Why Failure Is An Essential Ingredient Of Success

Successful people are usually well acquainted with failure. This is simply because successful people are triers, experimenters, optimists and they don't give up easily. They're not afraid of being first, of falling flat on their faces, making people laugh or crow.

Successful people are usually well acquainted with failure. This is simply because successful people are triers, experimenters, optimists and they don't give up easily. They're not afraid of being first, of falling flat on their faces, making people laugh or crow.

Swept along by an idea, we become excited, enthusiastic and before we know it we have jumped. We have embarked on whatever seemingly madcap scheme we are convinced is brilliant.

Our friends and family may roll their eyes, smile at us fondly, get exasperated, infuriated or plain bored. 'Oh, she's off again, fasten your seat belts!'

Yet the world needs agents for change, otherwise nothing improves, nothing is learned - we stultify. So here are my tips for getting over your fear of failure and making your (little or big) mark on the world:

1.Give it a go! You have a dream, an idea, a passion and it might just work - give it a go! Don't let fear of failure stop you. Nothing ventured nothing gained.

2.If you want your children, friends and work colleagues to succeed - then you must make it safe to fail. Tell them to try, it doesn't matter. If people are to win it must be safe to lose.

3.Competition is tough. There's often someone better, faster, cleverer, but that doesn't detract from the satisfaction of your personal best. The satisfaction of just having climbed Everest is amazing. However, even if you had to stop 1000 metres from the summit because you had altitude sickness - you have still climbed Everest. You have had that experience and that is not failure.

4.Laugh! Laugh lots, at yourself, your weaknesses and failures. If you laugh it doesn't hurt so much and guess what? Other people don't laugh at you. They secretly admire your courage and they won't laugh, I promise.

5.You fear snide comments, ridicule and loss of face. I know this is tough, you'd feel diminished, humiliated, embarrassed and stupid. Well don't! Such behaviour says far more about the attacker than it does about you.

6.Everyone loves a down-to-earth trier. Especially us Brits! Think Eddie the Eagle, or the cheers for the man who comes last in the marathon. It's the taking part, the massive effort we admire.

7.Detach your sense of identity from your endeavour. You have tried your best and failed by whatever measure you were using. You're still a brave, strong, positive power in the world. That gets a big tick and is not a failure of you. Your failed endeavour is just something you tried that didn't work out.

Ok so I expect you're wondering in what ways I have tried and failed. You want me to come clean so you can judge by what authority and personal knowledge I can say success and failure are two sides of the same coin.

I suppose it has been said by others that I'm a successful family lawyer and mediator, so I should not feel too squeamish about repeating that (though I do, feel squeamish that is). Several years ago, I realised family law could do with some improvement, so in the 1990s I became a mediator, set up Focus Mediation in 1999, which has grown and grown so that my main work has become mediation.

It turned out that it was the right decision and a big success for me - despite all those people who told me mediation would never catch on and was a waste of time. I followed my heart and ignored them. If I didn't try I wouldn't know would I?

I wrote a novel about one family's divorce. By any normal external measures such as how many books has it sold, it has failed, because it hasn't sold many copies really and has not yet been turned into a film (Yes, I know, in my dreams). However, many people have read it and raved about it and some clients found their way to me because of it.

My understanding of the psychology of family break-down and how best to manage it has grown. Can you hear how I'm thinking about this? By external book-world measures I have failed - I have not got a best-seller on my hands, but all is not lost, some good has definitely come of it.

I'm now thinking about my next book and my first concern isn't if it will be a bestseller. My priority is for the book to be a worthwhile, entertaining read. I don't know if it will be a success but I know that I'll enjoy the creative/ writing process and that I'll learn a lot along the way. This in itself is already a remarkable personal reward.

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