Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Nirit Cohen covers the Future of Work, bridging trends with solutions. What if your biggest career regret isn’t quitting—but ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (Jim Cooke / Los Angeles Times; photo via Getty Images) We all have regrets. And they come in myriad shapes and sizes. Some people ...
Regret silently creeps into our daily thoughts, influencing decisions and making us question our choices. While feeling remorse for past mistakes is natural, holding onto regret creates a deeper, more ...
If you ask most people if they have regrets, they answer with a resounding yes. In conducting his World Regret Survey, in which he collected regrets from more than 16,000 people in 105 countries, Pink ...
A friend of mine—we will call him “Jay”—was working for IBM in New York City in the early ’90s. He was a computer programmer and made a good salary. Occasionally, competitors and startups approached ...
Regret can be defined as the recognition of having made a mistake in the past and a sense that a different action would have been a better choice. Regret is a feeling unto itself, and tends to feel ...
Well-meaning people sometimes offer the following advice: “Don’t do something you will regret!” If you smoke cigarettes, you might get lung cancer, and you will regret that—so don’t smoke. If you have ...
Writing for The Conversation, J. Kim Penberthy, a neurobehavioral scientist in University of Virginia’s School of Medicine, explains that regret can negatively affect your physical health and shares ...
A new study, co-authored by Temple University’s Crystal Reeck, sheds light on how we can work through regret. The study employs a gambling framework — you win some, you lose some — to help people ...