Thanks for your interest in No More Regrets!

If you arrived here from the No More Regrets Flash Movie, you will be getting an email asking you to confirm your email address.

When you click on the link in the body of that email, you will be sent directly to a page with a link to your Aim for Authenticity PDF (6 chapters out of 30 of Marc’s new book). Take a moment, check your email and confirm now.

If you do not receive this email, look in your junk folder. If there, be sure to add dmarshall@bkpub.com to your address book so that our email gets through.

If you have not yet seen the inspiring short movie, click to view now and enter your email to receive your free gift.

Also, as a special promotion for viewers of this movie, you can click the link below to get 30% OFF when you buy the book.

>> Buy No More Regrets at 30% Off

($10.47 instead of $14.95)

Please leave your comments below, and feel free to answer one or more of these questions (only your first name and email is required and email is only for identification and will NOT be published or used in any way – website is optional but if you wish to include it, your name will be linked to your website)

  • What is your biggest regret?
  • What impact did this regret have on your life?
  • How did you move past this regret, if at all?
  • What are you doing differently now to avoid regrets like this in the future?

Also, visit author Marc Muchnick’s site No More Regrets!

Thanks!

5 Responses to “Thanks for your interest in No More Regrets!”

  1. It is in reality a great and useful piece of information. I am happy that you just shared this useful info with us. Please stay us up to date like this. Thank you for sharing.

  2. The year I missed my missed my kids’ first day of school is one of my biggest regrets. Every year prior to that it was a family tradition for my wife and I to make the kids a big breakfast and take pictures of them in their “first day” clothes. It was one of those times where work just got in the way – perhaps it couldn’t be helped but I sure felt disappointed. Not only had I let my kids down, but I had let myself down. Since then I’ve tried to plan ahead so that I can avoid repeating this scenario. I realize I can’t be there for everything in my kids’ lives, but I don’t want to sell my soul to my job either.

  3. My biggest regret is not taking time off between college and work to just live a little. Now I get 5 days of vacation per year, which isn’t enough to travel anywhere except maybe LA. If I had taken the time, I would have been able to explore other options, see the world, and maybe have a completely different life than the one I have now.

  4. I regret that I was not interested in religion and scripture study during my teenage years. I received religious training because of my mom but had little interest in it and did no study on my own until I was almost 19. I believe that I was much less mature and thoughtful about what matters in life than I would have been with more religious focus and study. This in turn led me to making mistakes that harmed my life, led me to focus my time on some unproductive pursuits, and caused me to miss opportunities for learning, development, service, and contribution. Faith, religious observance, scripture study, and service have since become a center of my life and a great strength and blessing in all that I do.

  5. One of my biggest regrets is that I didn’t spend as much quality time with my daughter in her high school years as i wished I had. We were super close until she reached junior high school but then she went into her own world of friends, and I was working killer days at my job, and gradually the connection was lost and we drifted apart. She’s now 24 and we are rebuilding our relationship. We still love each other, but I miss the previous closeness and affection. In the future, I will give priority to my most treasured relationships over my work life.

Leave a Reply