Thanks For Failure, Because Now I Am An Expert

Thanks to the failure, because now I am an expert

We have branded the concept of failure. From a young age, the looks we receive when we fail or make a mistake are very similar to those we receive when we misbehave. From a young age, when we fail, rather than be delighted to have found a path that is not the right one and thus to know that we can leave it aside, we get angry with us ourselves, we insult ourselves and we let the sadness flood us, as if it was the most just and the most adequate emotion to feel at that moment.

In addition, when we do not consider failure as something positive, we generally withdraw, we abandon the projects we had in our hands and we tell ourselves that we are useless. How are you going to profit from what this mistake has to teach you if you don’t treat it that way, if you try to erase everything if it was just poorly written text?

People who do not accept failure or learn from it are usually people with low self-acceptance. Generally, they are perfectionists and this in each of their acts. When they realize that in reality they are not perfect and that their expectations are not realized, then they are able to give up everything and fall into the most absolute despair.

This ineffective attitude is only achieved when people with high potentials and good skills stop trying for fear of failing again. An attitude that locks them in a glass urn, in their comfort zone.

The person who never fails is the one who never tries and stays in their comfort zone, who knows the risks are minimal. But in reality, these people want to live more hectic lives, with challenges to overcome or goals to achieve. And for that, it is not necessarily necessary to make all your dreams come true or to achieve success in everything you do.

When we stop trying for fear of moving forward, we are already caressing failure with our fingertips. The suffering is less intense than the anxiety that can be implied by taking on a project that challenges our abilities. But once this whole phase is overcome, life acquires a much more vivid color.

Failure, far from being a door to abandon our dreams, must be the signal that communicates to us that we are growing. An indicator showing us that we are exploring new paths and that thanks to all this, we improve, we mature and we develop our capacities.

It is certain that one cannot have any control over failure, if you want to achieve success you have to accept that you will make mistakes many times over. What, on the other hand, is well and truly under our control and depends on us, is the ability to persist despite what is happening, and this is where it is positive to invest our energy and to recover. afloat.

Failure is not an end in itself, but an intermediate step. The indisputable movement towards success or triumph in all walks of life. However, failure has more advantages than disadvantages, and the only thing you have to do to realize it is to realize that failure does not define us, and does not represent us. nothing more than the need to act differently.

In order to learn how to better manage setbacks, the first step is a task as complicated as it is important: that of accepting what you cannot change. That of not complaining forever about not having the right cards in your deck. Plus, whatever the outcome, we don’t just come down to this game, and we won’t always play with the same cards. We are not only our thoughts and our behavior, we are much more than all that; a complex, changing being who learns and who misses no opportunity to improve.

The next step is to adjust our expectations. We must clearly distinguish between the “real I” and the “ideal I”. The “real I” is the person I am, no more and no less. It is made up of my personal characteristics, my abilities, my qualities, my faults and my limitations. If I know myself well, I will know how far I can go and how far I can’t go.

The “ideal I”, on the other hand, is the person I believe I am, but actually I am not. If I have very high expectations of myself and believe in my “ideal I” more than my “real I”, then I will suffer when reality tells me I need to adjust the level.

Finally, learn to tolerate the frustrations that life brings to you. Projects don’t always go the way you want them to, but that doesn’t have to mean defeat. We will accept what we don’t like, even our own mistakes; we learn from them, because then we can nurture the illusion and move on.

 

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