This week I finished reading an 850 page Stephen King book, 11-22-63. I don’t usually read Stephen King and I don’t usually read books that long. But, I’m glad I did. It is the story of a man who finds a portal to time travel in the pantry of an old diner. He decides to use the power of time travel to go back to 1963 and to kill Lee Harvey Oswald before the assassin can kill President Kennedy. There are interesting sub-plots and the climax (I won’t be a ruiner) shows what can happen if we mess with the natural flow of things.
This got me thinking about what I might do with that power. First I thought about historical events. Would I go back and stop Aaron Burr from killing Alexander Hamilton? But then no Broadway musical! Would I have John Wilkes Booth miss his shots at Lincoln? Would I have the Emperor of Japan rule against the attack on Pearl Harbor? Would I have Ringo Starr turn down the offer to join the Beatles? Noooo to that last one!
But then I got to thinking about changing events in the past of my own personal life. There are the obvious choices to fix regrets, like doing much better in high school or having the “live on a college campus” experience. But to use that power to fix things like this may be a waste of time travel. What are the turning points in my life that I would alter if I could do back and change them? If I had been able to prevent my mom’s death, when I was fifteen, I would have more likely taken school seriously and gone to college in the September of 1970. If I could have prevented my daughter’s death in 1989, I would likely have more grandchildren and would not have to get upset to answer the horrible question everyone who lost a child dreads…How many children do you have? If I could have had my urologist say “the biopsy on your prostate is negative”, I would today feel more like a whole, strong, and confident man. These events were all out of my control.
Time travel would allow us to fix things that were out of our control. But what about the things we screw up that are under our control? A life philosophy I share with clients is that 99% of your mistakes are fixable. Maybe not easily or quickly, but definitely fixable. We don’t need time travel to lead a better life. But, it sure would be cool! Maybe I could be the drummer that replaces Pete Best!
I hope this post made you think a little bit about your life and your regrets and your mistakes. We all have them. Also, I highly recommend 11-22-63, in spite of its 850 pages.