We are all well aware of the disappointment that comes from
failing something important. A botched interview for a tremendous job, a
rejection on a college application, a proposal that gets denied (marriage or at
work), a promotion that goes to your arch rival (my wife has clarified those
aren’t just for superheroes), a sales call that goes south, etc. The pain from
those types of failure is very salient and raw.
Despite the sting that comes from failing at something that
significant, there may be even greater danger in succeeding at something that
isn’t. When we succeed in areas that are trivial, there is tremendous pressure
to stay on that course, even if it isn’t the path we supposed to be traveling.
Quick, easy wins in a game we aren’t meant to play tempt us to keep playing and
keeps us from weightier matters. After all, we tell ourselves, why risk failing
at something big when we can notch victories on Easy Street?
Leaning too heavily on success in unimportant areas of your
life is like making great time but driving in the wrong direction.
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