
Embrace Your Failure
Dydysh14
Description
<p><b><i>Great Leaders Embrace Failure – You Should Too</i></b></p> <p>If you hate failing, that's a good thing. It means you're driven. People that aren't fazed by failure or loss don't expect much of themselves. You're different. You're like most folks because failure is frustrating to you.</p> <p>You can begin to question yourself when you get something wrong. Likewise, you wonder if you're capable of achieving what's important to you. Even small failures can lead to an "I quit" attitude. Have several small setbacks in a row, and you might feel like giving up on making an effort at all.</p> <p><b>That's not what great leaders do. They embrace failure.</b></p> <p>That's definitely the case for a man who was defeated in a run for the state legislature. He failed in business several times. Shortly after one such failure, the love of his life died. This led to a nervous breakdown the following year.</p> <p>He returned, only to be defeated in his run for speaker of the house two years later. Then he was defeated for nomination to Congress. He was eventually elected to Congress, only to lose renomination two years later. </p> <p>He was rejected as a land officer and then defeated in his attempt to become a US Senator. A couple of years later, defeat would once again come calling, as he lost the nomination of Vice President for his party in 1858.</p> <p><b>His Failures Were So Legendary They Were Given a Name</b></p> <p>You could easily forgive such a man if he gave up. That's a staggering list of failures. It would be easy to believe the world was just against you if there had been your experiences.</p> <p><b>The man's lack of success was so legendary it was given its own name ... "Lincoln's Failures."</b></p> <p>We're talking, of course, about the 16th President of the United States of America. Abraham Lincoln recovered from those staggering failures, only to be faced with a Civil War and a political struggle that saw many in his own party turn their backs on him.</p> <p>Yet, he continued to do what