We usually define “success” as achieving some sort of goal. A sports team wins a competition. A job search results in an offer from the company of our choice. A contest awards a prize. And life in general, we gain more money or a bigger house or greater fame than others.
I’m starting to realize that I’ve learned the most from projects that I initially labeled as “failures.” This perspective probably is grounded in the decades I’ve spent trying to get published. I wanted to be a writer since I was ten years old. For about 30 years, I slowly but steadily published articles, nonfiction pieces in a variety of local and regional outlets, capped by a how-to book about recruiting and managing volunteers in libraries. Hardly the stuff of a Pulitzer or National Book Award. Since I always wanted to publish fiction, if I’d been asked about my writing success during those years, I would have rated myself as a failure.
At the same time I usually held down a full-time job in communications and public relations. It was during some stints writing applications for grants, then evaluating projects based on the final criteria, that I realized the expectation always was that we’d achieve every objective we’d listed in the original proposal. That defined “success.” This wasn’t always possible or even desirable. Surely if the people involved in the project learned about impacts, that was more important that claiming we’d met objectives. An example—if we hosted an art workshop for kids, and our objective was for each child to create three clay pots, surely it was more important that we leaned those children preferred paints to clay than that every child made his allotted number.
Evaluations with goals and objectives also are common in work plans. In fact as a government employee, I became accustomed to dreaming up annual evaluation methods, which usually changed according to agency fiat every few years, ungrounded in any kind of reality. And again, I seemed to learn more from ostensible “failures” than successes.
This same approach can be applied to raising children. Before mine were well launched into adolescence, I agreed with the theory that good parenting showed up in children who never got in trouble and did well in school. My eyes were opened to the independence of a young human when one of mine always had to learn the hard way. If my sole criterion had been my original standards, I would have written off the parent-child relationship as irretrievably broken. Fortunately I held on and realized both of us had learned and grown through the ill-defined “failure.”
Bob Dylan wrote, “There’s no success like failure. . .failure’s no success at all.” I’m inclined nowadays to apply this Zen-like approach. Arbitrary standards for success may be applied by others, but as the person on my own voyage through life, I’m trying to enjoy and learn from the process, not the result. Perhaps others can benefit from this perspective, too.
I write a comment when I especially enjoy a article on a website
or if I have something to contribute to the conversation.
Usually it is triggered by the fire communicated in the post I read.
And after this article Have we been fooling ourselves all these
years? Failure may hold more meaning and value than success because we learn more from it.
| Bonnie McCune, author. I was excited enough to drop a comment 😉 I do have some questions for you if it’s okay.
Could it be just me or does it seem like a few of the responses appear
as if they are left by brain dead people?
😛 And, if you are writing on other social sites, I’d like
to keep up with you. Would you list all of
your community pages like your Facebook page, twitter feed, or linkedin profile?
Thanks for your interest. I’m a complete novice when it comes to social networks; my Twitter and LinKed In comments are just bits from my blog. You’ll find an email address on my website if you want to chat further.
Good and refreshing perspective, Bonnie. Thanks!
I write a comment when I especially enjoy a article on a website
or if I have something to contribute to the conversation.
Usually it is triggered by the fire communicated in the post I read.
And after this article Have we been fooling ourselves all these
years? Failure may hold more meaning and value than success because we learn more from it.
| Bonnie McCune, author. I was excited enough to drop a comment 😉 I do have some questions for you if it’s okay.
Could it be just me or does it seem like a few of the responses appear
as if they are left by brain dead people?
😛 And, if you are writing on other social sites, I’d like
to keep up with you. Would you list all of
your community pages like your Facebook page, twitter feed, or linkedin profile?
Thanks for your interest. I’m a complete novice when it comes to social networks; my Twitter and LinKed In comments are just bits from my blog. You’ll find an email address on my website if you want to chat further.