Showing posts with label failure. Show all posts
    Showing posts with label failure. Show all posts


  • Friends i know you feel amazed  by reading title of this article but i know you definitely agree with this in the end. If you are doing lot of hard work  then you will never get success. everybody is doing something to earn money like job business. so hard work is required in job and business. Suppose if you like some game like cricket or football and you  will get chance to  play ur fav game during your your work then you will do it????
    Definitely
    People start doing 16 hour job if they get there fav game during job.
    Take example of small boy who loves cricket  and he is best in his city win many matches. So after 12th his parents wants him to be CA so  can he will become successful  CA. If he Will become CA then the work he is going to do is like hard work for him which he will not enjoy and feel  burden. Then burden lead to frustration and frustration lead to failure. Imagine what happen if he get chance to be cricketer.
    So you understand the point what i want to say.
    when we are doing something which we don’t  like then after doing 5  min work  it seem like lot  of hardwork.
    So basically i want to convey is that start doing something what you like the most.
    Follow your dreams and see the reality of your dreams.
    Start doing what you like and success will follow you. so even you  don’t feel like hardwork after 20 hours of work. And we are not doing hardwork we are just enjoying and playing.
    So in the end start doing something what you like the most. And start enjoying your work. If you are not  enjoying your work then change your work.If you are not doing both then you are leading towards your failure.


  • First
    The first thing I have learnt is that we must always begin with our strengths. There is an imaginary story of a rabbit. The rabbit was enrolled in a rabbit school. Like all rabbits, it could hop very well but could not swim. At the end of the year, the rabbit got high marks in hopping but failed in swimming. The parents were concerned. They said, ‘Forget about hopping. You are, anyway good at it. Concentrate on swimming.’ They sent the rabbit for tuitions in swimming. And guess what happened? The rabbit forgot how to hop! As for swimming, have you ever seen a rabbit swim? While it is important for us to know what we are not good at, we must also cherish what is good in us. That is because it is only our strengths that can give us the energy to correct our weaknesses.
    Second
    The second lesson I have learnt is that a rupee earned is of far more value than five found. My friend was sharing with me, the story of his eight year-old niece. She would always complain about the breakfast. The cook tried everything possible, but the child remained unhappy. Finally, my friend took the child to a supermarket and brought one of those ready-to-cook cereal packets. The child had to cut the packet and pour water in the dish. The child found the food to be absolutely delicious? The difference was that she had cooked it! In my own life, I have found that nothing gives as much satisfaction as earning our own rewards. In fact, what is gifted or inherited follows the old rule of ‘come easy, go easy’. I guess we only know the value of what we have, if we have struggled to earn it.
    Third
    The third lesson I have learnt is, in Cricket, no one bats a hundred every time. Life has many challenges. You win some and lose some. You must enjoy winning. But do not let it go to the head. The moment it does, you are already on your way to failure. And if you do encounter failure along the way, treat it as an equally natural phenomenon. Don’t beat yourself for it or anyone else for that matter! Accept it, look at your own share in the problem, learn from it and move on. The important thing is, when you lose, do not ‘lose the lesson’.
    Fourth
    The fourth lesson I have learnt, is the importance of humility. Sometimes, when you get so much in life, you really start wondering, whether you deserve all of it. We have so much to be grateful for. Our parents, our teachers and our seniors, have done so much for us, that we can never repay them. Many people focus on the shortcomings, because obviously, no one can be perfect. But it is important to first acknowledge, what we have received. Nothing in life is permanent, but when a relationship ends, rather than becoming bitter, we must learn to savor the memory, of the good things, while they lasted.
    Fifth
    The fifth lesson I learnt is, that we must always strive for excellence. One way of achieving excellence, is by looking at those better than ourselves. Keep learning what they do differently. But excellence cannot be imposed from the outside. We must also feel the need from within. It must involve not only our mind, but also our heart and soul. Excellence is not an act, but a habit. I remember the inspiring lines of a poem, which says that your reach must always exceed your grasp. That is heaven on earth. Ultimately, your only competition is yourself.
    Sixth
    The sixth lesson I have learnt is, never give up in the face of adversity. It comes on you, suddenly without warning.. Always keep in mind, that it is only the test of fire, that makes fine steel. A friend of mine shared this incident with me. His eight-year old daughter was struggling away at a jigsaw puzzle. She kept at it for hours but could not succeed. Finally, it went beyond her bedtime. My friend told her, “Look, why don’t you just give up? I don’t think you will complete it tonight. Look at it another day.” The daughter looked with a strange look in her eyes, “But, dad, why should I give up? All the pieces are there! I have just got to put them together!” If we persevere long enough, we can put any problem into its perspective.
    Seventh
    The seventh lesson I have learnt is, that while you must be open to change, do not compromise on your values. Mahatma Gandhiji often said, “You must open the windows of your mind, but you must not be swept off your feet by the breeze.” Values like honesty, integrity, consideration and humility have survived for generations. At the end of the day, it is values that define a person more than the achievements. Do not be tempted by short cuts. The short cut can make you lose your way and end up becoming the longest way to the destination.
    Final
    And the final lesson I learnt is, that we must have faith in our own ideas even if everyone tells us that we are wrong. There was once a newspaper vendor who had a rude customer. Every morning, the Customer would walk by, refuse to return the greeting, grab the paper off the shelf and throw the money at the vendor. The vendor would pick up the money, smile politely and say, ‘Thank you, Sir.’ One day, the vendor’s assistant asked him, “Why are you always so polite with him when he is so rude to you? Why don’t you throw the newspaper at him when he comes back tomorrow?” The vendor smiled and replied, “He can’t help being rude and I can’t help being polite. Why should I let his rude behavior dictate my politeness? ”

  • The first son was the sun of the family; he was everyone’s source of pride. His adroitness was evident when at ten years old he received the Best Student Lifetime Award, a recognition only given to a student with the best academic performance for three years in a row.

    The same year his younger brother was caught off guardstealing his friend’s money at school. He was expelled from the school, and moved to another one.

    At twenty years old the first son received a scholarship from his high school, while his younger brother had his first encounter with marijuana. Two months later he spent a year and a half in a rehab.

    The second millennium, the year 2000, went by when the parents were convinced that their first son, would forever be the sun of their family. He won a full scholarship to the United States of America while he wasn’t even twenty four. Promising his family reports of his achievement perpetuity, he said he would be overseas for another six years until he completed his doctorate.

    Two days after the departure of his older brother, the second son got his girlfriend pregnant. At the age of 20, he had a son and a wife, but no job and no house. Living on the edge of destitution, his family was certain that he was a total failure.

    Six years later the first son returned to his homeland and got married. Soon he built a company and performed a pilgrimage to Mecca, establishing himself a well-respected figure in the society.

    In the same year, the second son, still with no permanent job, had his second child born. After dropping out college, he decided to pursue his ambition to be a full-time musician. His family thought the man was out of his mind.

    Everything looked like in order. But life is a constant change. The world will not forever be days with bright light, neither will it forever be nights enveloped in pitch darkness.

    To everyone’s surprise, the first son’s business collapsed a year later. His company was found in pallid morbidity, enmeshed by corruption allegations involving his company’s director and managers. After found guilty with drug possession, he was sentenced to two years in prison. He lived in distress especially when he found out that his property was taken over by his business rivals. His anguish grew larger when he found his wife left him a month later.

    Meanwhile, the second son found his way to stardom when he met a producer. She was impressed and offered him to record an album. An hour after signing the contract he strode to a cemetery and placed a bouquet of flowers. In grief he prayed for his older brother who committed suicide the week before.

    The first son’s successes were irrefutable, but he never learned anything from what he had achieved.

    On the contrary, his younger brother, despite the major defeats in his early life, was a man who was never tired of learning from his failures.