Death Bed Confessions from Hospice Nurse
A hospice nurse who constantly hears death bed confessions is on TikTok is giving us advice on how not to carry regret.
Julie shares the death bed confessions from her patients:
- “Most people at the end of their lives have regrets about not appreciating their health.”
- “Not appreciating being alive, the little things.”
- “Working their life away.”
- “And not spending more time with family.”
She also gives advice on how to avoid those regrets:
- “Be in the moment, live presently, be grateful, don’t take for granted your health, and little things about living life.”
- “Don’t work your life away if you don’t have to, or make it so you don’t have to.”
- “Spend time with those you love, not necessarily family, but those you love and make you feel loved.”
@hospicenursejulie Reply to @kaitmichaud #hospicenursejulie #hospice #learnontiktok #PepsiApplePieChallenge
♬ See You Again (Piano Arrangement) - Alexandre Pachabezian
The Maney Roy, and LauRen Morning Show airs a segment called Charlotte Secrets. Its an opportunity for everyone in the Carolinas to open up, and confess their deep dark secrets. We have even heard bank robbery confessions! You can listen to the confessions anytime on the The MRL Show Podcast!
Here is another death bed confession! A Boston man who died earlier this year made a startling confession on his deathbed: He was secretly a wanted bank robber. Thomas Randele, a devoted family man was loved by almost everyone he met. He died in May after a battle with lung cancer. But just before he died, he told his family that he was actually Thomas Conrad, who in 1969 stole $215,000 from a Cleveland bank. That’s the equivalent of $1.6 million today and one of the biggest heists in the city’s history. Conrad changed his name in 1970 and moved to Boston, where he got married, raised children, and worked at a local car dealership. He was never caught despite the FBI continuing to search for him for decades.
You often hear stories of individuals making a confession on their deathbed, some true and others most likely not. This is quite the story though. I do wonder how someone is able to legally change their name without the FBI catching wind of it. I’d love to see a movie or at least a documentary about this one day though as this fascinates me.