With this concluding statement of the poem, the speaker means that the choice he had made (the "road" he took) is the reason why his life turned out the way it has. This is vague but it is the point of the poem. Had he chosen the other road, he would have the same conclusion about that choice.
In the final stanza, he explains that, when he is an older man, he will try to convince himself that he took the less traveled road. Note that he says "I shall be telling this with a sigh." The sigh is important because it suggests doubt. He foresees himself, "ages and ages hence" sighing, as if he will try to fool himself into thinking that he had taken the less traveled road.
This poem is all about making choices. The choice of taking one of two roads is a metaphor for any of the significant choices we make in life. Such a choice is made more difficult when both options look the same. Surely, it would seem more interesting to take the "less traveled" road. But note in the second stanza that both roads look like they've been traveled the same. Or, as Frost writes, "the passing there / Had worn them really about the same." Either choice would have "made all the difference."
This is a choice that he probably would not be able to revisit. So, the choice will make a huge difference in his life because he can not go back and try the other option.
Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
I doubted if I should ever come back.
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