Failing to Grow
A few weeks ago, I had a wonderful conversation with my eldest son. 
During the course of our discussion, he made two comments in relation to life and career:
If you are unwilling to experience discomfort, you will not experience success.
and
It’s okay if I keep failing as a result of trying to grow.
Since our chat, I’ve thought a lot about that conversation and the wisdom of those two statements. I think they apply to life in general, but I’ve specifically thought about them in regard to my writing career.
Sometimes, I must really push myself outside of my area of comfort in order to find get to the place I really want to be. With trepidation I pressed myself to:
- write my first book
- approach publishers
- attend writer’s conferences
- start a blog
- join Twitter
- write a second book
- have my work critiqued (several times)
- submit proposals
- re-write both books numerous times
- entered contests
- learn, practice, learn more, practice again
- write articles
- seed out the advice of established authors
- attend a mentoring class
- read a lot (okay, so that part is fun)
For some people, those things may be easy. For others, the same activities may feel impossible. Looking back on the journey, I see that I am becoming more successful as I am willing to be uncomfortable. Because we’re only uncomfortable for a little while, until we try, learn and become comfortable again with our new knowledge or abilities.
And even though I’ve failed a lot doing the above things, I’ve been growing. So the failure is part of the process and actually something to be embraced, not avoided.
I want to see my life in the same light.
Pushing outside my comfort zone, trying, failing, learning, failing, and growing.
Thanks for sharing, Josh. I love you.
What makes you uncomfortable? Where have you found growth in failing?