THE 5 MOST IMPORTANT THINGS IN LIFE

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It’s common to think about what the most important things in life are. We all seek to align ourselves with things that truly matter and that will ultimately add to our happiness and fulfillment.

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How we set ourselves up to create a life well-lived versus a life half-lived is often more about the regrets we have over the things we failed to do rather than the things we actually did.

We regret more not becoming our ideal selves or the person we truly wanted to be. We regret living an unfulfilled life. We regret living in fear and not having the courage to focus on the things and people that truly matter most.

What is important in life, really? With that question in mind, we’ll take a look at the things most people regret not pursuing and how to live a life grounded in what really matters


Table of Contents

What is Really Important in Life?The 8 Most Important Things in Life

What is Really Important in Life?

Anything in life that helps you achieve your goals and fulfill your responsibilities is what is really important in life. In most cases, answers you get to ‘what is really important in life?’ are often based on the individual but that is not the case. The important things in life relate to you and to those for who you are responsible.

One way of looking at important things in life is finding out what you cannot live without. Sadly, this does not include luxuries, it includes the most basic of things such as health, shelter, time, companions, etc.

“It’s important to know what really matters in life. Your sanity; your health; your family; and the ability to start anew.” – Les Brown

It is important to understand that these things are uncompromisable. Whatever you do in life, you protect what’s important at all costs. This is because life’s uncertainty can be harsh at times, and one must always have someone or something to rely on. Prioritizing what’s important in life helps you stay true to yourself.

Deciding What Is Important in Life

“Know what matters most to you and be unwilling to compromise those priorities at almost any price.”- Frank Sonnenberg

When deciding what’s important in life, there can be a lot of confusing things to choose from. Here are some simple ways in which you can determine what’s most important:

Pick the People That Matter Most

The right people help improve the quality of your life. You need to sort out who are your good friends and which family members have been there for you throughout the years. This directly impacts your mental health as they will be your support and encouragement.

Assessing the Skills, Talents, and Hobbies You Have

Another very important thing to pick what is important is to know how skilled you are in it and if you enjoy doing it. You may have multiple hobbies that you wish to pursue, but maybe you only have the option to be spending time with one of them. Knowing your skills, talents, and hobbies helps you get your daily schedule straight.

Take the Opinion of a Loved One

Sometimes the best opinions to make decisions of a fulfilling life come from your loved ones. This is because they know a lot about you and are actively invested in your well-being. They want you to enjoy life, so whenever you feel like you can’t sort your own priorities try asking for some advice.


Find Things You Enjoy Doing

To experience feelings like happiness and fulfillment, you need to enjoy what you do in life. To enjoy life, you need to have long-term interests in things that bring you joy. Be it exercising for a healthy body, painting, going on walks, or even personal maintenance. Afford a handful of carefully chosen luxuries that are the icing of your life.

Think About What You’ve Lost

Lastly, to find out what’s important you have to think about what you’ve lost and how you survived it. You must be able to differentiate things you were dependent on from those that you require on a daily basis. If you find yourself in a situation where you’re about to lose something that you survived in the past, then exercise control over your emotions and know you’ll survive without it.

What We Regret Most?

People regret their inactions more than their actions in the long term. Not falling in love, not hanging out with good friends, and not working toward a healthy body are just a couple of common themes.

Maybe you never started writing that book despite your love for writing. Perhaps you haven’t set up your own dream business because you were afraid of what people would think if you actually tried.

The thing is, taking action is the first step to ensure you avoid regrets. Confidence comes with taking action. Making a commitment to follow through and then having the courage to do it builds the momentum.

“I knew that if I failed I wouldn’t regret that, but I knew the one thing I might regret is not trying.” -Jeff Bezos

Research has found that people are haunted more by regrets about failing to fulfill their hopes, goals, and aspirations than by regrets about failing to fulfill their duties, obligations, and responsibilities. <1>


Published in Emotion, the researchers surveyed hundreds of participants, making a distinction between the “ideal self” (not achieving goals they had set for themselves, their dreams, and ambitions) and “the ought self” (not meeting the norms and rules they had for themselves or fulfilling their obligations to others). They asked participants to list, name, and categorize their regrets. <2>

Across the different studies, the participants said they experienced regrets concerning their ideal self more often (72% vs. 28%). Furthermore, when asked to name their single biggest regret in life, participants were more likely to mention a regret about not fulfilling their ideal self (76% vs. 24%).

“When we evaluate our lives, we think about whether we’re heading toward our ideal selves, becoming the person we’d like to be. Those are the regrets that are going to stick with you, because they are what you look at through the windshield of life. The ‘ought’ regrets are potholes on the road. Those were problems, but now they’re behind you.” – Tom Gilovich

If we don’t fearlessly pursue these things, we start blaming ourselves for not taking action and the regret compounds.

The Woulda, Shoulda, Coulda

If you are clear on our purpose and priorities in life, you can create the personal power necessary to push through, and take action on the things that matter most.

When you make a decision to focus on the most important things in life, you’ll move from “woulda, coulda, shoulda” to “I lived a life worth living” and “I made a difference.”

To get through the hardest journey, we need take only one step at a time, but we must keep on stepping. – Chinese Proverb

Bonnie Ware’s 2012 book The Top Five Regrets of the Dying tells us much about living a life to minimize regrets.<3> Ware spent many years in palliative care, looking after patients who had gone home to die. When she questioned these patients about any regrets they had or anything they would do differently, a number of common themes came up.

The five most common themes were, in descending order:

I wish I’d had the courage to life a life true to myself, not the life others expected of me.I wish I hadn’t worked so hard.I wish I had the courage to express my feelings.I wish I’d stayed in touch with friends.I wish that I’d let myself be happier.

The most common regret, by far, was “I wish I’d had the courage to live a life true to myself not the life others expected of me.” According to Ware:

“Most people had not honored even half of their dreams and had to die knowing that it was due to choices that they made, or not made.”

These themes are similar to the ones that came through when Guardian journalist Emma Freud asked the question on Twitter “What is your biggest regret?”<4>

Being held back by fear, self-blame and bad choices around love, learning, and loss were the most frequent responses.

The most frequent regrets focused around:

Not doing the right thing/being there when someone diedNot speaking upNot pursuing higher levels of educationFear of following their dreamsUnrequited or non-pursuit of loveSelf-blame around anxietyTaking too long to make a change

The 8 Most Important Things in Life

Through all of my research, speaking to clients, friends, family and my own self-analysis of regrets in my life, there are 8 core things in your life that you’ll probably regret not pursuing if you don’t do something about them today.

A lot of the other regrets you may have are a by-product of not getting the core things right.

1. Becoming the Best Version of Yourself

We often let doubt and fear hold us back from living a life of purpose and passion. This stops us from constantly growing and becoming a better version of ourselves. We forget to cultivate good health and relationships with family members or practice self-care for better mental health.

We have a number of things we want to do in our lives, yet many of these things never see the light of day.We worry that we don’t have the right information to make the right decision. We’re scared of the changes that could happen in our lives and so take the safe route instead.

This leads to regret, self-blame, and self-doubt. However, it is within us to create that amazing life we want.It means not worrying about what others think or how we will be judged.

Be fully present, surround yourself with the right people that cheer you on, have more fun, and take more risks. No matter how many times you fall you get back up and keep moving forward.

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.” –Mark Twain

2. Chasing Your Dreams

If you don’t have clarity on your bigger purpose, dreams, and goals, it’s very easy to get sucked into an unfulfilling routine made up of long hours at work, bland relationships, and unhealthy habits.

There is no growth, change, or transformation in this case. Rather than pursuing your dreams and growing every day, you become stuck.

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When you have a clear direction for your life and your priorities are top of mind, you are clearer on the steps you can take to move forward.