DON'T LET FAILURE GO TO
YOUR HEAD
I watched as an 8-year-old All-Star slid dramatically into second base.
Yet the umpire gave the dreaded signal, “Out!” The crowd yelled,
“That’s OK. Way to hustle! Great try!”
Another
little fellow swings the bat with all the power he can muster…three
times without hitting the ball. Each time, the fans encouraged, “Good
swing! Now just pick out a good one and make contact! Watch it over.
You can do it!” Then the strike-out. “That’s OK, man. Next time.”
I
eavesdroppped as one of the coaches talked to my grandson Joseph’s team,
who had just lost their second in the double elimination tournament.
“We have nothing to be ashamed of. You guys played hard and you played
well. The other team just played a little better this time. You’re
gonna keep practicing and next year, you’ll come back and you’ll be
great!”
I was
impressed as Steven, another coach, modeled for his young protégés the
responsibility he was trying to teach. In front of the whole team, he
apologized to Adam for his own mistake in signaling the boy to run on to
third base in a play that resulted in an out. He didn’t want the young
man to blame himself for something that wasn’t his fault.
Maybe
you’re thinking, “Of course, we tell them those things. We don’t want
them to get discouraged. We want them to keep trying and not give up.”
Exactly.
We
instinctively know what we need to do the keep these little guys
motivated and encouraged.
(Most of
us, that is. Unfortunately, in the last few years of attending these
games, I have heard occasionally heard some children being subjected to
loud, harsh criticism from insensitive parents. I admit I was savoring
the idea of punching them out when I was deterred by picturing the next
day’s headlines in the Hattiesburg American!)
HOW DO
YOU TALK TO YOURSELF?
You know
how to encourage others. But do you do as well with yourself? Do you
know how to keep yourself encouraged in the face of failure and
setbacks? Take this short quiz.
1.
When you make a mistake, do you ever talk to yourself harshly and
judgmentally, like this? “You idiot! Can’t you do anything right? You
should have known better.”
Think
about it. What if you had a spouse or a boss that talked to you this
way? How would this affect your performance? Your morale? Your
confidence?
Why not
use more encouraging words to yourself, like the fans to the Little
Leaguers? Talk to yourself about the effort you made, the little ways
that your most recent try showed improvement over the last, and the
things you learned from the failed attempt.
2.
Do you ever generalize from a specific performance failure to seeing
yourself as a general failure?
In other
words, you didn’t fail that test. You’re a failure as a student. You
didn’t lose that contract. You’re a dud as a salesperson.
Change
that! Talk to yourself about the specific situation. Don’t
overgeneralize.
3.
When you don’t accomplish what you had hoped, do you tell yourself,
“This is always the way it is for me?”
In other
words, do you view the failure as a never-ending pattern?
Challenge that hope-robbing perspective. If you are to keep hope and
keep trying, you must see your failures as temporary. Get to work and
find out how you can do better next time.
4.
Do you make yourself responsible for things over which you have no
control?
Recognize your human limits. Others make their own choices about what
they do, despite your best efforts. There are very real conditions that
impact your success at a task, no matter how skillfully and diligently
you try. Take responsibility for doing your best, but be realistic about
what you can control and what you can’t.
BE YOUR
BEST FRIEND
If you
have trouble changing the habit of talking negatively to yourself,
here’s
another
tool you can use. Imagine that your best friend were telling you about
the situation you’re in, and that the words being used were
self-berating…like yours. What would you say to him or her? How would
you encourage him or her to find the best in the situation and keep
trying?
See…you
do know how to do it. Now, do that for yourself.
If you
aren’t your own best friend, who will be?
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