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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask you your biggest regrets in life

428 replies

ThefloorisLav · 03/03/2024 14:06

Just that really, do you have any major regrets from decisions you have made in the past?

Any words of Wisdom?

OP posts:
Champers66 · 05/03/2024 13:19

My biggest regret is my career choice. Hairdressing, wouldn’t recommend a single soul to do it- and if a youngster mentioned it to me id happily tell them not to bother. Shit money, long hours, people think you owe them your life. Absolutely done with it. Waste of 18 years

Diddlyumptious · 05/03/2024 13:32

Termination biggest regret and second having an affair with DH friend 💔

Stephjea · 05/03/2024 14:24

SoOutingWhoCares · 03/03/2024 14:59

I would have prioritised dating for marriage/children in my 20s over education and career.

I'm a lecturer with an alphabet of letters after my name but have found myself left on the shelf and childless at 40. I definitely personally wanted a family more than career success and am annoyed that I was discouraged from pursuing that by family/teachers/work while I still had time. I was ready for marriage and kids at 24/5 but was given the very clear message that I would have been seen as a failure had I done anything other than pursue educational and professional success prior to 30 (more like 35!).

@SoOutingWhoCares if you are 40 it may not be too late, if it's still something you would like to do. My mum had my brother at 42 and I know a fair few women who became mothers in their 40s

SoOutingWhoCares · 05/03/2024 14:27

Thanks, the issue is I can't "go it alone" (asian, religious background would lead to shunning) and I've struggled to meet a decent man to marry.

Titsywoo · 05/03/2024 14:55

Selling most of our bitcoin before it hit its peak. We could have been mortgage free by now. Urgh. Try not to think about it!

NoddyfromToytown · 05/03/2024 14:59

Racking up huge amounts of debt over the years on things just because I wanted them... now paying £1000 a month back on repayments at high interest and no hope of being debt-free until at least my mid-40s. (Also finding it really hard to hide from friends/family members as my lifestyle has never been frugal so they expect me to be able to spend much more than I can)

angela1952 · 05/03/2024 16:19

SoOutingWhoCares · 03/03/2024 14:59

I would have prioritised dating for marriage/children in my 20s over education and career.

I'm a lecturer with an alphabet of letters after my name but have found myself left on the shelf and childless at 40. I definitely personally wanted a family more than career success and am annoyed that I was discouraged from pursuing that by family/teachers/work while I still had time. I was ready for marriage and kids at 24/5 but was given the very clear message that I would have been seen as a failure had I done anything other than pursue educational and professional success prior to 30 (more like 35!).

There are so many women in their 30's now who have chosen not to have children, some because they have pursued your path, others who say that they can't afford to have a family.

So sad for you, but have you considered adoption? My DD is single, 39 this year, and adopted two siblings a couple of years ago. It's very hard work for her but she's managing very well.
There may be many other women who feel the opposite to you, who settled down early, had children and have never been able to get a real career going.

angela1952 · 05/03/2024 16:21

Sorry @SoOutingWhoCares I've just found your post above. Your background does make it tough for you. I often hope that my daughter will meet somebody but having two children now will make it harder.

YourWinter · 05/03/2024 17:07

Thinking pensions weren’t something to worry about until I was old.

iamnotgroot0 · 05/03/2024 22:29

DustyLee123 · 04/03/2024 07:06

Try and find a way. I wish my DH would.

I don’t even know where to start. Even when we’ve talked in the last few months we never move forwards.

SylvanianAddict · 05/03/2024 22:29

I find it depressing thinking about regrets. I also find that as I grow older, my regrets change. Whereas at 25, I regretted not doing a degree in English and Creative Writing, at 35 I regretted not settling with that nice guy who adored me because I was desperate for a baby. And at 38, I am a single mother by choice and don't regret that anymore because I have my baby...

What I actually regret now that I am fully mature and sensible is not studying for a vocational degree at university - something like sonography, optometry, pharmacy or physiotherapy - basically an NHS career. I would have been on £22,000 upon graduation, would have saved for a deposit by living at home and been able to buy a 1 bedroom flat in a shitty part of London in 2008 - which would have cost something like £100,000 and would have been worth £325,000 now. Or I could have worked in a hospital in Leeds or Sheffield and bought a house with a garden there. It would have been paid off now.

I regret that I was too young and stupid when houses prices were cheap, too depressed and underemployed when house prices were still okay. I hate the feeling of having missed out, which is why I have to move out of London someday.

Greenly3 · 06/03/2024 05:30

This is a wonderful if heartbreaking thread to read. This is why I like mums net so much and I am 67! To see all of us have regrets ad beat ourselves up fo a lot of choices that were beyond our control. Wish everyone who. Has posted that they find peace gi
oing forward. And thanks for the honesty, I’ve been in tears reading some of them…..

speakout · 06/03/2024 06:52

I agree that it is heartbreaking.

But I question how useful it is to have regret.
It is a feeling wrapped up with a sense of loss, self blame, sadness and can become a tool to beat ourselves up.

I am on a deep healing journey right now, and although regret has never been something I do, we need to be far more compassionate towards ourselves.

We can learn from all of our choices, but regret can gnaw at our self esteem, feed ruminative thoughts, fuel anxiety.

Beating up on our past selves is not helpful.

PurpleFlower1983 · 06/03/2024 06:58

Being so overweight. I was significantly overweight from the the age of 6 which I know now wasn’t my fault but not doing something about it later definitely was. By the time I was 17 I was around 17 stone, I went down to 10.5st while at uni and was within normal weight range for the first time in my life but what has followed has been an ongoing battle, yo-yo diets and such an unhealthy relationship with food. It’s the biggest regret of my life and has affected my confidence/self-esteem etc. although most people wouldn’t realise that as I am outwardly quite a together person.

Another is a 9 year relationship with a cheating, abusive knob head!

Crackez · 06/03/2024 20:49

One regret that actually worked out in the end was thinking that I didn’t need to worry about breast cancer before my 50s. Someone I knew got it and so I started to self examine. The lump I found wasn’t supposed to be cancer . Thankfully Im a worrier so I went back for a six month check up. 20 years ago now, I was mid thirties. I don’t regret being a worrier. It saved my life.

cerisepanther73 · 07/03/2024 11:09

@Yoe

Have you thought of temporary fostering or more long term adoption

even respite break care formal or informal basis
when i was growing up with my adoptive family,
we used to look after a family friends's daughter,
who had speacial needs,
we would look after her for a day on regular basis
Just so her family could spend quality time with there able boded son...

Girlwithred · 07/03/2024 14:23

I agree with regrets changing with age. When I was a bit younger with young kids I wished I could travel more now I’m older I’m not as interested in travel!

timesaretight · 09/03/2024 01:16

Serial cheating.

BirthdayRainbow · 09/03/2024 21:33

2anddone · 04/03/2024 07:30

Getting on the plane when I went to America to be an Aupair is my biggest regret.
I left behind my boyfriend who was my first love and my parents intervened and split us up.
We saw each other about 5 years later and the spark was definitely still there but by that point I was married and had children with my emotionally and financially abusive ex husband.
I see him now occasionally and my heart still skips a beat...I will always wonder what if!!

Ask him out?

KattyBoomBoom95 · 09/03/2024 22:12

Not continuing my ADHD meds after my teens (now in a massive queue) and wasting years in office jobs thinking I'd eventually come to accept/enjoy it.

JoleneTookHerMan · 09/03/2024 22:20

Sometimes, I wish I hadn't travelled down the fallopian tube.

ForeverDelayedEpiphany · 09/03/2024 22:34

JoleneTookHerMan · 09/03/2024 22:20

Sometimes, I wish I hadn't travelled down the fallopian tube.

I'm so sorry 😞 I understand how you feel, and I sometimes feel the same way 😪💔

BirthdayRainbow · 10/03/2024 18:33

Roxy69 · 04/03/2024 23:33

Not losing weight earlier when it would have been much easier. I spent virtually the whole of my life hating myself and how I looked. Losing the love of my life because of it and not feeling good enough.

He doesn't warrant being the love of your life if he dumped you for being bigger than whatever size.

Naptrappedmummy · 10/03/2024 18:34

BirthdayRainbow · 10/03/2024 18:33

He doesn't warrant being the love of your life if he dumped you for being bigger than whatever size.

Sounds more like self sabotage because she was insecure to me?

Roxy69 · 10/03/2024 22:41

Naptrappedmummy · 10/03/2024 18:34

Sounds more like self sabotage because she was insecure to me?

I dumped him, it was indeed self sabotage. Don't underestimate the power of love, I thought he deserved better. Hope he got it.