Failing to Win

All serious daring starts from within.

-Eudora Welty

Many kids attend some type of leadership training when they are in junior high or high school or college.  I always loved these retreats. In the dictionary, it says to lead is to be “in command” or “to guide someone or take someone somewhere”.

Does the “where” have to be physical?

Does the leading have to be linked to accomplishment and success?

Think of Jesus.  He was a leader.  He led us to the cross.  Hmmm…success?  Now we know the rest of the story but if we didn’t know about Easter, was He a failure or a success in life?  What about Martin Luther King?  He led us to turmoil and conflict and he was murdered.  Success?  Of course, now we know his legacy but do you think he was familiar with failure?

The dictionary didn’t say where you were leading someone…it didn’t say you are leading them to climb the mountain or to win the race or to be loved by everyone.  It said you are leading them somewhere.  Can that somewhere be intellectual or emotional or spiritual?

When I think of great leaders in my life, I don’t immediately go to junior high basketball coach.  Our society tends to focus on sports and many leaders are born on the field or in the gym, no doubt.  Politics comes up when we think of leadership too and the military and business.  But I want to talk about a different kind of leader.

I want to talk about teachers.  After all, we are all teachers.  We teach by example every day.

I remember hearing a quote once that a doctor has the ability to save a life one person at a time but a teacher has the chance to save 30 lives at a time.  If they have the power to save lives, what else do they have the power to do?   Really.  It’s that serious.

I had an amazing teacher in 4th grade.  He was demanding and funny and creative and kind.  He taught 3rd, 4th and 5th grades together and he pushed all sorts of limits.  It was the 70’s so you can imagine, we were trying all kinds of experimental things including, school meetings in the new “pod” which was really groovy.  He was especially cool to the kids.  He made a little clay figure like “Mr. Bill” on Saturday Night Live and “Mr. Bill” would have all sorts of classroom adventures.  He loved to read to us out loud even though we could read ourselves. One time, he read The Amityville Horror to us (so scary!).   He was always cutting edge and unique and out of the box.  I’m sure he was pushing the administrator’s buttons constantly.  He sang, he danced, and he laughed a lot.  I can imagine him laughing now.  He was engaged.  He loved learning and he loved teaching.  He made school come alive for me and for many other kids.

On my first test in his class, I got an F…a  32%.  I was devastated.  I had never gotten anything other than an A. I was crying.  I will never forget what he said to me.  He got on his knees in front of my little chair and he looked right into my eyes.  He said, “I would rather have you get all F’s and be challenged than have you get A’s for the rest of your life and never be challenged.”

He was a leader.  And he developed his students into leaders.

Because of his words, I am not afraid of an F.  I am not afraid of something not working out.  I’m not afraid to try.  I’m not saying I still don’t cry sometimes when I fail, I just know it will be okay.    I’m not saying I don’t hesitate sometimes or second guess myself but I don’t let fear get the best of me.  He led me to acceptance and courage and confidence.  I’m not afraid to ask questions or embarrassed when I don’t know because I realize that’s how I learn.  I think this came from my experience with him.  With each failing try in my life, I have learned something.

I recently heard Kelly Corrigan (LOVE HER!)  give a graduation speech and she told the graduates that in life, it’s not about not failing, it’s about “failing better next time”.

Are we concerned more with the A than with the challenge?  Are we trying to be so perfect, we aren’t growing or learning?  Are we demanding perfection of others?

We can give our kids all kinds of experiences on the outside.  They can climb and run and jump and win…but can they fail?  And when they do, do they have a leader near them, a parent, friend, teacher, or relative (you!) that tells them they are great and brilliant and wonderful and important even when they don’t succeed?

You can take all the young people (and you) all over the world, spend gobs of money, hire many trainers and still not have a leader on your hands.  Because leadership does in fact, start within.  Turns out what’s best for your kids has nothing to do with money or external experiences.  It is about internal strength.  How ironic.  Winning is about failing…early and often.

Maybe we should ask teachers before we hire them, “How many times have you failed?”  Then we may be able to tell if we are dealing with a leader.

What about you…fail much?

Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm.

Winston Churchill

 
©2011 Sue Bidstrup, Great Big Yes™ All Rights Reserved

Author: Sue

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  • Sue, You’ll love the first few chapters of Nurture Shock, really interesting and along these same lines….. the studies support failure!

  • Sue,
    I always appreciate your wisdom and perspective, but
    this subject completely touched my heart! As a parent,
    I want to “help” my kids as much as possible. But am I
    helping/saving too much? Thank you for your compelling
    words! They give new meaning to, “epic fail.”

  • Sue,
    Brilliant! I completely agree with you about our kids not being given the chance enough times to learn from and “own” their mistakes and failures. Without realizing it we are doing them a huge disservice by trying to fix things for them and not make them accountable. They are missing out on a major part of growing up and being independent.
    Thanks for doing what you do!

  • you hit it outta the park AGAIN!

    unfortunately, so many parents would agree with this post yet NOT recognize the ways they do NOT allow their children to fail. ever bring a forgotten book to school? or a forgotten lunch? ever pick your child up at the bus stop in the rain b/c you know s/he forgot his/her umbrella? ever apologize for your child b/c s/he was too embarrassed to do it? ever pay the library fine for him/her? i was guilty of this until i went back to work as a teacher and saw how parents do NOT allow their children to “suffer” the consequences of the small failures that build responsibility and character.

    sign of the times: a common trend today in private schools is the “no rescue” policy that parents MUST sign each year to prevent parents from swooping in with the lunch money or school project.

    thank you for bringing this issue to light!

    amy

  • Sue,
    I love this! I am going to send it to all the amazing dedicated teachers I know. Thank you, you are the best.