This is a partial re-posting from a blog I subscribe to & LOVE by Kristen Lamb...Failure–The Key Ingredient to the Successful Writing Careerby Author Kristen Lamb |
Today,
we are going to talk a bit about failure. All writers who dare to dream seem to
have this same fear–FAILURE. It can seem larger than life and everything fades
away in the face of this looming beast. I want to let you in on a little secret.
For many years I was the best, the Big Kahuna, the Big Gal on Campus. I was
positively THE most successful person…at failing.
A
little about me…
I
was a high school drop out at the age of 15, then again at 16. I worked as a
waitress, but, to tell the truth, I was a really bad waitress. I lost my job and
returned to school. I finally graduated high school at the age of 19. No one
figured I would make much out of my life since it’s highly likely I graduated
last in my class. I think by the time you get a GPA as low as mine was, I think
they just start listing you alphabetically.
I
came from a military family, so I decided to enlist in the Army…only I got sick
in the middle of the physical and failed. Doc gave me a medical disqualification
(DQ).
Great.
So,
I dusted myself off and attended junior college. I figured I’d go to school and
try the Navy. I come from a family of Squids, so that wasn’t so bad. I put in
all my paperwork…then they found out about the Army. Sigh. Apparently a medical
DQ lasted two years.
No
Navy for me.
Back
to the drawing board (school). I knew the medical DQ would run out, so I worked
really hard and ended up winning a full military scholarship to become a doctor.
I didn’t really want to become a doctor, but this was the best scholarship and I
was broke, ergo not picky. I transferred to T.C.U. and began pre-med. I swore in
to the Air Force (yes, I made my rounds of all the branches) and pledged my life
to serving my country as a future military doctor.
Two
years in, I was a shining scholar with a 3.79 average. Then, in March of 1995,
Fort Worth was hit with an ice storm and T.C.U. refused to cancel classes. On my
way to class, I slipped and fell and hit my lower back on a concrete curb…and
fractured it.
Bye,
bye military. Bye-bye scholarship. Bye-bye medical school.
I
returned to school a semester later. I had to use a cane for eight months as my
back healed, and there was no such thing as handicapped access to anything in
those days. It seemed every class I had signed up for was on the third floor,
too. But I did my best and took it one class at a time.
I
didn’t want to be a doctor if the DoD wasn’t picking up the tab. Didn’t have the
money. So I changed majors because I could no longer afford to be on a medical
track. This was all well and good except that it set me back. Instead of being a
junior, I was back to being a sophomore.
Felt
a little like high school.
But,
I had changed degrees and really loved political economy. I studied the Middle
East and North Africa and felt I could make a difference. So you can imagine my
excitement when I was asked to help with a business development project in
Syria. I would live in the Yarmouk Camp (a refugee camp in Syria) and help
modernize a paper facility.
Well,
that was the plan at least.
The
day after graduation I hopped on a plane. I was full of hope, dreams and
passion, and just knew I would make a difference. I would knock this project out
of the park and it would look SO awesome on my grad school application (I was
applying for a special doctorate program).
Yeah….um,
no.
It
was a great experience but pretty much a huge failure. No matter what we tried,
we hit a wall of bureaucratic red tape and corruption. I came back to the States
and gave up on grad school. The hallowed halls of academia were too far removed
from reality, and I realized it was no longer for me.
I
went to work in software sales and then paper sales and was dismal at both. I
was a hard worker. I worked harder than anyone else, but it always seemed that I
was in the wrong place at the wrong time and the competition was eating me
alive. Thus, it was only a matter of time before my position—and me—would be
eliminated.
I
failed at high school, failed at the military, failed to become a doctor or a
professor and now I was quite possibly THE worst salesperson on the planet.
…and
I wouldn’t trade one minute of it.
My
failures taught me far more than success ever did. Many of you reading this are
terrified of failure. I want to let you in on a little secret–Failure is not the
end. Failure is a teacher. It will guide you to who you should be. Too often we
give failure too much power. We think it is the end, when in reality it is
training us for a better future. What if I HAD been successful? What if I was
now a military flight surgeon? I wouldn’t be doing what I love and I wouldn’t be
here to help you guys, to let you know it isn’t as bad as you might think.
If
we aren't failing, then we aren't doing anything interesting.
Failing
in school taught me to keep pressing on, even when that meant being embarassed.
It was humiliating being a 19 year-old in an English class full of 14
year-olds.
Failing
at the military taught me that some doors shut for very good reasons. Sometimes
our prayers are answered, it’s just the answer happens to be “no.”
Failing
in Syria taught me discernment. I jumped into a project before I thought it out
fully. I wouldn’t trade the experience for all the gold in the world, but the
project was doomed from the start. I should have done more research and planned
better. But it prepared me for a future that I never could have envisioned at
the time (for those who are curious, read this post Amazon--Beware of Greeks Bearing Gifts).
Failing
at sales taught me that trying to do everything myself was a formula for
disaster. It taught me to form teams and that relationships are the most
important possession we have. When I was in sales, I didn’t want to bother other
people and I tried to do too much on my own. My failure was the end result of an
inability to delegate and form a team I could depend upon.
I
now understand that any success I enjoy is not because of ME, because I am
anything special. It is because of opportunities, blessings and support granted
me from other people.
Our
success is only a culmination of a lot of team support. There are
no self-made best-sellers.
We
can’t do this alone.
Failure
is scary, but failure is priceless to the person who can embrace it. Failure
should be rewarded because it means we are taking a risk. Show me a person who
has never failed, and I will show you a person who's never tried anything
remarkable. Nothing great was ever created in the comfort zone. Sure there are
people who seem to succeed at everything they do, but the Midas Touch is not the
norm (and most of us find those people annoying, anyway). I don't know about
you, but I want to learn from great people who failed yet pressed on and
succeeded despite setbacks. I want to learn about creating wealth from Donald
Trump, not the latest lottery winner.
Many
of you who read my blogs want to be successful writers. If I can give you any
advice, it is to learn to embrace failure. When we are in the middle of the
storm, it is hard to see the bigger picture. It is tough to see how these
setbacks and disappointment might actually be shaping a more brilliant future
than we can ever imagine.
When
I was a little girl I dreamed of being a famous writer and teacher, but I was
told that was a foolish dream. So I traded in that dream for more practical
dreams—a military career, becoming a doctor, sales. And you know what? I thank
God every day that I failed at everything I ever tried because eventually I
failed so much I no longer feared it, and THAT is when success started coming my
way.
I
took bigger and bigger risks and was more willing to throw my heart and all my
passions into something because I finally understood failure never meant the
end…it just meant the beginning of something new and I would be stronger for
it.
The
strongest blades are forged in the hottest fires. Adversity is the fire that
removes the impurities in our character. Failure is the forge that
creates excellence. One of the strongest forms of steel in the world is
Damascus steel. Damascus steel is fired, folded and hammered hundreds of times,
and it is this fiery brutal birth that makes it so strong. What
about you? Are you a failure, or are you on your way to being Damascus
steel?
(For the rest of the blog post, click here-Kristen Lamb.)
No comments:
Post a Comment
NOTE: All comments will be reviewed before posting. This is due to SPAMMERS!