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Failure

Brickjectivity

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
What is the meaning of personal failure? You fail to achieve a goal, or you fail to uphold your obligations. You cannot repay. You have no gift to give in return for the life you have in you, the time spent on you. Trying harder only results in more failure. You reach the end of your ability or your integrity but not the end of your journey. Is it meaningless?
Merriam Webster online said:
Failure : omission of occurrence or performance; specifically : a failing to perform a duty or expected action
Wikipedia on topic Failure said:
Failure is the state or condition of not meeting a desirable or intended objective, and may be viewed as the opposite of success.
Admitting Failure
Five Ways To Make Peace With Failure - Forbes
Dam Failure - Wikipedia said:
Common causes of dam failure include:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/27/opinion/a-failed-earthquake-prediction-a-crime.html?_r=0


Day for Failure | Celebrate Failure
 

Brickjectivity

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Naturally, my favorite of the causes for Dam Failure is bullet 5 "Sliding of a mountain into the reservoir."
 

Brickjectivity

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Odion said:
Failure is the easy way out.
The easy way out. That is a possible answer. If you fail and quit, then that is taking the easy way out. What else would that statement apply to though. I can think of examplees where it doesn't.
 
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MysticSang'ha

Big Squishy Hugger
Premium Member
What is the meaning of personal failure? You fail to achieve a goal, or you fail to uphold your obligations. You cannot repay. You have no gift to give in return for the life you have in you, the time spent on you. Trying harder only results in more failure. You reach the end of your ability or your integrity but not the end of your journey. Is it meaningless?


Admitting Failure
Five Ways To Make Peace With Failure - Forbes
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/27/opinion/a-failed-earthquake-prediction-a-crime.html?_r=0


Day for Failure | Celebrate Failure

I fail and succeed to learn how to always improve myself for the benefit of all.

That's my short answer. :D
 

Terrywoodenpic

Oldest Heretic
Every one...
  • could do better
  • could improve
Perhaps...
  • they did better than expected
  • did as well as they needed to
  • did better than everyone else
Did they ...
  • Fail ?
  • or Succeed ?
 

Alex_G

Enlightner of the Senses
What is the meaning of personal failure? You fail to achieve a goal, or you fail to uphold your obligations. You cannot repay. You have no gift to give in return for the life you have in you, the time spent on you. Trying harder only results in more failure. You reach the end of your ability or your integrity but not the end of your journey. Is it meaningless?


Admitting Failure
Five Ways To Make Peace With Failure - Forbes
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/27/opinion/a-failed-earthquake-prediction-a-crime.html?_r=0


Day for Failure | Celebrate Failure


Failure is an illusion, sometimes useful, more often harmful. Your ego is obsessed with ideas of success and failure and how you’re doing relative to someone else. This is the world that breeds envy, resentment and jealousy. All these feelings are insidious, very powerful and damaging; they can easily dominate your thoughts and your life.

After the enlightenment human beings became the centre of everything. We were solely responsible for the discoveries, the inventions, the progress. No longer were such things ascribed to the gods, or fate or luck. As liberating as it is to own such successes, people also had to own their failures. This creates huge pressure for people, and a new type of language developed. It was once said that you had a genius rather than were one, as if you had something on board that was guiding you, taking the responsibility. Today you are that genius, and are responsible for all that you do. It’s unsurprising that so many creative people like writers had tragic lives, often turning to drink.
Today we call people 'losers' which is very different to calling them 'unfortunate' as we might have done a long time ago. The language conveys the fact that we put the burden of responsibility on the person, making it their fault if they fail. This is the unavoidable sting of a meritocratic system, owning not only your successes but your failures.

Our modern day is dominated by this culture of thinking, and egos are centre stage, being massaged or broken down. What we want, or think we want from life will be heavily influenced by this culture we grow up in. Being constantly shown how we should look, how we should talk, dress, live. Who we should be, what job we should have, what car, what sort of partner and so on. We are from the outset coerced into buying into this system, wanting or rather defining 'success’ in these terms.
Never really having the choice, you’re conditioned to think you want or need these things, and should you get them, well great, and if not you think you've failed. Not everyone can be rich for example, meaning most people are destined to failure with respects to this, feeling moral blame and the weight of responsibility on their shoulders for something they may never have been able to achieve in the first place.

I would propose that even if you get all these things, please your ego, have you really succeeded? or are you just as helplessly trapped in a false reality as the ‘losers’, possessing things that you were told/convinced you want? Loosing most of what makes you individual and authentic, the magic of your childhood self. To me even this sort of egotistical success is unavoidably a failure in the grand scheme of things. To be an actor in a bad play, whether you’re the king or the peasant on stage, all are equally tragic if they don’t realise that they are in fact on stage...
 
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oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
Failure is an illusion...

This is the best post that I have read since I joined RF, several months ago. All of it...... I just reduced it to save space.

I can't add anything more, other than to say that I'm going to copy and keep it. Thankyou.
 

Brickjectivity

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Kilgore Trout said:
Failure?

Oh, that's one of those things that I hear about that happens to other people.
Yes, I was just turning the world under my feet and thought I would ponder what the lesser people do.
 

Brickjectivity

Veteran Member
Staff member
Premium Member
Indeed. Sometimes success comes from failure, but any success can be described as a result of other failures. It does not necessarily make failure meaningful. We tend to define failure as the opposite of success in dictionaries.
 
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