Eight Things You Need To Know About Failure
1. To fail is not the same as being a failure. One may have many failings
and yet still be far from being a failure.
2. To fail is not the disgrace everyone thinks it is.
To err is to do nothing more than to join the human race.
3. Failure is only a temporary setback.
Failure is never the final chapter of the book of your life unless you give
up and quit.
4. Nothing worthwhile is ever achieved without running the risk of failure.
The man who risks everything and fails is anything but a disgraceful
failure.
5. Failure is a natural preparation for success.
Strange as it may seem to some of you, success is much more difficult to
live with successfully than is failure.
6. Every failing brings with it the possibilities of something greater.
Analyze failure under whatever circumstances you choose, and you will
discover some seeds for turning failure into success.
7. What you do with failures in your life is up to you.
Failure is either a blessing or a curse, depending upon the individual’s
reaction or response to it.
8. Failings are opportunities to learn how to do things better the next time
– to learn where the pitfalls are and how to avoid them.
The best possible thing to do with failure is to learn all you can from it.
By Dale Galloway: “How to Feel Like a Somebody Again!” (1978)
Dale E. Galloway was born on 4 February 1939 in Columbus, Ohio, United States of America. He is Dean of the Beeson International Center for Biblical Preaching and Church Leadership, Asbury Theological Seminary, Wilmore, Kentucky, United States of America.
1. To fail is not the same as being a failure. One may have many failings
and yet still be far from being a failure.
2. To fail is not the disgrace everyone thinks it is.
To err is to do nothing more than to join the human race.
3. Failure is only a temporary setback.
Failure is never the final chapter of the book of your life unless you give
up and quit.
4. Nothing worthwhile is ever achieved without running the risk of failure.
The man who risks everything and fails is anything but a disgraceful
failure.
5. Failure is a natural preparation for success.
Strange as it may seem to some of you, success is much more difficult to
live with successfully than is failure.
6. Every failing brings with it the possibilities of something greater.
Analyze failure under whatever circumstances you choose, and you will
discover some seeds for turning failure into success.
7. What you do with failures in your life is up to you.
Failure is either a blessing or a curse, depending upon the individual’s
reaction or response to it.
8. Failings are opportunities to learn how to do things better the next time
– to learn where the pitfalls are and how to avoid them.
The best possible thing to do with failure is to learn all you can from it.
By Dale Galloway: “How to Feel Like a Somebody Again!” (1978)
Dale E. Galloway was born on 4 February 1939 in Columbus, Ohio, United States of America. He is Dean of the Beeson International Center for Biblical Preaching and Church Leadership, Asbury Theological Seminary, Wilmore, Kentucky, United States of America.