Some of us, who do fail, never forget the defeat and it remains at the back of our mind somewhere. |
YOU FAILED. SO
WHAT ?
(Part I)
(Part I)
“In order to succeed you must fail, so
that you know what NOT to do the next time.”
~ Anthony D’Angelo
ailure’.
One single word with so many emotions entangled inside. Fear, Frustration,
Anguish, Regret, Shame and what not?!! I think this could be the toughest wor(l)d
to deal with. And nobody would like to get a tag of a failure or a loser in
his/ her life. Some of us, who do get the tag, never forget the defeat and it
remains somewhere at the back of our mind. This burden keeps upsetting us every
now and then. Sometimes it does feel too heavy to get it off our chest. Well, I
was quite impressed to hear Andy Murray, the 2013 Wimbledon champion pronouncing
his insight on failure during his post-match media briefing when he said,
‘Devdas in Banvaas’ could be cool to visit but it’s not so very cool place to stay. |
If truth be told, failure is the part and
parcel of life. Haven’t you experienced everybody fails at something in some
way or the other? And it’s not that easy to escape from. See a toddler and
watch him walk the very first time. He doesn’t start running from day one. He
tries and tries and tries and one day he walks his first baby steps after many
failed attempts. But in our case, as we grow up, we start taking our failures
way too seriously. And I think it's no
accident that we think this way. Sometimes even
the slightest tiff with the destiny appears the ‘be-all and end-all’. On the
flip side, these so called ‘failed souls’ disassociate themselves from others,
get isolated and start living in a ‘bitter-zone’. They become ‘Devdas in
Banvaas’ in no time. As if their life starts there and ends there only. Mind
you, ‘Devdas in Banvaas’ could be cool to visit but it’s not so very cool place to
stay.
Who said that life is all bouquets and
no brickbats? I want to tell you in very certain terms that it is no Yash
Chopra movie where everything seems rosy and looks picture perfect. Have I
never failed in my life? Not a chance! And when I recall I come to terms with
myself hitting the wall time and again. I have had my own share of ups and
downs in my life. I fell on my face so many times; I failed so many times, I
had so many sleepless nights. I know those experiences stayed with me for long
and sometimes even longer than required. And the pain continued to engulf me at
times. No doubt, life teaches everyone the hard way. And you feel the pinch.
That apart, my belief of never underestimating myself gave me enough power to
sail through the roughest times. That was my way of dealing with it and that’s
what kept me going. I admit that my pain, my scars, my wounds and my hurts
defined me as a person who I am today and shaped me for better (for sure).
Failure is not falling down but refusing to get up. |
Now let’s face it and be brutally honest.
Consider these reality bytes before branding your life a total disaster. Isaac
Newton was a wiz at math, but he did not excel when it came to other subjects.
He never thrived in school and when he was once put in charge of running the
family farm, he failed terribly. Albert Einstein didn’t speak until he was four
and didn’t read until he was seven. He was expelled from school as his teachers
said he would “never amount too much.” Walt Disney was fired from the Kansas
City Star in 1919 because, his editor said, he “lacked imagination and had no
original ideas.” And his first animation company Laugh-O-Gram went bankrupt in
1923. In 1972, Bill Gates launched Tarf-O-Data, but the company shut down soon.
At age 21, Steve Jobs co-founded Apple only to be fired. Narayana Murthy set up
Softronics in the late 1970s but the company got closed in a year. Long story
short, “Failure is not falling down but refusing to get up.”
If you really liked this blog post
and wish to share your experiences/ remarks/ views with me, you are most
welcome. Write to me at pdpbygauravmisra@gmail.com.