Bad_Lil'Pixie said:I would get past the selfishness and my "me" phases.
good wordsRollo Tomassi said:It is better to regret something you have done, than regret something you haven't done.
It's amazing how when we become adults we have to learn to ditch all our preconceived notions of how to live our lives during adolescence. Reprogramming social conditioning we picked up along the way from the media and parents. It's that big maturity leap from boy to man. Good advice ntssv. This thread is really hitting home for me since I just started my mid-20s.ntssv said:1. Break any and all bad habits bye the age of thirty. I wise one told me this in my late twenties (now 32) and sure wish I would have listened. Habits are much harder to break the longer you've done them.
2. Learn patience! If you get in a hurry, things will get F**ked up.
3. Don't give a sh!t about anyone else but yourself. Do what you gotta do, not what others want you to do.
Some people on Death Row might argue with you on that one, Rollo T. And some of them who are in fact innocent might wholeheartedly agree.It is better to regret something you have done, than regret something you haven't done.
A retard might argue with you that he should not be born. And you could argue with him why you like a retarded as a son.Bonhomme said:Some people on Death Row might argue with you on that one, Rollo T. And some of them who are in fact innocent might wholeheartedly agree.
That speaks to me on many levels. Thanks.Bourne said:Some things I wish I did...
- Not take everything so seriously
- Date more, have sex more and enjoy life alot more
- Move on from sh1t that makes you unhappy
- School and education
- Go out and make friends in all places and appraoch and date girls
- Take more risks and chances, this is your only chance in life.
I just started to follow this philosophy and I hope you come up with something similar too. It is never too late.
Yes yes YES, that is so dead on. I forgot to mention it in my reply, but I too had to learn to stop basing every decision I made on who it made happy - my parents, my friends, my g/f, my boss. Too often I put my true desires on the back burner in order to "make everyone happy", which I finally learned is impossible.Rollo Tomassi said:My only regret is not having been more self-centered and more self-concerned then. As superficial as that sounds, if I had been watching out for my own well-being rather than trying to please others, I would never have had to endure the other regrets I experienced. I mean this on every level - personal, educational, financial, family and women-wise.
It is better to regret something you have done, than regret something you haven't done.