“Develop
success from failures. Discouragement and failure are two of the surest
stepping stones to success.” –Dale Carnegie
The master of public speaking and communication and the
author of, “How to Win Friends and Influence People,” Dale Carnegie is another
example of someone who experienced great success in his work.
Carnegie stresses that you must experience discouragement and
failure in your life in order to find success. He believed that through
examining your experiences of failures, you can gain the knowledge that will
propel you to success.
How to Apply Dale Carnegie’s Tip to Your Life
Instead of fearing failures and trying to avoid thinking
about how you failed at something, look closely at your mistakes. You’ll surely
learn how to avoid those mistakes in the future. Even your feelings of discouragement
will eventually lead you down the path of success as you seek more positive
outcomes.
Try this process to help you use your failures as stepping
stones to success:
Ask yourself why something didn’t work. If you can figure out
a probable reason, you can avoid the same process as you try new ideas that
might work. Or if you’re developing a skill for your goal, you may decide that
you just need more practice to fine-tune your skill.
Come up with a new strategy. Brainstorm ideas for new ways to
approach your current challenge or get back on track toward your goal.
Try out your new idea right away. “Jumping back on the horse”
will keep you moving toward your goal and allow you to avoid wasting time bemoaning
your setback. If you let too much time pass before you continue on, your
motivation could wane as you wallow in your misery.
Repeat this process if your new idea doesn’t work. There’s no
shame in trying an idea that doesn’t achieve the goal. If your idea doesn’t
work, learn from it and move on.
Consider your failures as an important education in what it
takes to achieve. Whether you learn to stop doing something or that perhaps you
should have done something differently, examine your failures and feelings of
discouragement. Use them productively to then build your fact base for success.
Put your failure to good use; learn from it so you can
continue on your path to excellence.
Above all, remember that the only way you can really fail is
to give up. As long as you’re still working toward your goal, you haven’t
failed in your quest. Failures along the way just let you know how not to do something.
Your next idea may be just the one that brings you success!
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