Failure
is the highway to success.
Tom Watson Sr. said, "If you want to succeed, double your failure
rate." If you study history, you will find that all stories of success are
also stories of great failures. But people don't see the failures. They only
see one side of the picture and they say that person got lucky: "He must
have been at the right place at the right time."
- Lee De Forest, inventor of the triodes tube, was charged by the district attorney for using fraudulent means to mislead the public into buying stocks of his company by claiming that he could transmit the human voice across the Atlantic. He was publicly humiliated. Can you imagine where we would be without his invention? A New York Times editorial on December 10, 1903, questioned the wisdom of the Wright Brothers who were trying to invent a machine, heavier than air, that would fly. One week later, at Kitty Hawk, the Wright Brothers took their famous flight.
- Colonel Sanders, at age 65, with a beat-up car and a $100 check from Social Security, realized he had to do something. He remembered his mother's recipe and went out selling. How many doors did he have to knock on before he got his first order? It is estimated that he had knocked on more than a thousand doors before he got his first order. How many of us quit after three tries, ten tries, a hundred tries, and then we say we tried as hard as we could? As a young cartoonist, Walt Disney faced many rejections from newspaper editors, who said he had no talent. One day a minister at a church hired him to draw some cartoons. Disney was working out of a small mouse infested shed near the church. After seeing a small mouse, he was inspired. That was the start of Mickey Mouse.
Successful
people don't do great things, they only do small things in a great way.
- One day a partially deaf four year old kid came home with a note in his pocket from his teacher, "Your Tommy is too stupid to learn, get him out of the school." His mother read the note and answered, "My Tommy is not stupid to learn, I will teach him myself." And that Tommy grew up to be the great Thomas Edison. Thomas Edison had only three months of formal schooling and he was partially deaf.
- Henry Ford forgot to put the reverse gear in the first car he made.
Do you consider these people failures? They succeeded in
spite of problems, not in the absence of them. But to the outside world, it
appears as though they just got lucky. All success stories are stories of great
failures. The only difference is that every time they failed, they bounced
back. This is called failing forward, rather than backward. You learn and move
forward. Learn from your failure and keep moving. In 1914, Thomas Edison, at
age 67, lost his factory, which was worth a few million dollars, to fire. It
had very little insurance. No longer a young man, Edison watched his lifetime
effort go up in smoke and said, "There is great value in disaster. All our
mistakes are burnt up. Thank God we can start anew." In spite of disaster,
three weeks later, he invented the phonograph. What an attitude! Below are more
examples of the failures of successful people:
1. Thomas Edison failed
approximately 10,000 times while he was working on the light bulb. 2. Henry
Ford was broke at the age of 40.
3. Lee Iacocca was fired by Henry Ford II at
the age of 54.
4. Young Beethoven was told that he had no talent for music, but
he gave some of the best music to the world.
Setbacks are inevitable in life. A
setback can act as a driving force and also teach us humility. In grief you
will find courage and faith to overcome the setback. We need to learn to become
victors, not victims. Fear and doubt short-circuit the mind. Ask yourself after
every setback: What did I learn from this experience? Only then will you be
able to turn a stumbling block into a stepping stone. IF YOU THINK If you think
you are beaten, you are.
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