Day 166 – Failure Only Happens When You Stop

I was thinking about my old boat the other day. It sits in a dry dock junkyard now, rusting away, done. That boat is finished. But I am not a boat. And neither are you.

Failure feels real when you are staring at it. A project collapses. A relationship ends. A plan falls apart. You start to wonder if this is it, if you have finally hit the wall that does not move. But I have been asking myself a different question lately. Is failure even possible? I suppose the only time it is possible is when you give up, throw in the towel.

I think back on a few people with great influence in my life who died. They are gone, but here they are, still playing an active role. Reminding me of what to do, of what path to take. Their voices show up when I need them. Their example still shapes my decisions. If they are still working on me, then they are not really done yet.

If a person keeps adapting, learning, and moving forward, it is hard to call anything along the way a true failure. It only really becomes final if the process stops entirely.

I might have a serious impediment or wall to climb along the way, but is that failure? Only if I let it stop me. People often associate true failure with death. It is the only point where iteration definitively ends. But even then, your actions still ripple outward. People you impacted, things you built, ideas you contributed. In that sense, the process continues beyond you, just not under your control.

When your mind starts stacking up worries, what if this goes wrong, what if I mess this up, what if it all adds up to failure, it can feel like everything is riding on each moment. Like one wrong move defines the whole story. In reality, most of what you are worried about are just moments inside the process. They might be uncomfortable, even painful. But they are not the end of anything unless you decide they are.

The difference between a setback and a failure is whether you keep moving. The wall in front of you is not the story. What you do next is the story.

“It only really becomes final if the process stops entirely.”

So I am not worried about my boat anymore. It had its run. But I am still here. Still adapting. Still learning. Still moving forward. That means I have not failed yet. And as long as I keep going, I will not.

The next step is simple. Pick one thing that feels stuck right now. Do not try to solve it all at once. Just take the next small action. That is how the process continues. That is how failure stays impossible.

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