SHARED
FROM:
StarMetro,
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Sight
& Sounds by Xandra Ooi
COMING
BACK STRONGER
It doesn’t
matter how many times you make mistakes in your life,
What
matters is how you learn from it.
Mistakes
are perfectly fine and, in many ways, beneficial, as long as we take note to
not repeat the same mistakes. The
problem with mistakes isn’t the mistake itself, it is in the way we handle it
immediately after. Perfection isn’t
something we seek, because there’s little growth nor innovation in never
learning anything new.
The
way we view mistakes has to be predetermined, before mistakes happen. Our mindset governs the way we react to
mistakes. The other problem with
mistakes is that it can be disastrous if there is no post mortem, reflection or
an analyzation on how to avoid to making the same mistakes in the near future
or ever again.
We
all know not to cry over spilt milk yet perhaps it might not be so elementary
when we see adults not handling spilt milk well. Some would stand there and swear and
curse. Some would wring their hands in
dismay and stare at the mess in distress.
Some would quickly clear up the mess and pour another glass of milk, all
the while noting to be more mindful in the kitchen.
Mistakes
aren’t pleasant when they happen and often inconvenience or affect other people
as well. But it’s important to
acknowledge that nobody intentionally sets out to make a mistake. So, it is highly unproductive to simply be
furious at an employee for making a mistake in the workplace. Yelling at someone does not make them reflect
or analyse, it simple freezes the brain, leaving them unable to pick up the
ball.
Brushing
off a mistake is different from acknowledging it calmly with a solution at
hand. There is little or no excuse in
making the same mistakes over and over again as it goes beyond carelessness. No matter how bad we are at something, there
is always something we can do to improve it.
Acknowledging our mistakes in the present and working on not making them
again in the future is when we turn every mistake into an opportunity.
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