Unchaining & Unleashing: win vs. overwhelm

Beyond making a to-do list and doing them one at a time, there is a way to deal with overwhelm mode. When things get too complicated, look for the simplest solutions, back off to the right, and then take care of it all. Sure, he could give stronger or weaker advice, in fact. For the most part, though, just take the approach I just mentioned so you don’t sin with yourself or miss the mark against yourself.

We all love to be successful. However, sometimes temporary failure and learning lessons are the answer to all genuine problems. Success at everything, all the time, or perfection can be a bad thing anyway, especially when it comes to undue stress to repeat success “perfectly” or improve on it.

After all, to unleash the best within us, we need to know how to fail so we can do the opposite better and better anyway. Genuine strings of consistent success without that knowledge lead to a genuine fear of failure or learning more anyway.

“That’s how it’s always been done” is the saying of the person who has never temporarily failed to finally do something better. “I am willing to learn” is the saying of those who can genuinely grow to greater and greater success in everything. Think about that for a moment, then continue with this article.

Doing what has always been done never leads to a chain reaction of success, but creatively failing to do better always does when you figure out how to do something genuinely better than before.

Sure, Henry Ford built the first mass-use car, but Walter Percy Chrysler improved it by bringing one home from a showroom, taking it apart, putting it back together, and looking like a “crazy flop” until he made a really better one. because and gain success doing it. I hope that little story from the early 20th century proves at least part of the point I’m making with this article:

Learn from failure, understand what needs to be done, and then make success permanent and failure temporary, as the seed dies when planted and grows into a plant or tree and generates more life than the original seed had . Everything, including nature, fails to succeed ultimately and forever, can you?

So, in my personal thinking and actions, I see, feel and understand failure as a lesson, nothing personal and I gained success through those lessons as practical and realistically personal.