How would you be living your life today if you hadn’t been able to speak until you were almost four years old and your teachers said you “would never amount to much”?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to Albert Einstein, who went on to become one of the most influential scientists of all time.

bigstock-Impossible-to-possible-concept-071613How would you be living your life today if your life was totally about basketball and you had been cut from your high school basketball team?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to Michael Jordon, who went on to become one of the best basketball players ever.

How would you be living your life today if you had been fired from a newspaper for “lacking imagination and “having no original ideas”?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to Walt Disney, who went on to create a successful movie studio that developed many innovative cartoons and cartoon characters.

How would you be living your life today if at the age of 30 you had been fired from the company you had founded and devoted your entire adult life to?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to Steve Jobs, who went on to revolutionize life as we knew it by leading one of the most imaginative and successful companies in history.

How would you be living your life today if you had been demoted from your job as a news anchor because you were “not fit for television”?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to Oprah Winfrey, who went on to become the most successful daytime host ever and one of the most recognized and inspirational figures in the world due to her television show.

How would you be living your life today if you had a band that had been rejected by Decca Records who said “we don’t like their sound, they have no future in show business”?  … Please take a moment and answer this question right now. You will learn something very important. …

It happened to the Beatles, which went on to revolutionize music and become one of the most successful bands in musical history.

How would these situations have affected you?

How did you answer these questions?  Unfortunately, far too many people would answer that the disappointment led to a sense of victimization and a decision (perhaps unconscious) to not put themselves in a position where they could be disappointed again.  Many if not most people would have quit.

Clients call us every day telling us how incidents like these led them to conclude: I’ll never get what I want.  I’m inadequate.  Life is difficult.  If I allow myself to really want things, I’ll be disappointed and get hurt.  I’m not good enough.

And when people form beliefs like these, they either quit trying or, at best, they approach their goals with only a half-hearted commitment.

There is no such thing as a “failure”

The reason for telling you these “failure” stories is to remind you that not getting what you want at one point in your life does not mean you will never succeed.  Each of these people ultimately became major successes in their respective fields.  Their early “failures” did not stop them because they held these events as learning opportunities, not failures.  (Thanks to Dr. Fab Mancini for reminding me of these stories.)

If you had major disappointments early in your life and you’ve stopped doing all you could possibly do to get what you want today, here’s what to do—right now.

Here’s what to do

First, identify and eliminate any beliefs you formed in response to the events.  The beliefs I listed above are typical beliefs one might form in response to a major disappointment.

Second, recognize that no matter what happened, it does not mean you “failed.”  Failure is meaning you add to an event.  In the case of the six stories I told, none of the people ultimately experienced their setback as a failure.  They held the “disappointment” as something they could learn from to make them successful in the future.

Third, if you give negative meaning to events in your present life, notice you are doing that and make a clear distinction between what is actually happening (for example, things aren’t turning out the way you would like them to) and the meaning you are giving the event (for example, you’ll never succeed or you don’t have the ability to ever succeed).  What you make a clear distinction between the event and the meaning, the meaning will dissolve and all you will be left with is a meaningless event that is not capable of producing a negative feeling.

Fourth, stop allowing your beliefs and daily meanings to sabotage your life.  It is possible for you to rid yourself of your self-imposed limitations (your beliefs and meanings) and to create unimagined new possibilities for your life.  Start today.

 

Thanks for reading my blog.  Please post your questions or comments about success and failure, and the question: Have you allowed the meaning you have given events to stop you today?  Your comments will add value for thousands of readers.  I read them all and respond to as many as I can.

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Copyright © 2013 Morty Lefkoe

 

10 Comments

  1. Mar July 17, 2013 at 9:43 am - Reply

    Very interesting, totally makes sense. How about video blogging next time Morty?
    Thank you!

  2. Joan July 17, 2013 at 8:08 am - Reply

    That was a very inspiring article. Great insights. We truly have to turn our stumbling blocks into stepping stones , just as all the folks in your article did, and yes! failures are not really failures, but rather feed back mechanisms to tell us where we stand on the scale of life. and yes no event or situation has meaning unless we give meaning to it with our perceptions and interpretations.

    Morty, I love your work and I love reading your stuff. Keep up the good work. God Bless, Joan

  3. Suzanna Kiraly July 17, 2013 at 7:29 am - Reply

    Thanks for this article, Morty. It seems like most successful people were told at one time that they would not succeed or had setbacks, but did not let these things get in their way. It also seems like the universe gives us challenges to overcome, otherwise it would be too easy to get what we want and we would not appreciate things as much. So we have to remember that we can get what we want and keep going until we get it.

  4. Joseann July 17, 2013 at 6:40 am - Reply

    Hallo Morty, very interesting article.
    What I get from it is that there seems to be 2 types of people: the first type forms general beliefs about themselves or life when confronted with a setback or hurdle and as a consequence, they get stopped in their tracks. The second group doesn’t seem to form beliefs from setbacks that stop them in their tracks, neither about themselves nor about life .
    Why is that? What makes people form negative beliefs and other’s not?

    I did a character trait analysis once with a University in Switzerland and they also mentioned that people who get depressed relate to life differently, they look at problems as “being their fault, being permanent and pervasive”, meaning beliefs like “I am always and totally flawed” or “life is always and totally xy”. Those other people relate to issues as “random, periodical and not their fault”, it’s “at that time things just didn’t work out”. But they also couldn’t say what makes people choose one or the other.
    What do the people who continue have in themselves (that those others don’t have) that allows them to overcome setbacks? What allows them to not take on the meanings, criticism or judgment of others as their own? How can they interpret events in a way that is beneficial for them and others can’t?

  5. Shaun O'Hagan (@ShaunOhagan) July 17, 2013 at 1:35 am - Reply

    in the news today the UK government announces more testing for children – from the age of 5. So now even more children will be formatted into failures from an even earlier age. The education system is responsible for the vast majority of “failure” in life.

  6. Pooja July 17, 2013 at 1:22 am - Reply

    Thanks Morty — I have a question:

    How do you identify how long you should continue on a goal and when it’s time to try something else? How long should you wait for the results?

    Pooja

    • Morty Lefkoe July 17, 2013 at 2:38 pm - Reply

      Hi Pooja,

      It depends. There is no “right” answer.

      If it is your passion and what you are “here” to do, wait forever.

      Not succeeding for a while is not proof of anything. If it looks like your approach is not working and you find a better approach, try it. Always be asking if you’ve learned anything that might indicate you should change your approach.

      Love, Morty

  7. Kayla July 17, 2013 at 1:21 am - Reply

    Needed to read this! Definitely something a lot of people struggle with.

  8. Alex July 16, 2013 at 4:08 pm - Reply

    I will never give up. Thank you for all you’ve taught me Morty.

  9. Almog July 16, 2013 at 3:49 pm - Reply

    The stories in the beginning of the article are very pesruasive. Especially the first one. Seeing that one of the most famous scientists of modern times – and perhaphs the most – has been told by people that “he will never amount to something”, and then having his life turn out the way it did, was simply amazing.

    Thanks to you Morty, I ow know that every event is nothing more then what I, as the creator, make of it. I’m aware that I live my life mostly as the creation, but whenever necessary, the creator steps in and wipes off any uneanted influence. Making this a habit was probably one of the best decisions I have made, ever. So will be never giving up.

    Thanks and regards, Almog :-)

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