
The
Importance of Failure: 5 Valuable Lessons from Failing
“It is impossible to live
without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as
well not have lived at all, in which case you have failed by default.” — J.K.
Rowlinghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHGqp8lz36c#t=42
Why Failure is so Important
Failure, as much as it hurts, is an important part of life. In fact, failure is necessary.I have failed more times than I’d like to admit. And I’m not talking about small failures; I’m talking about the kind of failures that rock your world, completely altering the landscape of your relationships, finances, and mental-wellbeing.
And, if you’re anything like me, then you’ve also most likely failed many times over. I can’t say that I particularly enjoy failing, but failure, through its life-altering lessons, makes us into better persons.
In fact, failure is life’s great teacher; it’s nature’s chisel that chips away at all the excess, stripping down egos as it molds and shapes us through divine intentions.
Without failure, we’d be less capable of compassion, empathy, kindness, and great achievement; we would be less likely to reach for the moon and the stars.
It’s through failure that we learn the greatest lessons that life could teach us.
What
is Failure?
What is failure, really? Why is it
so important to fail at something before we can succeed?
Not too long ago, I wrote an article
about 12 Famous People Who Failed and
it really got me thinking about the nature of failure. What is it and how
does it affect our lives? How does it affect our thoughts, emotions, and our
actions?
When we think about failure, we
think of things in a negative light. We say that failure is painful and
that it causes emotional turmoil and upset, and inflicts agonizing pangs
of guilt, regret, and remorse.
But, for those that have known true
failure, and have bounced back from it, understand that failure in life is
necessary for success. Sure, failing hurts. In fact, it cuts deep like a razor,
slicing its way to our inner core. Yet, it’s necessary.
And the most successful people
in life have failed the most times. If you try to go through life without
failing at anything, then you’re not really living a life at all. Taking risks
and falling down flat on our faces is part of life; it makes us into who we
are.
When a baby is first learning to
walk, she’s going to fall down many times. This, in fact, is failure. But, ask
any mother about their baby’s ability to walk and she will wholeheartedly
declare that her baby will one day walk. She might fall down many times, but
she will surely walk.
Why is the mother so confident that
her daughter will walk? Of course, we all know the answer to that. We know that
falling down and failing while learning to walk is just a part of life. So, why
isn’t failure at other things treated this way?
What we don’t realize as is just
what some people had to go to in order to get where they are in life. Like the
baby learning to walk, they had to fall down and fail many times.
The problem? Society tends to
celebrate the successes rather than highlighting the epic journeys towards
success that are filled with trials, tribulations, upsets, setbacks, and
failures. It’s not as glamorous to talk about those things.
“I’ve missed more than 9000 shots in
my career. I’ve lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I’ve been 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.” — Michael Jordan
Why
It’s Necessary to Fail
In life, it’s necessary to fail.
Failure is a steppingstone. In fact, there are 5 very powerful life lessons
that failure helps to teach and instill in us. If you’ve recently failed at
something in a major way, and you’re going through a difficult time right now,
keep these important lessons in mind.
Failure
Lesson #1: Experience
The first important lesson gained
from failure is experience.
What happens when we fail? When we
go through something and can walk away with firsthand experience, it helps us
to develop a deeper understanding for life.
The experience of failing at
something is truly invaluable. It completely alters our frame-of-mind through
the induction of pain. It makes us reflect on the real nature of things
and their importance in our lives, transforming and improving our
future-selves.
Lesson #2:
Knowledge
Failure brings with it important
firsthand knowledge. That knowledge can be harnessed in the future to overcome
that very failure that inflicted so much pain in the first place. Nothing can
replace the knowledge gained from failure.
When Benjamin Franklin famously
failed nearly 10,000 times to create a commercially viable electric lightbulb,
with each failure, he gained the knowledge of just one more avenue that
didn’t work. It was the accumulated knowledge
developed from nearly 10,000 failed attempts that ultimately led to
his success.
Lesson
#3: Resilience
Failing in life helps to build
resilience. The more we fail, the more resilient we become.
In order to achieve great success,
we must know resilience. Because, if we think that we’re going to succeed on
the first try, or even the first few tries, then we’re sure to set ourselves up
for a far more painful failure.
The characteristic of resilience can
help us in so many ways in life. Resilience helps to breed success by setting
the game up to win. Gone are the lofty expectations that thing will happen
overnight, and in comes the expectations that true success will take an
enormous amount of work and effort.
Lesson
#4: Growth
When we fail, we grow and mature as
human beings. We reach deeper meanings and understandings about our lives and
why we’re doing the things that we’re doing. This helps us to reflect and take
things into perspective, developing meaning from painful situations.
Life is designed for us to grow and
improve. From the very genetic fibers that make us into who we are as
individual persons, into the fabric of society on a global scale, growth is a
fundamental part of us. Without growth, we couldn’t improve life on every
front.
Lesson
#5: Value
One of the biggest lessons that we
can learn from life’s failures is the necessity to create and spread an exceedingly
high amount of value. In fact, value lies at the heart of success and a lack of
value is a fundamental pillar to failure.
In thinking about your past
failures, think about how much value you brought to the table. Could you have
offered more value? Would that have prevented failure? When you learn to create
immense value, and do so consistently, you will eventually succeed.
How
to Recover from Failure
There are many ways to recover from
failure. Once you understand what failure is, and how it’s meant to serve us
rather than hinder us, you’ll free your mind and open your heart to experience
the joy of failure.
Joy? Yes – Joy.
When we’re going through failure,
it’s hard to recognize the importance of it. We can’t see the forest through
the trees, so to speak, when there’s a fire threatening to burn the whole
village down. But, that’s just what we have to do.
So, if you’ve failed in life,
hopefully you better understand the importance of failing and failing often.
But, how do you recover from failure? There are a few ways to do this.
#1
– Ignore the Naysayers
When you fail, surely there will be
the people telling you, “I told you so,” and, “You should have listened to me.”
Ignore those people. Ignore the
naysayers.
Living a life that’s completely safe
all the time, isn’t really living. If you watched J.K. Rowling’s Harvard
commencement speech, then surely you walked away with a better understanding of
this.
#2
– Understand that it’s Okay to Fail
One of the best ways to recover from
failure is to understand that it’s quite alright to fail. If you were to
conduct any one of a number of searches on the Web, you would find countless
stories about failure from the world’s most successful people.
It’s okay to fail. But it’s not okay
to give up.
Even if you failed and that failure
was extremely painful, it’s not okay to give up. Keep failing over and over
again if you have to. Keep on doing it until you succeed. Success will taste so
much sweeter when you reach it.
Pushing forward and not giving up is
quite possibly one of the best ways to recover from failure. Remember, it’s not
true failure unless you throw in that proverbial towel and wholeheartedly give
up forever.
#3
– Realize that it’s Okay to Fail
Although failure to us symbolizes
pain, and we’ll do more to avoid pain than we will to gain pleasure, we have to
realize that it’s okay to fail. When we realize the importance that failure has
played in the lives of the most successful people, it’s far easier to reach
this understanding.
Failure will take you on a journey
that you might not want to go on. But, the reality of the situation is that
those journeys will help to mold and shape you into a better person.
Recovering from failure becomes far
more effortless with the knowledge and experience of that failure under
our belts. And there’s simply no way forward in life without failure.
#4
– Using Failure as Leverage
If you’ve failed in life, you can
use that as leverage to not only recover from it, but to help propel you
forward in the future. Failure can be a great a platform for growth that is
simply unmatched.
To leverage your failures, you have
to illuminate them to your mind. Write out what you failed at and why you
failed. Did you have deep enough meaning to your goals in the past? What could
you have done differently?
How will you tackle those failures
in the future when you’re faced with them? How will you learn from the past to
help shape a bigger and brighter future?
Failure isn’t the end of the road as
long as you don’t give up. If you still believe in your goals, you can use the
failure as leverage to push past the old limitations of your past.
#5
– Revisit Your Goals
Did you have clear and concrete
goals in the past? Did you set goals the SMARTER way? Revisit your goals
from the past and look at just how clear you were with your goals. Were they
precise and exact? Did you visualize them in your mind?
Sometimes, failure results from not
setting goals the right way. Not only must we set goals the right way, but we
must track and analyze them on a monthly, weekly, and daily basis.
To recover from failure, revisit
your goals and redefine them. Spend the time necessary to analyze and adjust
where necessary.
#6
– Create a Massive Action Plan
Want to recover from failure? Create
a Massive Action Plan. Take your goals and lay out a plan as to how you’re
going to achieve them. What will you do in the face of failure next time it
rears its ugly head?
When we have a massive action plan,
we have a systematic way of achieving the goals that we set for ourselves. Once
we come to the realization that those goals won’t be simple to achieve, we can
approach things with a more long-term frame-of-mind.
Set out a solid action plan that
will help you push past the stumbling blocks of life, and watch as you slowly
but surely recover from any setbacks, upsets, or failures.
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