There are letters that inform, letters that comfort, and then there are letters that quietly rearrange the way we look at our own lives. One such piece of writing begins with a simple, haunting line: “If I had my life to live over, I’d dare to make more mistakes next time.” In those few words, an 85-year-old woman distils a lifetime of regret, wisdom and tenderness into a message that feels as relevant today as it must have felt decades ago. The letter, often attributed to Nadine Stair, was shared in an Instagram post by fact.philes is not loud or dramatic. It does not plead for sympathy. Instead, it reads like an honest conversation between an older self and the younger person she once was. And that honesty is what makes it so powerful. It captures the feeling many people only admit to themselves late in life: that in trying to live carefully, they may have forgotten to live fully. Scroll down to know more…
A life measured too carefully
The opening lines are almost startling in their clarity. “I would relax. I would limber up. I would be sillier than I have been this trip.” She continues, “I would take fewer things seriously. I would take more chances.” These are not the words of someone dismissing responsibility. They are the words of someone who has carried responsibility for so long that she can finally see its cost.So many people spend their lives trying not to make mistakes that they end up living in a state of caution. They protect themselves from embarrassment, from risk, from disappointment. But the letter reminds us that a life built entirely on caution can become smaller than the one we were meant to live. Her regret is not that she failed to be careful. It is that she may have been too careful for too long. Her line, “I would climb more mountains and swim more rivers,” feels like a metaphor and a memory at once. It speaks to more than physical adventure. It speaks to courage, curiosity and the willingness to step into the unknown. In many ways, that is what youth naturally offers, a sense that life is wide open. But adulthood, with all its duties, can narrow that sense until even joy feels scheduled.
The cost of imaginary troubles
Perhaps the most moving part of the letter is her quiet recognition of how much emotional energy is wasted on fear. “I would eat more ice cream and less beans,” she writes with a touch of humour, “I would perhaps have more actual troubles, but I’d have fewer imaginary ones.”That line lands with surprising force because it names a truth so many people live with but rarely say out loud. Imaginary troubles can be heavier than real ones. They are the fears we rehearse, the worries we multiply, the anxieties we carry long before anything has actually happened. Over time, those fears can steal the softness from life. They can make a person live defensively, always preparing for loss instead of noticing what is already present.Her words suggest that some of the best parts of life are not found in overthinking but in participating. In saying yes more often. In choosing sweetness over discipline when the moment calls for it. In being alive to the day instead of constantly bracing for the next one.
The beauty of ordinary joy
Later in the letter, the tone turns almost luminous. “I would start barefoot earlier in the spring and stay that way later in the fall. I would go to more dances. I would ride more merry-go-rounds. I would pick more daisies.”These are not the goals people usually list when they talk about success. They are small, almost childlike acts of joy. But that is exactly why they matter. The older woman is not looking back on the grand achievements of life. She is looking back on its texture, the physical, playful, fleeting moments that give a life its warmth.Bare feet in spring. Dances. Merry-go-rounds. Daisies. The list reads like a reminder that delight is not frivolous. It is part of what makes a life feel lived rather than merely managed. Her wisdom is not about abandoning responsibility. It is about refusing to let responsibility erase wonder.
What she leaves behind for the rest of us
What makes this letter unforgettable is that it speaks across age. It is not only a message from an 85-year-old woman to her younger self. It is a message from any older self to anyone still in the middle of living. It says: do not wait for permission to be happy. Do not postpone joy until life becomes less busy, less uncertain or less demanding. That perfect time may never arrive.The letter’s emotional power lies in its honesty. It does not pretend that life is easy or that regret can be avoided. Instead, it offers a gentler lesson: live with more courage, more softness and more play. Take the trip. Wear the dress. Say yes to the dance. Let some things be imperfect. Let some days be light.In the end, her words are not really about age. They are about awareness. They ask a question that every reader must answer for themselves: are we living in a way that will one day feel generous to the person we become? The lesson here is simple and deeply personal: do not let fear make your life too small. Make room for mistakes, laughter, risk and delight. The years pass quickly, but the moments you fully live tend to stay with you longest.


