I'm 66 and my son asked me what I'd do differently if I could live my life again and I said "nothing" and it's the most dishonest thing I've said in years - because the real answer involves a girl from 1984 and a job I should have taken and a conversation with my father I should have had before the stroke made it impossible, but you don't hand that list to your child because it rewrites the math that led to him - Silicon Canals
Briefly

I'm 66 and my son asked me what I'd do differently if I could live my life again and I said "nothing" and it's the most dishonest thing I've said in years - because the real answer involves a girl from 1984 and a job I should have taken and a conversation with my father I should have had before the stroke made it impossible, but you don't hand that list to your child because it rewrites the math that led to him - Silicon Canals
"When you tell your kid you wouldn't change anything, what you're really saying is that life is some kind of perfect equation where everything adds up neat and clean. But that's not how it works. Life is messy. It's full of wrong turns and missed chances and decisions you make at 22 that you're still thinking about at 66."
"There's a list. A long one. And at the top of it is a girl from before I met Donna who asked me to move to California with her, and a job offer in Colorado that would have tripled my income, and a conversation with my father that I kept putting off until a stroke stole his words forever."
A father reflects on a conversation with his son about life choices. He initially claims he wouldn't change anything, but internally acknowledges a long list of regrets. These include a past relationship and missed opportunities that haunt him. He recognizes that life is not a perfect equation, but rather a complex journey filled with mistakes and decisions that linger over time. The father grapples with the weight of unspoken truths and the nature of honesty in parenting.
Read at Silicon Canals
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