Celebrating Failure Week#13
The quote by Thomas Edison is one I have
repeated many times to myself, as well as to friends who are experiencing
failure. In fact, to go along with your picture of baseball, the great Babe
Ruth who was famous for hitting home runs, but he also held the record for the
most strikeouts – until another baseball great broke the record – Mickey Mantle.
Ruth’s mantra was: “Every strike brings me closer to the next home run.” I have
spent my life with that quote seared in my brain.
Tell us about a time this
past semester that you failed
n I didn’t listen to my adviser. I was told that two courses would be sufficient for my first term at
UF, but I thought I knew better – thus, I have struggled to get all my
assignments completed, a position in which I have never been. In fact, I haven’t
done many of them because I put myself in a situation that made me choose
between assignments from different courses.
Tell us what you learned
from it
n Listen! It would not have
hurt me to only take two, and then once I got into the semester I could have determined
at that time whether I could handle a full time job along with 12 credit hours
at UF. Instead, I did it “my way.” I decided to take 12 credit hours and if it
was too much I would back it down next semester. Wrong decision. I learned that
instead of listening to my adviser and been proactive, I am now in a reactive
state (more like panic) as the semester comes to a close.
Reflect, in general, on
what you think about failure
n Michael Jordan said
exactly the way I feel about failure: “I missed more than 9000 shots in my career.
26 times I was trusted to take the game-winning shot and missed. I’ve failed
over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.” There is
nothing fun about failure. What I have learned over the years is failure is my
teacher, not my undertaker. Failure has delayed my success, but not defeated
it. Along my journey, failure has been my detour, but never my dead end. I have
stumbled, and gotten back up. What happened yesterday should no longer matter
except to learn from it. Life always offers you a second chance, and it is
called tomorrow. As Scarlet O’Hara said in the last line of the Civil War
novel, Gone with the Wind, while thinking of ways to get Rhett Butler back: “After
all, tomorrow is another day.”
So,
now I have to get back on track and move closer to my dreams and goals. After
all, tomorrow is another day (but I have assignments due today!)
Hey Linda, you have some truly beautiful quotes going on here, and I think that you have really grasped what failure is mainly about. Yeah sure thing failure sucks and all, but at the end of the day, it wouldn't be as fun if everything was super easy and people never failed. That being said, I agree that it is so very important to learn from failure, otherwise I tend to largely see it as valuable time and effort wasted. This is why I believe one should always strive to learn both from success and failure, given that they shape who we are and who we become and grow up to be. Never stop learning! You can check my blog here:
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