Kevin Colleran has accomplished a lot in 34 years.
He graduated from Babson College and joined Facebook as one of the company’s first ten employees. While there, he made built a great ad sales team, made a lot of money, married his wife Erica, and made a lot of friends. Now he’s a partner at Slow Ventures, an $80 million startup investment fund.
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On February 27, Colleran was crossing the snow-filled streets of Boston to pick up breakfast. He saw a truck make a left hand turn and thought: I’m about to get run over.
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Colleran did get hit, but he walked away from the scene seemingly unharmed. Two hours later, he began to vomit and was rushed to the hospital. CT scans revealed that the former Facebook executive had severe internal bleeding in his brain. If he hadn’t admitted himself to the hospital, he would have become brain dead or died within a few hours.
The first thing Colleran did when he woke up was take a selfie. With his sense of humor still in tact, he wrote the caption, “Big Day,” and posted it to Facebook. Then he turned to his doctors and said, “Hey guys, is this a bad time to mention that I don’t have health insurance?”
The next thing Colleran did was reflect on his life. Colleran realized something significant, which he shared with Babson’s 2015 graduates in a commencement speech Saturday morning.
“I woke up from surgery and saw my wife and family by my side,” Colleran said. “Immediately, I took a selfie (and put it on Facebook, of course), happy to be alive and happier to share my story with all of my friends. Because, as I think about it, there is NOTHING I would change.”
Colleran realized that feeling, having no regrets, is the best possible measure of success in life.
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“Now, I would not wish any of you to ever get hit by a bus,” Colleran told the graduates. “But I do hope that you live your life in a way that leaves you without regrets. Build your career and develop friendships and relationships in a way that — when you do have a reason to look back on it all — there’s nothing you would change.”
This story originally appeared on Business Insider. Copyright 2015
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