Why Our Definition of Success Is Wrong
“I will read 10 pages in any book every day.”
That was one of my New Year’s resolutions. My only other resolution was not to make any other resolutions.
I love reading. It’s one of my favorite pastimes. So, 10 pages a day would be easy.
We often look at the world in a binary way: on-off, right-wrong, easy-hard, success-failure.
From a binary viewpoint, I failed. My goal was to read 10 pages per day, and I didn’t do it. The first day I missed meant failure because my goal was every day. “Did you read everyday?” No, so the binary check fails.
It’s a simplistic example, of course, but we measure success and failure in our lives far too often in exactly that way:
- Failure at weight loss because we give into a food temptation. This often results in giving up because we failed; doesn’t even matter how many times.
- Failure at learning a new skill because we make a mistake applying what we thought we knew. Again, this can often result in giving up.
- Failure as a partner or friend because of a big argument.
- Failure as a parent because a child doesn’t turn out how we hope.
- Failure as an employee because of an expensive mistake.