Starting Right

Lessons From A Failure.

DannyMac Season 1 Episode 1448

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0:00 | 5:34

Failure can feel personal fast. One rough conversation, one bad decision at work, one plan that backfires, and suddenly we start talking to ourselves like we’re the problem instead of someone who had a problem. Today I share a quick reset built for real mornings, when you’re tired, honest, and tempted to label yourself by what went wrong. 


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Welcome And A Five-Minute Start

SPEAKER_00

Good morning and welcome to Starting Right with Danny Mack. I'm going to be here every Monday to Friday to help you get a great five minute start to your day. So grab your cup of coffee, sit back, relax, and let me help you start your day right.

Edison And A Better Definition

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There's a very famous story out there about Thomas Edison, who says that he tried over a thousand times to invent the light bulb before he finally got it right. A reporter then asked him, How did it feel to fail a thousand times? Edison replied, I didn't fail a thousand times. The light bulb was an invention with one thousand steps. If you look on the internet, you're going to find various forms of that story, including the number of times he failed and variations on his responses to it. But the essence of the story remains the same. Thomas Edison failed many, many times in his attempt to invent the light bulb. He knew what he wanted to get, but getting there was a whole nother story. What kept him going was the recognition that everything that he tried that didn't work didn't mean that he was a failure. It just meant that it was not the right way to do it, or was a step to know how to do it.

Failure Is Not Your Identity

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He kept moving ahead. Today I want to talk about the times that we fail. What happens when in our lives, in real time, in this life we fail? What do we do about that? How do we handle it? The truth is that failing does not make somebody a failure. I can't begin to tell you how many times I've found myself laying in bed at night thinking about all the things that I failed at that day. I think about how I failed as a husband, or I failed as a parent, or I failed at my job or I did something that didn't work out right. It is so easy to beat ourselves up and to feel under condemnation because we view ourselves as failures when we fail. The key for all of this is found in Philippians chapter four and verse thirteen. It says, For I can do everything through Christ who gives me strength. If we have that as our foundation, as our baseline, we can then start walking through how we live our lives and the times where we come up against things that we fail at, and then know how to go on from there. It's important for us.

Assess What Went Wrong

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So here are the three things. First of all, we need to assess what went wrong. So we ask ourselves, is this permanent? Is there a possibility here of a second chance? We need to see our failure in light of the big picture, and then ask ourselves, what can I do to make it right? Hall of Fame football coach Tony Dungey once said, Remember, failure is not part of your identity, it's part of your journey. And all of our life is a journey. It doesn't stop. We move ahead, we keep going. Psalm 25, verses 4 to 5 say, Make me know your ways, O Lord. Teach me your paths. After you assess it, you need

Review And Learn The Lesson

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to review it. What can I learn from this? Failure should be our teacher and not our undertaker. John Maxwell once said the only difference between a successful person and someone who is a failure is that the successful person is willing to keep failing until they get it right. Just like Thomas Edison did. So we need to ask ourselves, what can I learn? How can I move on? And then we also need to ask ourselves, what kind of things within myself may have caused me to fail? Are there some attitudes or some habits or some other issues that I have that may be holding me back from being able to be successful at what I'm trying to do? Was there a physical limitation or a psychological limitation that caused me to fail? Those we tend to keep as private wars within us. We do not need to deal with those by ourselves. God has placed his spirit within us to help us in the practical living of our lives every day. And then God has also placed people around us to help us to get through what we're challenged with every day and to help us get past our own weaknesses.

Adjust And Use What You Have

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After we assess it and we review it, we need to adjust it. I love this story from John Maxwell's book, The Winning Attitude. He talks about a conversation between a surgeon and a boy who had just lost his hand at the wrist. When the surgeon asked the boy about his handicap, the boy replied, I don't have a handicap. I just don't have a right hand. The surgeon later discovered that the boy was one of the leading scorers on his high school football team. It's not about what you've lost, it's about what you have that counts. And how do we do all of this? We remember Philippians chapter four. I can do everything through Christ who gives me strength.

Find Strength And Try Again

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You may be feeling some failures right now. Your business is struggling, you've lost your job, a relationship may have turned sour. Your plans to solve a problem may have created a bigger problem somewhere. Remember that your heavenly Father has not left you and that his spirit is within you. God is right there with you, encouraging you to get up and to try again, and he will give you the strength and the wisdom to move ahead. You are not a failure. You are a child of God, and God's hand is on you. Have a great day, my friends. We'll talk again tomorrow.

Closing And Weekly Invitation

SPEAKER_00

Thank you for listening today. And I invite you to join me Monday to Friday right here on Starting Right with Danny Mack.