How has a failure, or apparent failure, set you up for later success?

How has a failure, or apparent failure, set you up for later success?

I’ve learned more from my mistakes than my success.

I expect to win or be successful at what I do now. I’ve paid enough dues in life and have learned enough lessons at the school of hard knocks that I should be doing things correctly by now. (I hope I don’t eat those words).

Life was tough growing up. I had no manual and a couple of siblings who rooted against me the whole time. It almost forced my will to overcome and to not only win, but to overachieve at whatever I did.

Along the way though, failure at tasks, life, relationships, and a lot of other things taught me more lessons than success. I hate losing and I hate screwing up. I only want to fix something once. That’s easy to do with carpentry, electrical, plumbing and repair. It’s damn near impossible with relationships.

I know the Tom Brady’s of the world must hate losing more than anything. He learned how to win. That’s how I feel about it.

2 thoughts on “How has a failure, or apparent failure, set you up for later success?

  1. I was laid off from a job (that I hated) back in 2006, one I had worked hard at, but after getting a 20% raise in November, I got laid off on January 2nd. We had 2 small children and I was unsure how we’d make ends meet.

    Got a job in March at the company I now work for, and worked my way into the job I always wanted. Now I have a team of 5 data analysts working for me, and I’ve never been more satisfied in my work.

    That layoff was the best thing that ever happened to me.

    Like

  2. My body failed me . . . never got me big enuf for sports and all. Got good at everything I tried, but knew I’d never make it to the big leagues in anything, even golf.

    So I got good at takin tests and worked my way into a scholarship. Bein small, you make a lotta noise to keep from gettin stepped on by the pituitary freaks. Made me decide to be the one givin directions.

    Like

Leave a reply to Zarba Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.