“I am not concerned that you have fallen. I am concerned that you arise.” —Abraham Lincoln
Life is never, always a comedy. At times, it is tragedy.
Life is experienced as a constant, never-ending shift between successes and failures—sometimes occurring within moments of one another. To be human is to fail. We know this to be true from personal experience.
We experience hardship both because of our faults and because of the faults of others.
We fail in the small things: staying on a diet, running a 5k, keeping a New Year’s resolution, or controlling clutter in our homes. We fail in the larger things: overcoming an addiction, finding employment, or holding on to an important relationship. And sometimes our failures negatively impact the rest of our lives: keeping a marriage together, persuading a child to make better choices, or overcoming a lifetime of debt.
But in each setback—whether small or large—we find opportunity for growth. And as long as a glimmer of hope remains, so do we.
Some of the most influential people in my life have cemented their legacy through their failures. This should come as no surprise. After all, some of the most inspirational stories ever written (or lived) center on personal triumph over weakness or loss. As one screen writer once told me, “If the hero in your story does not experience tragedy, the audience will never relate to him or her.”
Failure is a necessary part of life. We would be wise to allow it to change us and shape us. How then, can each of us redeem failure for good?
An Encouraging Guide to Overcoming Failure
1. We admit that we experience it. Despite the universality of failure, our world goes to great lengths to hide it. People always have and people always will. Our default position too often is to downplay our weaknesses, but those who find growth in failure begin by simply admitting its existence in their lives.
2. We recognize failure is common. And because we know all experience it, we find comfort knowing we are not alone in it.
3. We look for personal responsibility. Our initial tendency is often to blame others or uncontrollable, external factors. After all, to admit defeat is to admit defeat. But rarely are the failures in our lives entirely the responsibility of someone else. And until we take personal responsibility in some capacity, we can never move on to the next step.
4. We process our weakness. Socrates once said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” This holds true in both success and failure. When failure occurs, which it always will, the wisest of us journey inward to determine the cause and intentional steps we can take to learn from the experience. And in time, we learn to champion humility.
5. We let go of the factors outside our control. One of the most hope-filled moments in life is when we find the courage to let go of what we cannot change.
6. We grow through pain. We live in a society passionately committed to avoiding pain. But there is benefit to be found in discomfort. While I would never encourage anybody to intentionally seek pain through failure, it will arise. And when it does, it will be okay. In fact, it will teach us things we could never learn elsewhere: patience and perseverance for example.
7. We forgive. If our pain is partly a result of someone else’s failures, we find freedom in forgiveness.
8. We turn to others. Nobody successfully navigates life alone. When the hope inside us begins to fade, we look for it in others. We turn to family. If family is not available, we turn to friends. And if friends are not available, we look for intentional communities around us to find support.
9. And then, we share our stories. It may not happen right away—some failures take longer to process than others. But eventually, we find opportunity to share our story. When we do, we share it with honesty and humility. Through it, we discover opportunity to provide hope, strength, and encouragement to others. We find influence for good. And we begin to make sense of our failings.
Failure is never the end. It is instead, a necessary part of the journey. May we keep hope alive. And find redemption through it.
Thanks,helpful to me
Tnxxx for the tips to given Me many time I face failure after I blame others and I feel like I’m useless now I get energy what I learned free to failure one day bring success
I am in the process of writing a book about the loss of our 37-year old son and would request permission to use a portion of this article.
Sure.
THE SERENITY PARY GOD GRANT ME THE SERENITY TO ACCEPT THE THINGS I CANNOT CHANGE,THE COURAGE TO CHANAGE THE THINGS I CAN AND THE WISDOM TO KNOW THE DIFFERENCE.
I find the older I get, the easier it becomes to admit and accept my faults and failures. I learn so much about myself and find I am beginning to like and accept who I am more and more through the process. Very well written. You are my new morning coffee read!!
I think at this time of year while the world is taking steps towards freshly minted goals, some of us are reflecting on those moments where failure was part of the previous year (I am). Sometimes I wish for a reset button–to go back and have a do-over–to magically be perfect in my past. Except, the beautiful failure is what makes me understand myself and others better–resetting would be forgetting what has been learned. Thank you for the gentle reminder that those failures are how we are broken and made stronger.
It’s also important to forgive yourself, if you’re the one that messes up big and gets yourself in trouble. That’s the hardest part for me. I tend to just try to move on as fast as possible, I’m not sure I’ve ever managed to truly forgive myself. Hmm.
this is the biggest bunch of BS. there’s only failure because of the absolutely sick and irrational ideas we have for success. no one is a failure…we’re just trying to get through life and stuff like this drivel just keeps us tied in knots over absolutely nothing.
hi joshua!
as you have given part of your life to us to share all these stuff, i would like to take a moment to say thank you!
after reading what you have shared yesterday about perfectionism, its like god opened my eyes and help me see through what has been holding me back all this while. Its really liberating to finally see and accept the fact that perfectionism is truly about fear.
and guess what joshua, i started my very first blog in my life!!! i have been thinking about writing all these years, but not until yesterday, i suddenly got the urge to write and make it happen right away.
All these years, i have been waiting and wishing away lives, not until yesterday. Tqso very much!!!!!
you have made a life breakthrough possible!!!!
i have been following your blog since October last year, my journey of becoming a minimalist has been amazing.
Thx and God bless you and your family!
This is a beautiful and hopeful way to see our failures, as part of the process, not the end of the process. Thanks.
I just needed to let you know today how helpful I found this post yesterday. So inspiring, and so true. I linked it to my blog youllsoonbeflying.com so that your message may continue to grow. It’s one worth passing along in these times of over-abundant demands, with an illogical presumption of our capacity for fulfilling them all. Failure is important. Its growth. Thanks for the great read!