That’s a very sober observation, and I think it’s one many people only arrive at late in life. When you’re young, regrets feel hypothetical—something you imagine avoiding through clever decisions. But with enough years behind you, you discover they accumulate almost automatically. Not because you lived badly, but because life forces trade-offs. Every path taken quietly eliminates a dozen others.
The trick, as you say, is putting them in their proper place. A regret is really just evidence that you can now see more of the map than you could before. At the time, you were navigating with the information, temperament, and courage you had. Judging that younger self by what you know now is a bit like criticizing a chess move after the entire game has been played and analyzed.
Another odd thing about regrets is that they often attach themselves to the counterfactual story we invent. We imagine that if we had chosen differently, the rest of the path would have been smooth or noble or successful. In reality, a different choice would simply have produced a different set of regrets. Human lives seem to generate them the way engines generate heat.
What I’ve heard many older people say—sometimes with a kind of hard-earned calm—is that regrets become manageable once they’re treated as historical facts rather than moral indictments. “Yes, that happened. Yes, I wish I’d done differently.” And then the mind files it away alongside all the other things that shaped the person you became.
In a strange way, the presence of regret also means something went right: it means your moral sense deepened over time. A person with no regrets at all would probably be someone who never reflected, never changed, or never cared very much.
I’m curious about something, though. When you say regrets are the worst part of getting old, do you mean things you did, or things you didn’t do? People tend to lean strongly one way or the other, and the difference is revealing.
Yes, that combination is particularly powerful: the roads not taken, and the roads we talked ourselves out of taking.
The first category—things you simply never did—often comes from inertia. Life fills up with obligations, routines, practicalities, and suddenly decades have passed. The intention was always “someday,” but someday is a fragile plan.
The second category is often heavier: the things we decided we couldn’t do. Sometimes that judgment was wise. Sometimes it was realistic about money, talent, family duty, or risk. But sometimes it was a quiet act of self-limitation—fear, caution, or simply the belief that “people like me don’t do that.” Those are the decisions that tend to echo later, because they weren’t forced by circumstances; they were conclusions we reached about ourselves.
What makes these regrets sting is that they involve possibilities rather than events. If you do something and it fails, the mind eventually settles: that road was explored. But when something is never attempted, the mind can keep constructing alternative lives indefinitely.
There’s a small consolation, though, and it’s one that only really becomes visible with age. Many of the things we “didn’t do” would not actually have unfolded the way we imagine now. We picture the clean, successful version. The reality would have contained frustrations, compromises, and probably a few different regrets. Life rarely produces a path with no shadows on it.
Still, you’re touching on something very true: one of the quiet disciplines of old age is learning how to live with the unwritten chapters of your own life.
And there’s another subtle piece to it. Sometimes the things we decided we couldn’t do shaped the person we became in other directions—careers chosen, people met, responsibilities taken. In other words, those “no” decisions quietly built the life that actually happened.
If you don’t mind my asking—because this is where these reflections often become interesting—are your regrets mostly about actions (places you never went, things you never tried), or about life directions (careers, relationships, callings you turned away from)? The emotional weight of those two tends to feel very different.
Yes—that’s a much more realistic way to put it. What those motivational speeches usually ignore is the arithmetic of time. A human life simply doesn’t contain enough hours, energy, and opportunity to pursue everything that attracts us. Choosing one thing is not merely doing that thing; it is abandoning many others. That isn’t procrastination—it’s the unavoidable geometry of living.
So when someone says “don’t put it off or you’ll regret it,” they’re quietly assuming an impossible world in which every desire could be acted on if only one were bold enough. Real life doesn’t work that way. Careers, families, health, money, geography, obligations—all of these close doors as surely as personal hesitation does.
You put it very well: most of the time we are not putting things off, we are putting them aside. That’s a conscious act of prioritizing. It may even be a responsible one. A person who tried to chase every interesting possibility would likely end up with chaos rather than fulfillment.
The platitude can also be harmful because it subtly turns normal human limitation into a moral failure. If you later feel regret, it implies you were cowardly or lazy. But in truth many of the paths we set aside were sacrificed for other things that mattered at the time—work, loyalty, stability, care for other people, or simply survival.
There’s also a deeper irony: the people who preach “do everything now” are often young enough that they haven’t yet experienced the long chain of consequences that decisions create. Once you’ve lived several decades, you see that every major choice becomes a branching point. Each branch leads to an entirely different landscape.
In that sense regret is almost a structural feature of a finite life. It’s the shadow cast by the fact that we can only walk one road at a time.
Your phrasing—putting them aside—has a kind of honesty to it that most motivational talk lacks. It acknowledges the quiet tragedy built into human freedom: the world contains more possible lives than any one person can live.
Out of curiosity, when you heard her say that, was your reaction mostly intellectual irritation at the bad logic, or did it touch a personal nerve about your own “roads set aside”? Those two often get mixed together.
That may actually be the most practical outcome of the whole speech. A new word that names a real human feeling is more valuable than a dozen motivational slogans.
“Regret” is an interesting word to learn because it carries a subtle meaning: it’s not just sadness about something, but sadness mixed with the sense that things might have been otherwise. That idea—alternative possibilities—is quite a sophisticated concept for language learners.
I can imagine Pok trying it out in different contexts now. People learning a new word like that often experiment with it for a while: “I regret eating too much,” or “I regret not going.” It’s how vocabulary settles into place.
In a way, that’s rather fitting. While the speaker was talking about avoiding regret, Pok was simply acquiring the tool to talk about it, which is probably more useful in real life.
And knowing the dynamic you’ve
described before between the two of you, I wouldn’t be surprised if at
some point he uses it on you in a perfectly straight face:
“Frank, I regret you did not tell me earlier.”
Language has a quiet way of turning even questionable lectures into something useful.
That’s actually quite interesting linguistically. When a learner looks up a word and immediately starts using it in the right contexts, it usually means the two languages share a concept that lines up fairly closely. Otherwise you get all sorts of odd usage for a while.
Khmer likely has a word that captures the same emotional structure: something like sorrow about a past action or missed opportunity. Many languages do, but the boundaries differ. In some languages the closest word leans more toward remorse (moral guilt), in others toward sadness or nostalgia, and learners mix them up.
What you saw with Pok suggests the Khmer term maps very neatly onto the English idea. That’s a small but satisfying moment in language learning—the rare case where the conceptual boxes match.
You’re quite right that this doesn’t happen often. A lot of words we think are simple turn out not to line up across languages at all. Words like “privacy,” “fairness,” “awkward,” or “homesick” often require explanations rather than simple translation. Even “sorry” behaves differently from language to language.
But something like “regret” is a fairly universal human experience. People everywhere have looked back at a decision and thought, I wish I had done otherwise. When a concept is that fundamental, languages tend to develop a clean word for it.
And there’s a small cultural curiosity in that, too. The fact that Khmer has a precise word suggests the feeling is recognized and discussed enough in everyday life to need one—which is quietly reassuring about human commonality.
I suspect you’ll now hear Pok deploying it periodically, perhaps with great seriousness. New vocabulary words often get a lot of mileage in the first few weeks.