How To Transform Failure Into Success

10 Responses to “How To Transform Failure Into Success”

Comments

  1. Staci, this is pure gold. How did you whip this up so fast after our talk? You’re amazing. Regroup, Review, Redesign, Relaunch…and Repeat. Brilliant!

    It’s our damn ego that gets in the way, saying “This shouldn’t have happened.” And then making up stories about what that means about us and our lives. If we can be lighter about it — not taking it personally — we can move forward. I’d say this post AND YOU are a smashing success!

  2. Sue says:

    Thank so much for your article on Failure….it was just want I need to read as I had a “fail” recently and it knocked the wind out of me. Thank you for your inspiring words and giving me a foundation to dust myself off and start again, and again, and again.

  3. rfwilkins says:

    Great read. You summed up so many things and put it all together in 4 easy to remember steps. You could read a few help books and not get it as simple as this. Thanks Staci.

    You can always achieve, what ever your mind can conceive and believe.—rfw

  4. Thanks for your comments! We have to remember not to quit. Life, joy, happiness are sciences. You try a thing, it works, or doesn’t. If it doesn’t make some tweaks and test it again. The key is not to take it personally or let the “didn’t work” events cause us to quit.

    Dream it, plan it, do it!!

  5. Lisa Ellwood says:

    This brings to mind comments that I’ve had in my previous incarnation as a Freelancer – people making backhanded comments about how *maybe one day you’ll be successful*. In their eyes, my life was nothing but failure – even though I earned a good living, worked hard and was a decent friend and colleague. Even in the corporate world having a … See morepermanent job – I was *just* a Junior Manager on a *minor* team. No matter how hard I worked or how much I moved up the ladder – it still wasn’t enough to be considered successful. Strange…

    Success takes many forms and it’s not about being the biggest and/or the best and having it all. More power to the people who measure success by how big their bank balance is, the *ideal* trophy partner, high powered job, high maintenance lifestyle… you get the picture. Values and standards are important – but it seems to me too many of us value the wrong things and put a lot of unnecessary pressure on ourselves and other people.

  6. Doing what we love and having people that we love is success. Anything above and beyond is gravy…

  7. I agree Staci..Beautifully put..

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