Failure of any kind is tough. Most people talk about how failure is
part of success and how you should continue with your efforts until you
succeed, but most don't talk about how to deal with failure when it
happens. Sometimes, the truth is it's not so easy to pick yourself up
and continue to try again, especially when you are just tired.
IT ACTUALLY REQUIRES EFFORT
That
sinking feeling that comes with failure, the consequence, the pain and
regret... none of them will go away unless you make a conscious effort
to make them go away. Make peace with the fact that you are going to
have to fight to be back on your 'A' game, if not failure will
permanently brand you with its scar - the scar of self-doubt.
Self-doubt
is a lack of confidence or reliability on one's own thoughts,
abilities, motives, actions, personality etc. No one should have to live
with such a scar; no one should give in to such a life. Self-doubt can
easily become the cause of every missed step in life. It steals dreams,
denies hope and assassinates faith, as someone once said. Be prepared to
fight to rise up from where failure threw you down and move forward.
DON'T PERSONALIZE IT
You
failed at something; it's not your failure, it's a failure. Learn to
detach the fact that you failed from your person, from who you are. The
fact is, failure is a part of life; nobody gets it right all the time.
In life you are going to fight many battles, willingly and unwillingly,
and you have to choose your battles and decide not to let the belief
that you are a failure because of certain times you failed, be one of
your battles. Understand that failure is a message to either 'try
again', 'try some other way' or 'try something else' and move on.
FIND THE HOLE THAT CAUSED YOUR FALL (LEARN YOUR LESSONS)
We
fail because there is something that should either have been done
better or should not have been done at all. In other words, there is a
sort of hole that needs to be filled.
Look back, no matter how
difficult it might be, revisit whatever you need to revisit, and try to
find the hole that caused your fall. There is always a reason for
failure; you only need to patiently find it. But make sure you don't do
this immediately, because thinking and rethinking about the fact that
you failed, replaying the events in your mind so soon especially when
you are still raw from the hurt, can be counter-productive. It might end
up leading you to depression and in more extreme cases, self-hatred and
suicidal thoughts.
So, wait before you reach this stage, make
sure you are relatively detached from the event to see it in a fairly
objective way so that you can get the truth. If third parties you can
get feedback from where involved, please venture to ask them questions
on the reason(s) for the failure. Ask questions (Why did I fail? Could I
have avoided it? What could I have done differently? What did I learn
from all that happened?), get the facts, understand why you failed and
learn.
MOVE ON
You have failed. Accept,
learn from it and move on. Give yourself time to make peace with the
fact, give yourself time to analyze all that happened as objectively as
you can and move on to the next thing or step. Don't dwell on it.
I
once read the story of a coach that gave his players 24 hours and not
an hour more, to feel the pain of every loss they had and joy of every
win as deeply as they could. After the traditional 24 hours were up, the
coach and his players continued the next day like nothing significant
happened. They had moved on to the next challenge and could not afford
to waste any energy on what was no longer relevant.
Remember,
failure is a message to either 'try again', 'try some other way' or 'try
something else'. Discern its exact message to you and move on.
Failure
of any kind is tough. Most people talk about how failure is part of
success and how you should continue with your efforts until you succeed,
but most don't talk about how to deal with failure when it happens.
Sometimes, the truth is it's not so easy to pick yourself up and
continue to try again, especially when you are just tired.
IT ACTUALLY REQUIRES EFFORT
That
sinking feeling that comes with failure, the consequence, the pain and
regret... none of them will go away unless you make a conscious effort
to make them go away. Make peace with the fact that you are going to
have to fight to be back on your 'A' game, if not failure will
permanently brand you with its scar - the scar of self-doubt.
Self-doubt
is a lack of confidence or reliability on one's own thoughts,
abilities, motives, actions, personality etc. No one should have to live
with such a scar; no one should give in to such a life. Self-doubt can
easily become the cause of every missed step in life. It steals dreams,
denies hope and assassinates faith, as someone once said. Be prepared to
fight to rise up from where failure threw you down and move forward.
DON'T PERSONALIZE IT
You
failed at something; it's not your failure, it's a failure. Learn to
detach the fact that you failed from your person, from who you are. The
fact is, failure is a part of life; nobody gets it right all the time.
In life you are going to fight many battles, willingly and unwillingly,
and you have to choose your battles and decide not to let the belief
that you are a failure because of certain times you failed, be one of
your battles. Understand that failure is a message to either 'try
again', 'try some other way' or 'try something else' and move on.
FIND THE HOLE THAT CAUSED YOUR FALL (LEARN YOUR LESSONS)
We
fail because there is something that should either have been done
better or should not have been done at all. In other words, there is a
sort of hole that needs to be filled.
Look back, no matter how
difficult it might be, revisit whatever you need to revisit, and try to
find the hole that caused your fall. There is always a reason for
failure; you only need to patiently find it. But make sure you don't do
this immediately, because thinking and rethinking about the fact that
you failed, replaying the events in your mind so soon especially when
you are still raw from the hurt, can be counter-productive. It might end
up leading you to depression and in more extreme cases, self-hatred and
suicidal thoughts.
So, wait before you reach this stage, make
sure you are relatively detached from the event to see it in a fairly
objective way so that you can get the truth. If third parties you can
get feedback from where involved, please venture to ask them questions
on the reason(s) for the failure. Ask questions (Why did I fail? Could I
have avoided it? What could I have done differently? What did I learn
from all that happened?), get the facts, understand why you failed and
learn.
MOVE ON
You have failed.
Accept, learn from it and move on. Give yourself time to make peace with
the fact, give yourself time to analyze all that happened as
objectively as you can and move on to the next thing or step. Don't
dwell on it.
I once read the story of a coach that gave his
players 24 hours and not an hour more, to feel the pain of every loss
they had and joy of every win as deeply as they could. After the
traditional 24 hours were up, the coach and his players continued the
next day like nothing significant happened. They had moved on to the
next challenge and could not afford to waste any energy on what was no
longer relevant.
Remember, failure is a message to either 'try
again', 'try some other way' or 'try something else'. Discern its exact
message to you and move on.
WAYS TO DEAL WITH FAILURE
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