Well, you are not bothered about inconsequential mistakes. Especially one-off, inadvertent human errors that don't harm you. Genuine mistakes.
As Confucius, the Chinese thinker, says, "A man who has committed a mistake and does not correct it is committing another mistake."
He is right. Mistakes have the potential to harm you. They can sometimes inflict irrecoverable damage. Many mistakes happen because you are unclear about what you want from life. That is a big unknown most face at some point in their life.
You then encounter the expression of insecurity, fear, sadness, unhappiness, anger, stress, and disappointment.
The best approach is to respond to the unknown with intent and rigor.
Warren Buffet said, "The best protection against inflation is investing in your skills." Inflation brings hardships and uncertainty. And having skills positions you to respond. Skills bring new opportunities to achieve what you want from life. Even when odds don't look in your favor.
Acquiring skills that reproduce the picture of the past self is a mistake.
Skills must be developed to build a bridge between the self of the past and the future self. The path involves understanding what works and doesn't work.
Mistakes are unavoidable. Repeating them is inexcusable. Insulating from them is a smart strategy!
Comments
Post a Comment