Success as a Paradox

In an interview, I asked the question: “When is solving a problem worse than the problem itself?”

There are many good answers to this question, and I’ll present two here:

I broke it by trying to fix it

As a young teen, I often trekked the woods near my house.

One day I came across a hatching chrysalis. It seemed obvious to me that the butterfly inside was struggling for its life. I pulled out my pocket knife and carefully enlarged the split, helping it progress.

It eventually came out and its wings spread but it never flew. It needed that life-and-death struggle to build the strength to fly; My success in helping it out of its cocoon created a long-term failure in denying that struggle.

From what I’ve read, other people have tried this with varying results. Sometimes the emerging butterfly is fine. Sometimes it can’t even unfurl its wings, and dies shortly after. Sometimes it’s sick and will die regardless – there is nothing to be done.

The lesson in this is that sometimes the “solution” causes a problem – it’s the wrong prognosis for the diagnosis. In most cases, I’ve found that time either reveals the correct solution, or is the solution itself.

Time either presents the correct solution, or is the solution itself. Watchful waiting while the smoke clears keeps you from causing more damage and clears your head to recognize the real from the imagined. Click To Tweet

(Not really) booked until Thursday

I asked a doctor-friend why people are made to wait. It seemed cruel to me.

He said that many times, people react to the shock or the perceived immediacy of the ailment or accident. By giving people some time to digest what’s going on, they give a more accurate description of the problem and help him with the diagnosis and the course of medicine. Many times, he added, the problem fixes itself. It’s not as serious as they thought or our natural ability to heal takes over and they’re well by the time they have the appointment.

In both of these stories, watchful waiting can be the successful course of action while acting with urgency causes or adds to the problem.

It’s very hard to wait when the world feels like it’s crashing down. Ignoring (what seems like) impending failure isn’t an option. Especially when emotions are high – wait on it. Don’t send that email. Don’t make that phone call. Just wait it out. The very perception of failure causes irrational responses.

Sometimes actively trying to solve the problem is the problem. I’ve discovered that this is consistent among a variety of people: the stronger the emotional motivation, the more true this is.

This article is from the “Raw Talk on Failure” series.

Photo by rawpixel on Unsplash

The Junkie

It was a culmination of bad days. My best friend died a few months before. My band instrument was stolen because someone tried to pull a prank on me and the band director did nothing about it. I had been beaten up so hard at my locker that I had to go to the infirmary and subsequently, go home early. I told my dad that I was ready to “end it all”.

Many people have been there. Maybe even you. When people under a $150k salary were asked what they value in a job, it wasn’t that they did work with meaning. It was a stable income and dignity. People are even willing to take a lower paying job if it gives them more dignity and time with family. (*Roy Bahat).

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please get help.
Call 1-800-273-8255 – the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

My dad came in my room. After a series of questions and a typical lecture that went nowhere, he turned around and saw a poster of a cartoon alley cat near a dumpster with the words emblazoned “I’m Okay, God Doesn’t Make Junk”. My dad ordered me to recite it over and over again.

I hated that poster. I always did. I had ordered a different poster through a mail-order catalogue (it was the 80’s) and they sent me the wrong one. I had put the poster on the wall as a reminder that the forces of the universe were against me.

I'm okay! God doesn't make junk! Click To Tweet

But the words on that poster is the message I carry with me in life. We are not junk, nor should we allow ourselves to be treated as such – especially from our inner thoughts. And the universe isn’t against you. There is no chance, but there is fate. There are no odds to beat, but life is a gamble. We make bad decisions, but our lives are not a bad decision. We hurt those we love, but that doesn’t make us unloveable.

When you feel disparaged – when it seems that life is out to get you. Recite out loud, because it’s true: “I’m Okay, God Doesn’t Make Junk.” You have worth. You just don’t feel it at the moment.

This article is from the “Raw Talk on Failure” series.

Photo by Fábio Scaletta on Unsplash

For Shame!

Failure, even if just perceived, results in shame. Shame is that uncomfortable feeling from becoming aware of participation in something inappropriate, dishonorable, ridiculous or humiliating.

When is the last time you felt shame after making an inappropriate comment? What about the private shame you feel from “guilty pleasures”?

When we’re rejected or criticized by others, we also feel shame. It’s a powerful emotion that people intentionally and unintentionally use to manipulate others. We hear of fat shaming or food shaming or parent shaming or emotion shaming. There’s also interview shaming (which I recently experienced from various industries).

Being shamed leaves you helpless and hopeless – there’s no benefit other than elevating the shamer’s ego by putting others down. I have a word for that: bullying.

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please get help.
Call 1-800-273-8255 – the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Dealing with shame is probably the most delicate of the issues we face. It’s what I believe is the second leading cause of suicide. There are stories all over the internet, like that of Audrie Pott‘s.

These complex emotions drive our conscious decisions. They inhibit us from making bad decisions, but that also means we forego risk and all its rewards by oversteering away from perceived failure.

But put in the right hands, the shame can be flipped to something powerful and good – accountability. With the right, caring, accountability partner, we can break bad habits and grow stronger character. We can also run other people’s shaming comments by them. Asking delicate questions like “am I really a loud-mouth?” Or “am I doing something wrong with how I raise my children?” to a friend who’s open and honest helps us to see a more unbiased reality.

Accountability is a powerful tool that changes the twisted power of shame into a positive strength towards transformation. Click To Tweet

Sometimes people are just so narrow minded that anything out of their realm of thought should be shamed or bullied out of existence. In these cases, they’re the one who’s acting shameful.

The lesson here is twofold:

1. Get an accountability partner. This is someone you can trust to be vulnerable with and who’s honest in return.

2. Ask your accountability partner to help you see the reality – if you feel shamed by something someone else said, or even by the voices in your own head, run it by your accountability partner. Ask if they see anything and ask for suggestions.

This article is from the “Raw Talk on Failure” series.

Photo by Mitchel Hollander on unsplash