Sunday, May 31, 2015

Failure!...what's that all about??


    Over the past forty years of my career, I have been an employer or in a position of hiring for the companies that I have worked for. One of the things that I have noticed over the past fifteen years or so is a new crop of graduates entering the workforce with what appears to be a warped reality of their actual qualifications and abilities. I don’t mean any disrespect in that statement, but I have a real concern for what is actually going on.

Here are some examples from past experiences. People who know me know that I am all about encouraging, promoting, growing, building up, team building, strengthening, mentoring, and empowering others. So it is of no surprise that I sometimes have taken on some help that others might not have given a chance. One such person was a young man who had gotten his degree, had very little work experience, and had been fired from his last position. After working for me for approximately one month, he came to me to let me know that he was going to save the company. That he was only there to help us with his talents and knowledge. And basically, asked me to create a position for him that would utilize, fully, all of his gifts. Whoa Nelly!

First of all, the company didn’t need saving, he hadn’t even learned his job yet, and the position that he wanted me to create was never going to exist. Strange, I thought. He approached me a couple of more times about this, each time with his feelings more and more wounded because I hadn’t acted upon his desires.

Another young lady came to work at another company I worked for, and soon after she had started her new job, she declared to others on the team that she was going to be the next assistant manager. There were actually other people in line for that position who had been there longer and had proven their abilities. This young lady was inexperienced in the field, never showed up to work on time, and went over others’ heads to do what she wanted to do instead of what was good for the team. Definitely, not management material, yet.

Both people ended up leaving those companies thoroughly hurt.

Some might say that these two folks had a major sense of entitlement. There is a lot of that going around these days, you know. But after really analyzing these two and others who fall into this category, it appears to me that entitlement is really the aftermath of something else. A lot of it has to do with failure, or better yet, the lack of being allowed to fail.

I have had parents pick up applications for their young adult children, telling me that they will be filling out the application for them, because if their child does it, they probably won’t do it right and will miss out on a great opportunity. Hmmm.

On several occasions, I’ve had elderly parents eagerly approach me after I had terminated their adult child and beg me to give them their jobs back. Groveling and crying, with actual tears, all of which I found quite embarrassing for them and their adult child. All the while, the adult child never told their parent the real reason as to why they were fired. And I, as an employer, cannot discuss it with anyone other than the employee themselves, leaving me standing there looking like the bad guy in front of these parents.

There are just some things parents should not interfere with. It’s called boundaries.

What I have observed is that so many children are not allowed to fail as they are growing up, which is a major mistake. As a parent, I understand how you want to protect your children from physical hurts, heart hurts, and major disappointments. So many times, we hear of how children are given awards, trophies, stickers, and grandiose acknowledgements when they didn’t actually do the work, give their best, or win, all to spare hurt feelings. EVERYONE’s a winner! Really? No, that’s not a reality.

Failure is the beginning of success. We have to fail, experience the hurt, deal with the reality, and learn how to pick ourselves up, move on, and become successful. It’s a process we have to learn. Our failures make us stronger.

Sometimes, the first tries are successful. But not everything starts out as a success! Didn’t you fall learning how to walk or ride a bike? Was your first business adventure a disaster? Maybe you messed up a little bit with your firstborn, learning how to maneuver a diaper around them. Or maybe the first time you took a hard course at school; you failed it miserably. But you didn’t give up! You got up, brushed yourself off, and moved forward.

There have been many recorded stories of famous folks who failed many times with their ideas, businesses, and inventions. They had accomplished the art of failure; they learned, became stronger, more determined, and went on to achieve a great score!

Generally speaking, society, as a whole, looks down upon failures, leaving the failed feeling unworthy, beaten, and with the sense that they will never amount to anything. Society has it all wrong, totally missing the art in it! With the correct outlook, attitude, and training, even the most catastrophically failed can overcome.

When we are always caught by a safety net, such as our parents, and are not allowed to experience failures, it hampers our learning abilities, our growth, and it skews our realities. It slants our decision-making, it makes us weak, and it gives us a false sense of who we really are. If we are always being told that we did great when we didn’t, that we are better than everyone else, when we are not, that we are a winner, when we were a very poor player with a very poor attitude, we do not receive the real message about ourselves. We develop a puffed-up opinion of ourselves that leaves us with an unrealistic sense of our capabilities. And I’m not saying to never let your small child win a board game from time to time…they need to know what winning feels like, too!

Several years ago, I taught parenting classes to parents who had at least one child removed from their home or voluntarily taken out of the home in order to live at another facility dedicated to giving help, structure, and a hopeful new beginning for these families. The parents that I taught came from all kinds of backgrounds. But I discovered that they all had one thing in common: they didn’t ever let their children fail or be disappointed because they didn’t want to deal with the meltdowns that their children would have.  

Someone once told me, “You are getting to enjoy your son as a teenager because you did all of the hard work when he was a young child.” I really hadn’t thought of it that way, but that statement was true. The parents that I taught were dealing with some really bad consequences with their teens because they didn’t want to deal with the breakdowns they had had as small children. Parenting is hard work, but if you do the tough work while they are little, the chances are, life will be easier as they age!

The tough work means there will be some really hard days as a parent, and it takes time and patience to work with a small child through a failure or a meltdown. They don’t know what to do with their feelings, their anger, the hurt, and the tears. It is our job as parents to help them through these emotions. Pre-teaching to your children before an experience happens is vital and can prevent a breakdown. But if a failure happens, talk to them, calm them, ask them what they are feeling, kiss the boo-boos, tell them that next time will be better, get them back on the bike or the horse, and let them try again.

Yes, it hurts to watch our kids suffer through life’s snares, but with proper, prudent, diligent guidance, they will have a better chance to become strong, emotionally healthier adults when they grow up.

Teach them how to fail forward and step out of their way! They will have a more authentic reality of who they are, know what they are fully capable of, have better relationships with others, and have another great tool to help them make wise choices.

Blessings!
Debra Lee
Speaker/Author of “It Is What It Is…But It Wasn’t A Tragedy” and “Making Wise Choices…The Most Important Life Skill To Master”.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

FIVE- STAR BOOK REVIEW by Debra Lee

BOOK: Dreams of July by Taryn Schroeder



 

I have watched Taryn grow up in the church that I attend and she has become a beautiful young Christian woman with many gifts. Writing being one of her gifts. I am amazed at her ability to create characters and write about things that she probably has not yet experienced in her young life.  She definitely has done her homework in writing this book!

Dreams of July is delightful. A love story if you will. It is a wholesome read about two lives coming together after each one had experienced devastating tragedies in their lives. Without giving anything away, I really like the peach tree analogy given in this book as a way to demonstrate the healing process that is needed to be able to come out on the other side of an event that leaves one's life in shattered pieces.

You will read about how two lives come together after being scarred by two separate events and how they overcome their deep wounds and find a new beginning with each other's help and their faith in God. Taryn is brilliant when she keeps the readers wanting more after introducing one of the characters. This character's past is constantly being alluded to, taunting the reader, and remains a mystery until the end of the book!  

Love, tragedy, faith, mystery, and overcoming, all packed into this 260 page book!  A must read!

 

This book may be purchased at www.sunnidaiz.com or www.amazon.com.