Who Will Cry When You Die?
When you were born, you cried while the world rejoiced. Live your life in such a way that when you die, the world cries while you rejoice.— Ancient Sanskrit Saying, as shared by Robin Sharma
This is the uncomfortable question Robin Sharma asks at the very beginning of Who Will Cry When You Die? — one of the most quietly powerful self-help books ever written. Not because it's about death. But because it's about how you choose to live starting today.
Most of us are so busy being busy that we've forgotten to actually live. We chase promotions, scroll through phones, pay EMIs, attend meetings, sleep, repeat. And one day — probably sooner than we think — it'll all be over. The real question is: Will it have meant something?
Sharma wrote this book after quitting a high-paying law career at 25 because he felt hollow despite outward success. He realised that success without significance is just a golden cage. This book is the distillation of everything he learned — 101 lessons — arranged with a gentleness that feels like advice from a wise older friend, not a lecture from a stage.
About Robin S. Sharma
Robin Sharma is a Canadian-Indian author and one of the world's top 5 leadership experts. A former litigation lawyer, he quit law at 25 to pursue wisdom and purpose — and went on to author global bestsellers including The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari, The 5 AM Club, and The Greatness Guide. He has advised organisations like Microsoft, Nike, IBM and GE. Who Will Cry When You Die? (1999) is the third book in his Monk series — and arguably his most intimate and personal.
📋 What You'll Discover in This Blog
A Harvard study found that on their deathbed, people's biggest regrets are almost never "I wish I'd worked more" or "I wish I'd made more money." They are: "I wish I'd been kinder," "I wish I'd spent more time with people I love," and "I wish I'd had the courage to live the life I truly wanted." Robin Sharma wrote this book so you never have to say those words.
Discover Your Calling
Sharma opens the book with this lesson because it is the foundation of everything else. Your calling is not some mystical, far-off thing reserved for artists and saints. It is simply the work that makes you feel most alive — work that combines what you love, what you're good at, and what the world needs.
The Japanese call it ikigai — the reason you get out of bed in the morning. Sharma says most of us ignore it because we've been told to be "practical." We choose security over significance. And then, slowly, we start dying inside while our body keeps walking around.
Sharma is clear: discovering your calling doesn't necessarily mean throwing everything away and starting over. It means bringing more of who you truly are into everything you do. A teacher who shows up just to collect a salary is miserable. A teacher who sees herself as someone who shapes the next generation — that same job becomes a calling.
On his deathbed, the writer Aldous Huxley — after a lifetime of philosophy and wisdom — summed up everything he'd learned in seven words: "Let us be kinder to one another." That's it. Not rocket science. Not complicated strategy. Just live with more heart.
Ratan Tata could have retired comfortably after decades leading India's biggest business empire. Instead, he channelled his calling — using business to serve society — into Tata Trusts, funding hospitals, education, and clean drinking water for millions. His calling wasn't just to run a company. It was to leave the country better than he found it. When he passed, an entire nation mourned.
- Ask yourself: "If money were not an issue and I couldn't fail, what would I spend my days doing?"
- Write a list of 5 things that make you lose track of time completely.
- Find the intersection: What do you love + What you're good at + What helps people?
- Bring even 10% more of your authentic self to your current role this week.
"We are all here for some unique purpose, some noble objective that will allow us to manifest our highest human potential while we add value to the lives around us."— Robin S. Sharma
The Extraordinary Power of Everyday Kindness
Sharma dedicates an entire lesson to one of the simplest, most underrated practices: being kind to a stranger every single day. Not a grand gesture. Not a viral Instagram moment. Just a quiet, genuine act of human decency.
We've been sold the myth that meaningful life requires grand achievements — building companies, writing bestsellers, becoming famous. Sharma calls this out directly: a meaningful life is built from a series of small daily acts of decency and kindness that add up to something truly great over a lifetime.
Sharma's exact words hit hard: "Kindness, quite simply, is the rent we must pay for the space we occupy on this planet." Think about that. Every day you wake up and breathe air is a gift — not an entitlement. The question is: what are you giving back for that gift?
He suggests simple acts: paying the toll for the car behind you, giving your seat on the metro, being the first to say hello. None of these cost money. They cost only one thing: attention. And attention is something we are all hoarding on our phone screens.
A study at University of British Columbia found that people who performed five acts of kindness in a single day — even small ones like holding a door, buying someone coffee — reported dramatically higher happiness levels for weeks after. The receivers of kindness reported feeling more connected to humanity. One kind act creates ripples nobody can trace or measure. The stranger you helped today may carry that forward to ten others. That is legacy in real time.
Two patients shared a hospital room. The one by the window would describe beautiful sights outside — boats on the lake, children playing in the park, lovers walking. One night, the window patient died. The other man, desperate to see those beautiful views, asked to be moved to that bed. When he finally looked out the window — it faced a blank brick wall. His roommate had invented those vivid scenes purely out of love, to make a sick man's days brighter. That is the highest form of kindness — giving from your imagination when you have nothing material to offer.
- Commit to one genuine act of kindness every single day for 21 days — log it.
- Write a thank-you note to someone who changed your life (Sharma's Lesson 27).
- Say one genuine compliment to a stranger today. Watch their face change.
- The next time someone wrongs you, ask: "Is retaliation worth my peace?"
The Morning Ritual That Changes Everything
Long before The 5 AM Club, Robin Sharma was teaching this lesson in Who Will Cry When You Die? He calls it the Platinum 30 — a specific morning ritual designed to set the tone for a purposeful day. The idea is deceptively simple: the first hour of your morning belongs entirely to you.
Sharma's Platinum 30 ritual unfolds like this: After waking, go to your personal sanctuary — a quiet corner, anywhere away from screens and noise. Spend 15 minutes in silent contemplation — not scrolling, not planning, just being. Then spend time with "wisdom literature" — books that ground you in what truly matters. Then set your priorities for the day ahead.
Tim Cook (Apple CEO) wakes at 4:30 AM. Oprah Winfrey meditates every morning before any work begins. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam was known to wake before 5 AM and spend quiet hours in reflection and reading. This isn't coincidence — it's design. These people discovered what Sharma teaches: the stillness of early morning is the most fertile soil for clarity, creativity and conviction.
Sharma also recommends the Weekly Sabbatical — one intentional period every week (even just 2–3 hours) where you unplug and reconnect with yourself. Walk on a beach, sit in a bookshop, write in your journal, watch the sunrise. "Who cares if others don't understand," he writes. "Do it for yourself. You are worth it."
- Set your alarm 30 minutes earlier than usual — own that time before the world wakes.
- First 5 minutes: No phone. Just breathe and be grateful for three specific things.
- Read one page of a book that feeds your mind — not news, not social media.
- Write tomorrow's top three priorities the night before, so mornings have direction.
- Pick one morning this week for your personal sabbatical — protect it like a meeting.
Mastering the Most Important Machine: Your Mind
The average person has around 70,000 thoughts per day. Studies suggest that for most people, about 80% of those thoughts are negative — worry, regret, fear, comparison, self-criticism. We carry around a radio that plays mostly static, and then wonder why we feel exhausted.
Sharma dedicates several lessons to one urgent mission: taking control of your inner world. Because the outside world — your job, your relationships, your bank balance — will always be uncertain. But the way your mind interprets that world? That you can train.
One of Sharma's most practically brilliant ideas: Worry Breaks. Instead of letting anxiety drip through your entire day like a leaking tap, schedule a fixed 30-minute window to worry. During that time, worry freely — think about your problems, feel the anxiety. But when the timer ends, you close the tab. No more.
This sounds simple. It works because it gives your brain permission: "Yes, we will deal with this — but not right now." Neuroscience backs this up. Unscheduled, ruminated worry activates the amygdala constantly. Scheduled worry reduces overall cortisol. Sharma discovered this through his own anxiety as a lawyer — and it changed his life.
Winston Churchill — arguably one of the most stress-tested leaders in history, who led Britain through WWII — reportedly wrote down his worries before bed so his mind could rest. He understood that the mind cannot simultaneously worry and solve. You have to deliberately separate the two. Churchill's discipline wasn't about being fearless — it was about being organised about fear.
Sharma recommends a powerful, somewhat radical practice: choosing a mantra — a personal phrase — and repeating it 200 times daily for four weeks. If you want more peace: "I am so grateful that I am a serene and tranquil person." If you want confidence: "I am filled with boundless courage."
This isn't woo-woo mysticism. Neuroplasticity research confirms that repeated thought patterns physically reshape neural pathways. The words you say to yourself — silently or aloud — become the architecture of your belief system. Most people talk to themselves brutally. Sharma says: choose your words with the same care you'd use when speaking to someone you love.
- Create your "Worry Break" — 30 min tonight, every evening. Worry only then, not all day.
- Notice the next time you say "I'm so stressed" or "I'm terrible at this" — replace it deliberately.
- Write your mantra. Read it every morning. Watch what changes in 30 days.
- When a troubling thought appears outside your worry break, write it in a notebook and say "I'll address this at 8 PM." Then return to the present.
The Relationships That Will Define You
Sharma's research into what makes people feel their life was well-lived consistently points to one answer: the quality of their relationships. Not their bank balance. Not their job title. The people they loved, the people who loved them back, and what they built together.
Sharma makes a critical distinction: a diary records what happened. A journal explores what it meant. Writing daily about your experiences — your decisions, your reactions, your growth — creates what he calls a "wiser self" accumulating day by day. Every page you write is a mirror showing you who you are becoming.
It also forces honesty with yourself, which is the foundation of genuine relationships. You cannot truly connect with others if you don't know yourself.
Leonardo da Vinci filled over 7,000 pages of private notebooks — not just with inventions, but with questions, doubts, observations, self-reflections. Marcus Aurelius wrote Meditations never intending it to be published — it was his personal journal, his conversation with himself. These pages became some of the most powerful writing in human history. Not because they were written for an audience, but because they were written in radical honesty.
One of Sharma's most memorable phrases: when someone is speaking, stop preparing your reply and start truly listening. Try to see the world from their perspective — get "behind their eyeballs." We have two ears and one mouth for a reason, he notes: to listen twice as much as we speak.
This single habit — genuine, full-attention listening — can transform marriages, friendships, professional relationships, and even brief encounters with strangers. Most people feel profoundly unseen and unheard. Be the rare person who actually hears them.
- Start a journal this week — even 3 sentences a night. Write what happened and what it meant to you.
- Develop an "Honesty Philosophy" — go on a 7-day truth fast. Zero white lies. Notice what happens.
- Practice tough love: say hard, kind truths to people you care about instead of comfortable lies.
- In your next important conversation, put your phone face-down. Listen 80%, talk 20%.
- Call one person this week just to say "I'm grateful you're in my life." No other agenda.
"Everyone who enters your life has a lesson to teach and a story to tell. Every person you pass represents an opportunity to show a little more of the compassion that defines your humanity."— Robin S. Sharma
The Thief You Invited In: Reclaiming Your Time
Here is the brutal arithmetic of a human life: If you live to 75, you have 27,375 days. Subtract childhood, sleep, and the unavoidable basics of living — you have perhaps 15,000–18,000 days of truly conscious, purposeful life available to you. Every wasted day is irreplaceable.
Sharma is not asking you to be a productivity robot. He is asking you to be intentional — to choose how your hours are spent rather than letting the urgent crowd out the important.
Sharma's unusual prescription: pick one day and remove your watch. No checking the time, no schedule, no clock. The idea is not to be irresponsible — it's to discover how profoundly we let time anxiety govern us. When you stop watching the clock, you start watching your life. You eat when you're hungry. You rest when you're tired. You notice sunsets. You hear laughter.
This exercise teaches you the difference between being productive and being alive. Modern life has largely forgotten the second one.
Many Indian villages in the Himalayan foothills still operate without clocks in any meaningful way. Anthropologists studying communities in Bhutan — consistently ranked among the world's happiest — find that time orientation is fluid, relational, and present-focused. They have deadlines but not domination by the clock. Sharma's wisdom here is ancient: time is a river, not a cage. The question is whether you're swimming in it or drowning in it.
Sharma is direct: if your life priorities are unclear, you will say yes to everyone and accomplish nothing of significance. The most effective people in the world — every single one — protect their time ferociously. They know their top three priorities and they measure every request against them.
Miles Davis — considered perhaps the greatest jazz musician of all time — focused obsessively on his single point of brilliance: the trumpet. He didn't manage social media. He didn't attend every party. He said no to everything that wasn't jazz. The result was a lifetime of incomparable mastery.
- Write down your top 3 life priorities right now. Check every commitment against them for one week.
- Spend one Sunday morning completely phone-free — walk, read, sit in silence. See how rich it feels.
- The next time you say "I don't have time," correct it to "That's not a priority for me right now."
- For one day, don't answer your phone immediately. Let it ring. Notice how the world doesn't end.
Care for Your Body: The Temple You Live In
Sharma devotes significant attention to physical wellbeing — not because he's a fitness fanatic, but because he understands a profound truth: your mind cannot operate at its peak in a neglected body. You cannot think clearly, love deeply, or work meaningfully when you're constantly exhausted, sick, or running on processed sugar and stress.
Sharma describes a colleague who goes to the gym at 5:30 PM every single day — "his daily pilgrimage." Nothing — not late meetings, not client calls, not family dinners — disrupts this. People thought he was selfish. But this man consistently outperformed colleagues half his age, was calmer in crisis, more creative in brainstorming, and more present at home. The gym wasn't vanity. It was strategy.
He also recommends: drinking fresh fruit juice daily, walking in nature, and finding your "place of peace" — a physical location where you consistently go to restore yourself. It could be a park bench, a temple, a stretch of beach, even a particular chair at home. Consistency of place creates consistency of inner peace.
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, despite facing extraordinary political battles, social discrimination and enormous intellectual labour, maintained a rigorous reading and physical discipline. Nelson Mandela exercised every morning at 4:30 AM — even during his 27 years of imprisonment on Robben Island. He later said this discipline preserved not just his body but his sanity, his dignity, and his resolve. Your physical routine is not separate from your purpose — it is what fuels it.
- Commit to 20 minutes of movement every day for the next 21 days — walk, swim, yoga, anything.
- Stop eating after 8 PM. The research on this benefit is overwhelming.
- Drink one glass of water the moment you wake up — before coffee, before your phone.
- Find or create your "place of peace" — one location you go to just to breathe and be.
- Walk in nature at least once this week. Leave your earphones behind. Just walk and observe.
The Only Thing That Outlives You: Your Legacy
Most people avoid thinking about legacy because they equate it with death. But Sharma reframes this completely: thinking about your legacy is the most life-affirming thing you can do. It forces you to ask: Who am I becoming? What am I building? What will remain when I'm gone?
Sharma asks you to write a Legacy Statement — a paragraph describing the impact you want to have had when your life is over. Not a to-do list. Not goals. A description of how people will remember you. How did you make them feel? What did you build? What did you protect? What did you sacrifice, and for what?
This statement then becomes your compass. Every decision — career, relationships, how you spend your Saturday afternoon — gets measured against it. Does this choice move me toward the life I've described, or away from it?
When Alfred Nobel — the inventor of dynamite — read his own premature obituary, which a French newspaper accidentally published (his brother had died and they confused the two), he was described as "the merchant of death." He was horrified. That headline changed his life. He spent his remaining years and almost his entire fortune establishing the Nobel Prizes — to rewrite his legacy. Today, Nobel is synonymous not with destruction but with the highest human achievements in peace, science, and literature. He literally rewrote his story. And so can you — starting today, not at the end.
Sharma includes one of the book's most poetic lessons: plant a tree under whose shade you may never sit. This metaphor captures the entire spirit of legacy — doing good for people who aren't yet born, serving without any expectation of return. The greatest human acts throughout history have been precisely this: sacrifices made by people who wouldn't live to see their benefits.
His Lesson 100: Selflessly Serve. Volunteer. Mentor someone younger. Give your knowledge freely. Woodrow Wilson said: "You are not here merely to make a living. You are here to enable the world to live more amply, with greater vision, with a finer spirit of hope and achievement."
- Write your Legacy Statement — one paragraph. Read it every morning for a week.
- Choose one cause, person, or community you want to serve beyond your own interests.
- Mentor someone this month — share a skill, open a door, introduce them to the right person.
- Literally plant something: a seed, a tree, a garden. Watch what it means to nurture life.
- Ask yourself tonight: "If I die tomorrow, am I proud of the person I've been this week?"
The Deathbed Test
Sharma's central provocation: imagine yourself at life's end. Strip away the noise — the status, the money, the busyness — and ask these questions with total honesty.
Did I discover my calling — and did I pursue it with courage?
Did I love the people in my life fully, not partially?
Did I show up for strangers — even when it cost me something?
Did I grow — mentally, spiritually, emotionally — every single year?
Did I have the courage to be honest — with myself and with others?
Did I forgive — truly release — those who hurt me?
Did I leave something — anything — that outlasts me?
When I leave this world — who will genuinely cry?
🗓️ Your 30-Day "Who Will Cry When You Die?" Life Challenge
Don't just read this. Live it. One month. Small changes. Big life.
Discover & Design
- Write your Legacy Statement
- Start waking 30 min earlier
- Begin a journal — 3 lines/night
- Write your calling down on paper
- Choose your daily mantra
- One act of kindness per day
- Take a 2-hour sabbatical Sunday
Clean Your Inner World
- Start Worry Breaks (30 min/night)
- 7-day truth fast — zero white lies
- No news for the first hour of day
- Meditate 10 min each morning
- Write thank-you notes to 3 people
- Spend one lunch in silence
- List 5 things you're grateful for
Show Up Fully
- Exercise 20 min every day
- Have dinner with family, no phones
- Walk in nature — no earphones
- Call someone you've neglected
- Say no to one non-priority request
- Drink fresh juice each morning
- Find your place of peace
Give & Leave Your Mark
- Mentor or help one person grow
- Volunteer — even for 2 hours
- Plant something. Literally.
- Take more risks — one brave thing
- Collect 10 quotes that inspire you
- Write a letter to your future self
- Re-read your Legacy Statement aloud
The Complete Lesson Index
The title of this book is a question — and it's not a comfortable one. Who will cry when you die? Not as a morbid exercise, but as the clearest mirror life can offer you. Because the answer tells you everything about how you've lived.
If you've spent your life hoarding time, avoiding vulnerability, protecting yourself from connection, saying "later" to everything that truly mattered — then the answer might be: not many. And that's okay, if you change course now.
Sharma's greatest gift in this book is not the 101 lessons themselves — though they are extraordinary. It's the permission he gives you to slow down and ask the real questions. What is my calling? Am I being kind enough? Am I building something that will outlast me? Am I truly present with the people I love?
These are not questions you answer once. They are questions you live with — daily, honestly, bravely. The good news is that you don't need to transform everything overnight. You just need to begin. One lesson. One day. One act of genuine kindness. One morning of quiet intention.
Norman Cousins wrote: "The tragedy of life is not death, but what we let die inside us while we live." This is the epigraph to Robin Sharma's book. Every unlived passion, every unspoken love, every avoided risk, every forgiveness withheld — these are the real deaths that precede the final one. Start living before you start dying.
So here is the question Sharma leaves with you — and that I leave with you now. Stripped of everything temporary, standing at the edge of your life looking back at all of it: Will you have been proud of the person you chose to be?
The answer to that question doesn't live in the future. It lives in what you choose to do with the next hour.
