people are bugged for years, decades,
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by these moral breaches earlier in their life.
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I think most of us want to do the right thing.
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And then connection regrets.
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We want love, not love only in the romantic sense,
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but love in the broader sense of connection and relationship
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and affinity with other people.
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And so in a weird way,
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this negative emotion of regret points the way to a good life.
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By studying regret, we know what constitutes a good life,
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a life of stability,
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a life where you have a chance to take a few risks,
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a life where you’re doing the right thing
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and a life where you have people who love you and whom you love.
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And so to me, I started out saying,
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“Oh, boy, is this book going to be a downer, studying regret?”
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And it ended up being very uplifting.
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And so, those are the four core regrets.
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Regret points us to the good life.
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And so I hope that you'll begin to reckon with your own regrets
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because I think they're going to give you direction to a life well lived.
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Whitney Pennigton Rogers: Well, thank you for that, Dan
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I was clapping behind the scenes when you couldn't actually see me,
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for everyone who I know also really appreciated what you shared there.
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First, Dan, you mentioned, you know, this big takeaway
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about how thinking about regret
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can help us figure out what is the recipe for the good life.
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I guess what has been your biggest takeaway from doing this work beyond that?
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DHP: I found it really interesting how much people want to talk about this,
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and that's what got me on it in the first place.
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That is, I had an experience in my life
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where one of my kids graduated from college,
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and that sort of marker in my life made me start thinking
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about what regrets that I had.
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And I just mentioned it to a few people,
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and I found them, like, leaning in to the conversation.
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So I was amazed at how much people want to talk about this
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and how much this taboo of like,
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“Oh, I don’t have any regrets,” is so ridiculous.
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I mean, it's absurd.
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And that if we actually start talking about it,
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we're going to be better off.
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For me personally, I think that the biggest takeaway was the ...
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Was the connection regrets.
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Because I had so many people who had the same story
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where they had a friendship,
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some kind of relationship,
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and it comes apart,
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and they want to reach out and they say,
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"Oh no, it's going to be really awkward.
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And the other side's not going to care."
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And we're so wrong about that.
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It's not awkward, and the other side almost always appreciates it.
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And so for me,
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I guess the takeaway is if I'm at a juncture in my life
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where I'm thinking,
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“Should I reach out or should I not reach out?”
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I've answered the question.
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That the answer to that question at that juncture,
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if you reach that juncture,
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the answer is, always reach out.
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You know, especially coming out a time like this, Whitney,
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we need that sense of of connection.
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And so the ethic of always reaching out, to me, is one of the best life lessons
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that I've learned.
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WPR: Well, we're going to do something a little interesting next, Dan,
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which is have some Members share their own regrets.
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And so I want to, I guess,
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hand things over to you right now so that you can bring in our first Member
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and we can explore more
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what this process of thinking about making our regrets
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help us live the good life actually looks like.
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DHP: Sure, sure.
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And so let's bring on Lily.
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I don't want it to sound like a magic act, but Lily and I don't know each other.
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We haven't gone through this before,
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but what I want to try to do is actually,
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the hearing of the stories of people's regrets
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I think is super interesting and revealing.
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We’re going to hear Lily’s regret,
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and we're going to talk through what science says
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might be some appropriate responses to that.
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So, Lily, welcome.
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Lily: Thank you, hi everyone.
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DHP: And tell us where you are.
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L: I'm currently in Brooklyn, New York.
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DHP: Brooklyn is in the house here at TED Membership.
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So Lily, tell us you regret.
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L: Yeah. So my regret that I want to share
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is that for most of my young adult life
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from kindergarten, really, straight through high school
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is that I was painfully, painfully shy
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with really low self-confidence.
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As I was thinking about this, I was remembering,
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and there were times where I just wanted to close my eyes
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and be invisible.
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And I think that, you know, my ...
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Like, I didn't really come into my own until I got to college,
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where I found a really great group of friends,
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really, like, I was confident in expressing myself
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and, you know, just being myself.
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And I think that, you know,
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my regret is that I just really wish I had taken a little bit more effort
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to build my confidence to fight this a little bit more,
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because I worry about what opportunities I might have missed.
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So ever since then, I feel like I try to counteract it now.
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And if ever I meet someone who might be going through,
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especially if they're younger, like going through the same thing I did,
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I try to make them feel seen
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and try to empathize with how they're feeling.
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So that's kind of a takeaway, I guess, from that regret.
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DHP: But I mean, it sounds like ...
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So is this a regret that's still with you?
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L: I think ...
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DHP: It sounds to me like you might have sort of begun the process
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of resolving it a little bit.
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L: Absolutely.
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But I think that, you know, even just, you know, prepping for this,
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I start to think about like, you know,
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there could have been more things that I could have done
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if I had just put myself a little bit out there,
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if I didn't, just try to hide so much.
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DHP: OK, alright.
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This is fascinating, Lily,
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and I have to say, I have this database of regrets.
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And you can search the database.
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And if I were to search the database
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for the phrase "speak up," "spoke up," "spoken up,"
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I would get huge, huge numbers of of people.
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It is one of the most common regrets,
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is that people regret not speaking up.
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The important thing about our regrets that comes from the science is this:
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it's how we deal with them.
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So we can take that regret and say,
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"You know what?
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It doesn’t matter that I feel terrible and I have this regret,
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because I'm just going to ignore it," right?
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That's like the blithe "no regrets" philosophy.
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That's a bad idea, alright?
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The other way at it is to say,
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"Oh my God, I have all these regrets,
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it's so terrible, I'm going to wallow in them."
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That's a bad idea too.
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What we want to do,
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and I think that you've already done a really brilliant job of it
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is use these regrets as signals.
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Signals for our thinking; what is it teaching me?
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And so there are a few things in the research
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that give us some clues about what to do.
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So one of them is this.
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So we start with sort of, reframing the regret
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and how we think about it in ourselves.
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So do you think that you are the only person with this kind of regret?
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L: I don't know.
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DHP: Not at all.
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I’m watching the chat, man.
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Somebody said, “Lily, you’re telling my story.”
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So one of the things that we can do with our regret
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is treat ourselves with self-compassion, alright?
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Not boost our self-esteem,
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that's sometimes dangerous.
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Not rip ourselves down with self-criticism,
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but actually say,
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treat ourselves with kindness rather than contempt
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and recognize that what we're going through
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is part of the shared human experience.
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That's one thing.
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The second thing that we can do is we can disclose our regret.
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And there are few things that are interesting about disclosure.
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There's something amazing why 16,000 people
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were willing to share their regrets with me.
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I mean, like, what's going on there, right?
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And the reason is that when we disclose our regrets,
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we relieve some of the burden.
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That's one thing.
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The second thing that we do
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is that when we actually talk about our regrets,
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converting these kind of blobby mental abstractions into concrete words,
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whether it's spoken or writing,
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defangs them.
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It begins the sense-making process.
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And the other thing about disclosure,
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which is a dirty little secret that I'll reveal to all of you
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that comes out in the research very clearly,
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is that when we disclose our vulnerabilities and our weaknesses,
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people don't like us less,
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they actually like us more.
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Because they empathize with us.
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They respect our courage.
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And the final thing is to actually try to extract a lesson from it,
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to use this regret.
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So what would you say, Lily,
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is the lesson that you've learned from this regret?
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L: I think that ...
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What would have gone wrong if I ...
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DHP: That's interesting.
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L: If I were more open about expressing myself,
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like, people might discover I'm a little weird,
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or they might think that maybe I'm nice
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and hopefully maybe a little funny.
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So I think, like, maybe that's one thing that jumps to mind.
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Like, what could have gone wrong?
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You know.
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DHP: So what's the lesson that you have applied going forward?
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Taking this regret, OK,
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so you've sort of treated yourself with kindness rather than contempt.
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You've disclosed it to all these people here.
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You've begun the sense-making process by talking about it and writing about it.
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What's a lesson that you can extract from this?
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L: I think that ...
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I'm not sure.
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DHP: Well, then let me tell you.
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(Laughs)
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I think that the lesson is to ...
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Next time, speak up.
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Next time, speak up.
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Next time when you are at a juncture,
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"Should I speak up or not,"
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think about this.
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Think about this and speak up.
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Do you have any kind of work meetings or anything coming on
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where you're going to be confronted with this?
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L: Yeah, and I think that happens all the time.
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Like, you know, I have an idea.
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Oh, but someone starts talking,
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and then like, you just sort of fade back into the background,
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and that’s something I want to counteract more often.
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Because, more often than not,
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you know that idea is a contribution,
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and why am I hesitating so much?
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DHP: Yeah.
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So you have a lesson.
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The lesson is, speak up.
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So why don't you --
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So how about the next meeting you're in,
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when you have something to say, don't hesitate and speak up.
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L: Done, I'll do it.
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DHP: OK, but here's the thing,
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what I like about this is you've just made a promise to 300 people.
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So you're on the hook.
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L: I'm on the hook.
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DHP: So this is it.
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So, Lily has this regret.
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She's looking backwards, saying, "Oh, if only I'd spoken up,"
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and instead of beating herself up, she is divulging it,
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she's extracting a lesson from it,
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and she's taking that and applying it to some next interaction.
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So this is what we do.
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This is how, again, looking backward can move you forward.
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Lily, that's such a fantastic --
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People in the chat are saying, "We will hold Lily accountable,"
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which I love.
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So Lily, thanks for that.
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We're going to bring --
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I really, really appreciate your sharing that with us,
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and I want you to report back that you did speak up.
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L: I will, thank you.
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DHP: Thanks, Lily.
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WPR: Well, we have a question here from Claudia, who asks,
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"Can you speak to the issue of painful life regrets?
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Major opportunities lost?
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Do you have some advice
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on how to avoid being paralyzed by fear or further regret?"
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DHP: Yeah.
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It’s interesting that Claudia said “opportunities lost,”
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and let me pick up on that phrase right here.
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Because one of the things I saw in my own research,
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because I also did a huge survey of the American population
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where we surveyed
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a representative sample of 4,489 Americans
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about regret and how it worked.
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But one of the things you see widespread
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is that there are, in the architecture of regret,
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there are often two kinds of regrets.
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One are regrets of action and one are regrets of inaction.
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Regrets about what we did.
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Regrets about what we didn't do.
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And overwhelmingly, inaction regrets predominate.
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And that's what an opportunity lost is.
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With action regrets,
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we can try to undo them.
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We can make amends.
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We can look for the silver lining, and we can reduce the sting.
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For inaction regrets, it is harder.
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And so the key here on the opportunities lost
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is to think about,
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you know, really like, what are you going to do?
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You sort of reduce the level of abstraction and say,
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"What are you going to do next time?"
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Not an abstraction of like, "Oh, I'm going to be more bold."
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It's like, what are you going to do next time?
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This is what we were talking about with Lily.
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What are you going to do next time?
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All regrets begin at the juncture.
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You can go this way or you can go that way.
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And so for Claudia, I would say, the next time you're at this juncture,
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take the opportunity, play it safe.
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Stop,
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think about your regret,
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and make the decision there.
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Or another thing that you could do.
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I'll give you another, sort of, decision-making heuristic.
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Two of them, in fact.
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When you're at that juncture, Claudia, next time,
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go forward five years.
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This is called self-distancing.
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Be Claudia five years from now, look back on Claudia today.
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What decision do you want?
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What decision does Claudia of 2027 want Claudia of 2022 to make?
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It's very clear.
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Or the best decision-making heuristic there is:
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You're at a juncture, what would you tell your best friend to do?
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When you ask people that when they're trying to make a decision,
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say, “What would you tell your best friend to do?”
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Everybody always knows.
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So, I think that's it.
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Remember, the main thing, though, is don't let it bog you down.
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Use it as a tool for thinking -- not as a tool for wallowing,
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not as a tool for ignoring -- but as a tool for thinking.
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WPR: A question from Kim, she's asking --
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She says you're talking as if any bad decision or mistake is also a regret,
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and I'm not sure that that's always the case.
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Can you share your definition of regret?
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Especially after doing this project.
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What is your definition?
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DHP: There's a difference between a regret and a mistake, alright?
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So you can make a mistake and not regret it
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because you say, you immediately learn something from it
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or it was a worthy mistake.
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A regret is something where you look backward at something
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that where you had control, where you had some agency ...
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Where you had some agency, you did something that, well,
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you did something wrong, and it sticks with you.
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It doesn't go away.
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And it sticks with you for a very long time.
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So there's a big difference, for instance, between ...
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I can make a mistake and actually not regret it
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because it's not significant enough to me to linger, right?
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So that's the difference between a regret and a mistake.
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It's basically the duration,
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essentially, the half-life of the negative emotion.
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There's a huge difference between regret and disappointment.
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Huge difference between regret and disappointment.
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Because with disappointment, you don't have any kind of control.
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The great example of that is from Janet Landman,
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a former professor at the University of Michigan who, to me, is like,
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she tells the story of like, OK, so a kid loses her third tooth.
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A seven-year-old loses her third tooth.
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She loses her tooth, she goes to sleep,
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before she goes to sleep, she puts the tooth under the pillow.
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When she wakes up,
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the tooth is still there.
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The kid is disappointed,
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but the parents regret not leaving that --
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So you have to have some agency and it has to have a ...
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It has to have enough significance that it stays with you.
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And once again, going back to these four core regrets,
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it ends up being the same kinds of ...
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it ends up being the same kinds of things.
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If you said, "Oh, I shouldn't have bought that kind of car,"
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it might sting for a little bit, but the half-life is very, very short.
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But other kinds of things stick with us and stick with us,
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and those are the things often of significance.
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WPR: Thank you so much, Dan, for chatting with us,
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and I love ending there, "If not now when?"
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And we'll see you soon.
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Thank you, Dan.
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DHP: Thanks a lot, what a pleasure.
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[Get access to thought-provoking events you won't want to miss.]
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[Become a TED Member at ted.com/membership]
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