“Difficulties
come to you at the right time to help you grow and move forward by overcoming
them. The only real misfortune, the only real tragedy come when we suffer
without learning the lesson”
(Emmet Fox)
(Emmet Fox)
If you’re going to lose –
and you are because everyone does – then why not turn it into a gain? How do
you do that? By learning from it. A loss isn’t totally a loss if you learn
something as a result of it. Your loses can come to define you if you let them.
If you stay where a loss leaves you, then eventually you can get stuck there.
But know this: Your choices will begin
to declare you. You can choose to change, grow, and learn from your losses.
That, of course, is not
necessarily easy. In a favourite Peanuts
comic strip Charlie Brown walks away from Lucy after a baseball game, head
down, totally dejected. “Another ball
game lost! Good grief!” Charlie moans. “I
get tired of losing. Everything I do, I lose!” “Look at it this way, Charlie Brown,” Lucy replies. “We learn more from losing than we do from
winning.” “That makes me the smartest
person in the world!” replies Charlie.
It’s a good thought, but
not everyone learns from his losses. A loss doesn’t turn into a lesson unless
we work hard to make it so. Losing gives us an opportunity to learn, but many
people do not seize it. And when they don’t, losing really hurts.
Learning is not easy
during down times because it requires us to do things that are not natural. It
is hard to smile when we are not happy. It is difficult to positively respond
when numb with defeat. It takes discipline to do the right thing when
everything is wrong. How can we be emotionally strong when we are emotionally
exhausted? How will we face others when we are humiliated? How do we get back
up when we are continually knocked down?
In his book Sometimes You Win – Sometimes You Learn (2013),
John C. Maxwell wants to help you to answer these and others questions about
learning from losses. John believes you can do that using this road maps:
Humility: The Spirit of Learning
Reality: The Foundation of Learning
Responsibility: The First Step of Learning
Improvement: The Focus of Learning
Hope: The Motivation of Learning
Teachability: The Pathway of Learning
Adversity: The Catalyst for Learning
Problems: Opportunities for Learning
Bad
Experiences: The Perspective for
Learning
Change: The Price of Learning
Maturity: The Value of Learning
I want to give you a FREE COPY of this book – hardcover with
large print – if you can answer (comment on my blog post below) these three
simple questions: #1 What is your personal motto or favourite
quote on failure? #2) Who or what is your main inspiration to move
forward in life? And 3) Why you got to have a copy of this book?
There are only THREE (3) COPIES AVAILABLE, get your copy now! [Malaysian readers only]
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.