SUCCEEDING THROUGH FAILURES
Failure is the greatest fear of many in our world
today. Failure in the religious life, the business world, the family circle and
in everyday activities has pushed many a dreamer into a deep hole of hopelessness.
Why allow failure to be your greatest enemy to success when it can rather be
your best friend to achieving your dreams? Names like Albert Einstein, Oprah Winfrey,
the Wright brothers, Franklin Roosevelt are quick to make our success list but
some fail to see the depths of failure they trod till they came into the light
of success.
With a background of
a poor childhood to an inability to read in the formative years, past the years
when even those who taught him came to believe he was handicapped and convinced his parents to think so emerged
a man who has changed the face of modern science – Albert Einstein.
With a background as
a college drop-out with a poor first product, everything seemed to be against
the one who is considered as the richest in the 21st century – Bill
Gates.
To rule the world’s
superpower from a wheelchair and lead the greatest democracy on the planet
through a period of war and worldwide economic depression is one of the most
respected presidents in American history – Franklin Roosevelt.
Missing nine thousand
shots in a single career, losing more than three hundred games, a team losing
twenty six games because he failed in taking the final shot right, the popular
NBA star could say without any doubt that, “I’ve failed over and over and that
is why I succeeded”. – Michael Jordan
Many names can be
mentioned. They have become household names which easily fall from our lips.
But the greatest
question is, “How did these people emerge from the difficulties life presented
them, to the height they reached?”.
In the words of Zig Ziglar, “they made
failure their teacher not their undertaker”. Instead of being buried by failure,
they were lifted up by it.
3 SIMPLE STEPS IN SUCCEEDING WHEN YOUR PAST
FAILURES HAUNT YOU.
1.
Learn from your mistakes
Many successful
people have experienced some kind of failure--and they build on those lessons.
Learning to fail well means learning to understand your mistakes. In every
mistake there is a potential for growth. A world renowned innovator put it
succinctly, “I have not failed. I’ve just found out 10,000 ways that won’t
work”. Thomas Edison
2.
Spend more time practicing after failure
Practice makes
perfect! After failing at whichever endeavor you set your heart on to pursue,
don’t give up. Take the bull by the horn and tackle the problem again. Practice
till you get it right. No man could put it better than Winston Churchill,
“Success is walking from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm”.
Keep getting up
The worst part of human growth and development is to stay
down when you fall. The holy book puts it in no uncertain terms, “The godly may trip seven times, but they
will get up again. But one disaster is enough to overthrow the wicked.” –
Proverbs 24:16
Remember: “Falling down is part of life, getting up is
living”. Anonymous
Are you tempted to stay down because of a past failure?
Why not look failure in the face and thank it for coming your
way?
Nana Yaw Amo Broni

Brilliant piece. Thanks Broni
ReplyDeleteThanks. Any other contribution to the 3 steps outlined?
ReplyDeleteIt's insightful
ReplyDeleteThanks Rahman.
DeleteJeremiah 29:11
ReplyDeleteFor I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.
So definitely giving up is no option when failing but rather a stepping stone to raising and looking at things in a border perspective.
Keep writing Nana
Mo.