looking through me

Tag: words

failure?

My eyes skimmed the post until they caught these words: “Failure…implies an end. An end to trying. An end to worth.”[1]

I stopped.

My fear of failure is paralyzing. It threatens to sink me on my best days, and on my worst . . . on my worst it takes me places I should never go.

I re-read the words.

“Failure…implies an end. An end to trying. An end to worth.”

They took me back six years. I sat in a counselor’s office and choked out how I had failed and was failing. Then he handed me a piece of paper and a pen. His directions were simple: write down every single time I’d failed. Every academic failure. Every athletic failure. Every relational failure. Every professional failure. Every personal failure. Every one.

I fidgeted as I stared at the paper. In my head, there were only two categories: perfect and failure. I slapped the label of failure on anything I touched that didn’t end in unqualified success. I careened between success and utter failure with no room for landing in the wide middle of acceptable.

But there wasn’t much to write on the paper. I hadn’t stopped trying. I hadn’t lost my worth. I hadn’t failed.

I hadn’t failed.

It was a stunning realization.

Months later on a spring day I gave notice that I would not be returning to my job as an elementary school teacher, and as I submitted my paperwork I pictured a different paper: the list of my failures. And I knew this moment—this ending—was not a failure. It was an end to a season, yes. But my skewed perception of success and failure did not win. My worth was in tact. I signed my name to the form and felt freedom, not failure.

It’s been six years. My fear of failure shadows me every minute. But it’s easier to call it out as a fear—a possibility—not an inherent reality. And now when it crowds against my shoulder or slips its icy fingers around my heart I can counter it with these words—”Failure…implies an end. An end to trying. An end to worth.”—and I have a hunch I’ll find I’ve not reached the end.

The words aren’t magical. The piece of printer paper handed to me in a moment of crisis was just processed wood pulp. But together they put language and imagery to my internal struggle. They offer a filter through which to screen my labeling of life—or maybe they let me peel the hastily applied labels of failure off the imperfect moments.

The conversations that played out so differently in reality than in my head? Not failures.

The jobs I didn’t get? Not failures.

The degrees earned not directly applicable to my current position? Not failures.

The slow, slow process of figuring out what I have to offer, what my contribution to the world is?

Still in process, still trying. My worth is intact. I am not a failure.

 


 

[1] Mulder, S. (2014). The Success of Failure [Blog] That’s Me- Susan Mulder. Available at http://susanmulder.com/the-success-of-failure/ [Accessed 3 Nov. 2014].


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wildly good

“Wildly good.”

What would that term apply to in my life? A meal? A vacation? A dream? Or . . . it’s the phrase that popped into my head when prompted with “your past.”

My past? The one I think of as ho-hum, a little bit boring, a zigzag of non-sequitur jobs, a lot of investment and not much payoff—that past?

“Wildly good” is not a caption I would write for the life in my wake. But here it is screaming in neon across my frontal lobe.

Really?

I require context. It’s how I learn; it’s how I assess meaning; it’s how I make decisions; it’s how I assign worth. Yet I peer into my past and see a lack of cohesion. I see events and circumstances in isolation. I see a bunch of pieces and no indication they fit in the same puzzle except for the fact they are strewn across the table of my life. I see an absence of significance.

But I failed to notice my hands were so full of personal, historical minutiae I’d lost—or never found—the narrative thread. In looking back I latched onto the hard, the disappointing, the not quite moments, the desert sojourns; and I let them overwhelm the good, the exciting, the successful, the fun, the light. As a pessimist optimistically calling myself a realist I wrote off the positive as nothing special.

My past does include pain and frustration and deviated dreams; but it also includes an amazing family, a support network both widespread and tightly woven, three degrees with no debt, zip lining in a rain forest, holding my newborn nieces and nephew, walking the land Jesus walked, deep friendships, skydiving, investing in people, freedom to explore multiple career paths, resources with which to be generous, a well-stamped passport . . . an experientially and relationally rich life.

Putting the pieces in context is key.

In fact, with a little prompting, I’m realizing my life—my past, my present and my future—is wildly good.

 

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