The Zen of Failure
Despite my
aversion to rolling over and exposing my soft, pink underbelly, the blog posts
that draw the most readers and get the strongest reactions, are the ones where I
publicly fail – or at least, come close enough to failure to see the shreds of my dignity in
its teeth and catch the reek of shame on its breath.
I don’t
attribute the popularity of those posts to some kind of schadenfreude thing.
There are very few people around who actually enjoy seeing others fail. In
fact, just the opposite usually happens; a certain amount of failure brings out
the best in people. It attracts and engages us, makes us want to help. Many of us enjoy rooting for the underdogs –
specifically because they are the underdogs.
For those
on the receiving end of that attention, it’s nice when people sit up and take
notice – even for the wrong reasons. As long as we don’t play the “woe is me”
card too often, it can even give us a sense of achievement and reinforce our
sense of self worth.
There's a bunch of stuff we all know at some level, but it can be hard putting it into practice - and can even be hard to remember in the face of a fresh batch of failures. When it comes to pitting the things you know against the things you feel, the emotion smacks us upside the head more often than not.
Here are some things I've been thinking about that put everything into perspective for me:
There's a bunch of stuff we all know at some level, but it can be hard putting it into practice - and can even be hard to remember in the face of a fresh batch of failures. When it comes to pitting the things you know against the things you feel, the emotion smacks us upside the head more often than not.
Here are some things I've been thinking about that put everything into perspective for me:
The Differences Between Failure and Misfortune
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Photo by Nathan Cowley from Pexel |
When we are
laid low by illness, disaster or other unforeseen circumstances, that’s not
failure, it’s just misfortune.
Genuine
failure comes from within. Whether we’re trying to do something we are not
qualified or fully prepared for; taking a shot in the dark and hoping for the
best; or coming close enough to the brass ring to break our knuckles on it in
the attempt to grab it.
External
forces can play a part – but only when we demonstrate the hubris to defy
insurmountable odds. Or fail to respond quickly and appropriately when someone
throws a wrench in the works.
Most human failure
comes from errors in judgement – being optimistic when pessimism is called for;
putting our opinion out there when discretion would have been a better approach;
or simply trying to get away with performing poorly. In its simplest form,
failure is simply lack of success.
Defining Success
Ah, that’s
the nub! What the hell is success,
anyway?
It’s
something that most of us experience everyday – at least in small measures,
even if it is limited to getting up and walking to the bus stop, or driving the
car to work. These are small steps toward a larger goal. Our paycheque is our
reward.
Although the
thrill of small repetitive successes wears off pretty quickly, they give as all at least a passing
acquaintance with success, in some ways, conditioning us to expect success on a
larger scale.
Absence of Failure is Not the Same as Success
You can’t
fail at something you don’t attempt – and the fear of failure makes many of us hesitate to go beyond our
comfort zones. Modern media enables us to vicariously experience the success of
others. We enjoy witnessing the success of people we see as more privileged or
beautiful or talented than ourselves. We like getting close to it – hoping that
success, like luck, may rub off. We enjoy being part of it. A partner’s success
can feel almost as good as achieving something ourselves.
No matter
how risk averse we are, there are a few times in everyone’s life, we set
ourselves extraordinary goals that test
our limitations: like striking out on our own, losing 60 pounds, writing a book
or climbing a mountain. Sometimes life sets these goals for us – as in when we
get pressured to close a massive business deal. The danger, or even likelihood,
of ultimate failure makes those achievements rarer and more precious. Very
often, the goal is just to succeed in large enough increments to make us feel
good about the effort.
Succeeding in Increments
So what if
you don’t pass your driver’s test the first time? It just tells you what to expect
the next time, and helps you train for a successful run the second or third
time. No biggie. Ask an athlete how close they came to the world record their
first time out. They may laugh out loud,
or give you a puzzled look. If it was that easy, then why would people spend so
much of their lives in training? Most athletes enjoy small scale successes
along the way. Best among your friends, at your school, your gym, or on your
team – best in the city, the province,
the country. It takes work and
dedication to reach every one of those stages. If you put it in perspective,
you can see every failure as just a step toward success.
When
investors look for entrepreneurs and ideas and businesses to invest in – what
they most often look for are serial entrepreneurs. Why? Because it shows that you
failed and you took the lesson from it and kept pressing forward. Investors
prefer to work with people who have failed. Because it shows you have the
gumption to try in the first place, and the perseverance to keep going.
So failure
isn’t something to be feared and avoided – it’s something that should be
courted and embraced. Learning to come to terms and deal with failure is the greatest
skill you can possibly master.
After all,
the journey counts more than the destination, especially when you master the
zen of failure.
This was a surprisingly inspirational piece, well crafted and intelligently written.
ReplyDeleteThanks Derryl,
DeleteBelieve it or not, this post actually began as an appeal for people to give me tips about how to get more comments! Sometimes you need to tell people about your failures for them to even know you've tried and failed! And sometimes the zeitgeist does things its own way. Ha!