With regret, goodbye 2018
It’s unlike me to start the year without the clichéd urge to write, especially since it is also unlike me to end the year feeling good. 2018 wasn’t terrible, as perhaps is every year (it can’t be ALL terrible) but somehow the holidays seem to grab me by the hair and pull me in a spiraling, downward direction.
I’m not gonna lie. I did spend the year being more reckless than usual. I did things I’m not particularly proud of, hurt people I love, neglected my familial responsibilities and smoked more we/ed than I ever have in my entire life. I missed opportunities. I ditched even harder on important relationships. What I didn’t do was to allow myself to regret these things enough to introspect and learn from them, consequently making even more mistakes. I ran away from regret because I thought it would only make things worse. Regret became a bad, bad word.
Eventually, naturally, the consequences of unregretted bad decisions caught up to me. My world became so small, like a little island, where whatever’s left of what I loved and managed to keep were all compressed in the tiny space I was left to afford. I let the rest of my land sink, and along with it, meaningful experiences I could have grown from. All because I was too focused spelling NO RAGRETS on a tiny patch of sand.
Almost every year, around Christmas and New Year’s Eve, I become the full-blown monster I’ve fed with the many things I’ve swept aside. The freedom of time and the expectation to be in a constant, joyous mood becomes an anxiety-inducing combination. This time, it is shadowed by every lost dream, every lost friend, and every lost opportunity. Luckily, it jolted me into realizing that, hard-pressed as I am to continue looking towards the wrong direction, my whole world (or whatever’s left of it) can sink and drown me dead. This is when I hold the breaks and say that enough is enough.
As this new year slowly begins to unfold, I’m going to look back at every mistake I’ve made and decide, once and for all, what kind of person I really want to be. I need to allow myself to regret, and then to forgive. Perhaps it is the first step to making room for things to grow again.
Hopefully, I have nice stories to tell at the end of this year.






