Thursday, April 4, 2013

Forward Failure


"Failure is a detour, not a dead-end street." - Zig Ziglar


Failure is the greatest teacher that I have ever had in my life. I've learned more through my mistakes than I ever have through successes. This has been chronicled in several posts detailing mudder, leadership, and education failures.  One of the people I admire and read about often is Abraham Lincoln. Failure was a critical component to Lincoln's success. Here is a short list of the failures that helped him move forward.

  • He failed as a businessman - as a storekeeper.
  • He failed as a farmer - he despised this work.
  • He failed in his first attempt to obtain political office.
  • When elected to the legislature he failed when he sought the office of speaker.
  • He failed in his first attempt to go to Congress.
  • He failed when he sought the appointment to the United States Land Office.
  • He failed when he ran for the United States Senate.
  • He failed when friends sought for him the nomination for the vice-presidency in 1856.
Each one of these failures helped him move forward on his journey towards greatness. The most important thing I can do as a leader is to cultivate a culture of risk-taking and forward failure. This is the culture necessary to help students and teachers move outside of filling in bubbles sheets and into the world of problem solving, critical thinking, and creating new products/projects.

Lincoln is not the only prominent failure that exists in history. The video below shows several more. Keep in mind that Edison failed thousands of times before he revolutionized the world with his invention. Our students hold the key to the next great idea. We cannot continue to try to solve today's problems with yesterday's answers. We need to set up the environment that fosters the surfacing of that idea.  How are you cultivating a culture of "Forward Failure" in your work? 



We are two weeks away from the "Mid-Atlantic Mudder" in West Virginia.  This will be a  new course and we are bringing back a familiar teammate for this challenge.  There will be a fair amount of failure on the course for sure.  We'll have the opportunity to run it on both Saturday and Sunday again.  The failures on this course will certainly fuel the training for our hometown "Virginia Beach Mudder".



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