Tag Archive for 'failure'

SuperGuest: Kari Ponders Goodness

Annyeong (that’s Korean for peace — as well as hi and bye)! It’s my pleasure to introduce to you the writings and photos of my esteemed friend and colleague, Kari Dalane, a young woman who has tremendous vision and understanding, not to mention a superb blog on American education. Since the day that she wandered into my school as my fresh-faced-yet-battle-hardened co-teacher, I have been begging her to share her mind with our little garden. Finally, she has acquiesced:

I have tried to live my life in pursuit of goodness.  I feel the weight of my own good fortune every day and it presses me to help create a world where more people are able to enjoy similar luck.

This pursuit has led me down some ill-fated roads, such as Teach for America, and has instilled in me some negative, self-destructive feelings.  Guilt, for enjoying privileges I have not earned while others suffer; Helplessness, for feeling unable to create the positive changes I’d like to see in the world; Shame, for my helplessness; Fear, for looking failure in the face with unblinking eyes and seeing my own reflection.

I mentioned Teach for America because it truly drove home the weight and price of my idealism.  I joined a corps of individuals hoping to have real impacts on the poorest and unluckiest American children with stars in my eyes and my head somewhere in the clouds.  A friend and fellow corps member once told me that all TFA recruits are three things: idealistic, naive and pompous.  I thought the world could be changed to be a better place and I naively believed I would be able to help make this happen as an inner-city teacher with almost no training.  I quickly came crashing down to earth.

I’ve since left Teach for American and have somehow found myself as a teacher in South Korea.  I don’t know why I decided to come here.  I do know that, after much thought, I realized education is my passion.  I believe in it.  And I want to, need to, stay involved in it.  Teaching abroad for a year seemed like a good way to stay involved while figuring out what to do next.  I’m so happy I made the choice to come here because it has turned out to be exactly what I needed.  Good friends, a feeling of success in my job, reassurance that the world can be a wonderful place and that people can, and do, work to make it better all the time.  In little ways and big ways.  I can still be one of those people; in some ways, I already am.

I started reading SuperForest when I met Drake and have found it to be a place that echoes resoundingly with goodness.  It’s wonderful to be surrounded by and read about people who, sometimes unintentionally, pursue goodness every day.  A smile or kind word, forgiving a friend, not giving up on a dream. It all adds up.  And I’ve learned that my mother was right — patience really is a virtue.  I should not feel guilty for failing to have a big positive impact on the world.  I have time.  We have time.  We have lifetimes.  We are not helpless and should not be ashamed or afraid.

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? … Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do… And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.
- Marianne Williamson

Your playing small does not serve the world.  And each of us has much to offer the world.  Only in discovering the truth in this, and allowing it to happen, can we truly live.  This does not mean “putting pressure on reality.”  It’s in acknowledging and allowing your most true self to shine through that you do yourself justice and give back to the world, tenfold, what you have been given.

Children have not yet built barriers against the world and shine brilliantly, unself-consciously, every day.  We must be like children.  Young children are not crippled by their failures.  A toddler trying to walk across the room fails every time until she makes it.  We all fail, every day, many times.  It is taking these failures in stride, and with humility, that allows us to grow and discover more about what doesn’t work for us.  We mustn’t focus on what doesn’t work, but instead on coming one step closer to what does.

So who are you not to be brilliant, talented, gorgeous, fabulous?  You must break down the barriers you have built against yourself — guilt, or helplessness, or shame, or fear- to live the kind of life you deserve.

Mike Monteiro: “Let’s Make Better Mistakes Tomorrow”

Hey hey, SuperForest!

I’d say that for about the past several months, I’ve seen the above image at least 180 times without ever knowing who the artist was or the story behind it. Which I guess kind of makes sense considering the message is all about the boldness of those words. The fearlessness behind it. The bravery. For me, that was good enough.

A couple days ago, the image resurfaced on Good in an article featuring the work of five artists depicting “What it means to work today” and when I saw the image this time, I had found not only the name of the artist, but an essay he wrote to go with it! It’s everything you’d expect. The essay is absolute chaos and takes an image I’d already thought had done its job in communicating its message and just adds a whole new level to its madness. Here is an excerpt.

Let’s make better mistakes tomorrow. Let’s scratch our heads and give up and wake up and try it again. Let’s fail at digging the well the first three times to get it right the fourth. Let’s build faster horses, and then strap rocket ships onto them. Let’s start a company, let’s watch it fail, and then let’s start another one.

Let’s be the boss. Let’s take the boss down. Let’s order too much of something just to see where our limits are. Let’s take a chance precisely because it might fail…

(continue reading) – warning: the rest of the essay does contain foul language.

The first time I read it, my initial thoughts were “Whoah whoah, calm down, buddy!” but after giving it a few more reads and reflecting upon the “blasphemous” ideas on what it means to be a “successful” worker, I realized that to some degree, this guy is totally right. Failure tends to be one of our biggest fears. Even though we might not communicate it, I’m sure we’ve all felt it. This fear has a way of keeping us boxed in and making us feel and act safe. When eradicated, sure, it might feel like chaos, but it must also be liberating. Because when mistakes no longer become “mistakes”, there is no such thing as failure. There is only growth. There is only progress.

After all, how many times did Edison try to make an incandescent light bulb?

Wishing you the best, most fulfilling, life-improving mistakes,
C