There's a tendency in our culture to only talk about our successes and the things we do right.
So when we do something wrong, or something doesn't work the way we planned, it's a whole lot easier to just sweep it under the rug and never talk about it again. We all want to be winners--and that's why we try to forget our failures and say that they do not define us.
But what if they do? What if our failures are one of the most important parts of who we are?
The fact is, if you pride yourself only on being a winner, you'll never embrace failure - and that means you'll never take a risk. And if you have no tolerance for risk, you'll never venture off the well-beaten path that everyone else takes. Which (of course) means you'll never have any amazing, improbably successes either!
Failure isn't something to be ashamed of. When we fail, it means we tried to do something that was too hard. It means we stretched our bodies and minds beyond their original dimensions.
We should actually be proud of our failures... especially as innovators.
The fact is, only boring, incremental innovation can happen without risk. And those who innovate in the smallest possible increments are swallowed alive by the people who throw their heart and soul into something that could fail miserably.
All new ideas that take the world by storm are risky. All paradigm-changing innovations happened because someone decided to face failure.
So, when was the last time you failed? And how are you risking failure right now? Can you answer those questions?
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