{"id":174132,"date":"2022-01-13T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2022-01-13T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ceotudent.com\/?p=174132"},"modified":"2022-01-16T19:29:10","modified_gmt":"2022-01-16T16:29:10","slug":"from-an-elderly-nurse-5-things-people-on-their-deathbed-most-regret","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ceotudent.com\/en\/from-an-elderly-nurse-5-things-people-on-their-deathbed-most-regret","title":{"rendered":"From an Elderly Nurse: 5 Things People on their Deathbed Most Regret"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Many of us live in fear of saying “I wish” and we care about it. As if it were an instinct, we act with it throughout our lives and look for ways to live our lives without regret.<\/div>\n
We will all be on our deathbed in some way, and from that moment on, what are we doing today to look back and say less “I wish”? Since we still have time, read them carefully. We will talk about an important work. Australian nurse Bronnie Ware has witnessed the deathbed of many patients throughout her career. He spends the last 3 months of the patients in the hospital where he works with them. Bronnie noticed that patients often regret similar things in their lives and put them together. Here is that impressive work:<\/div>\n