The 5 Regrets of the Dying

We agreed there is always a gift in any challenge. ‘People play the victim forever,’ she continued. ‘But who are they kidding? They are only robbing themselves. Life doesn’t owe you anything. Neither does anyone else. Only you owe yourself. So the best way to make

Ware, Bronnie. Top Five Regrets of the Dying: A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing (p. 101). Hay House. Kindle Edition.

‘For the first time in more than twenty years, I knew passion again. And do you know why?’ she asked, as I waited. ‘I had purpose, true purpose. That was what the emptiness had been with my work. It didn’t have enough purpose for me.’

Feeling of being unhappy because my purpose had been to GoVertical/Blurb. Like my purpose was being sole from me without acknowledgement.

Ware, Bronnie. Top Five Regrets of the Dying: A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing (p. 103). Hay House. Kindle Edition.

Money is just another kind of energy, one that wants to bring good and happiness. But we use it wrongly, giving it power, chasing it, fearing it, unbalancing our lives in its pursuit, as we obsess over it,’ she stated. ‘It is as available as the air we breathe. We don’t waste our time worrying if there will be enough air. We shouldn’t waste our time worrying if there will be enough money. Those very thoughts are what block the natural flow of this loving, creative energy to us.’

Ware, Bronnie. Top Five Regrets of the Dying: A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing (p. 107). Hay House. Kindle Edition.

He didn’t know anything about meditation, other than that people overseas in orange robes sat with their eyes closed. He asked me what it was. I explained it as simply as possible, telling Charlie that by learning to focus the mind, we become better able to observe our own thinking. From this it becomes clear just how much of life is shaped by a mind running wild on its own, creating unnecessary suffering and fears. As these unhealthy thinking patterns grow and intensify, we become identified with this personality being who we are and shaping our lives around that. When actually, we are not this but so much more.

Ware, Bronnie. Top Five Regrets of the Dying: A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing (p. 120). Hay House. Kindle Edition.