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To fail is human.
It’s built into our experience from childhood.
We begin to walk and we fall.
We begin a project, we work toward a goal, or we start a business and we may fail.
We experience these moments -
And we come up short.
And in these moments there is an opportunity for practice -
Learning to relate to these moments from a place curiosity, care, and compassion (vs. criticism, blame, and judgment).
In my recent conversation with Amy Edmondson we dove into the topic of failure and explored this opportunity under the backdrop of larger questions:
How do we stay open to learning in the face of failure?
How do we stay open in the moments where we come up short?
Today’s practice (which is being re-released) offers some options for opening that build upon the conversation with Amy and the insights that came out of it, including:
An invitation to slow down
To breathe deeply
And to make an intentional shift to curiosity, awareness, and compassion.
When you do, it may just open up more opportunities for learning, growth, and getting better next time.
If you want to dive deeper into this topic I would encourage you to check out the interview with Amy Edmondson (if you haven't already):
Or pick up a copy of her book: Right Kind of Wrong: The Science of Failing Well
Thank you for your practice.
I look forward to continuing together next Thursday!
-Joshua
Looking for more practice opportunities?
Check out:
Support the show
By Joshua Steinfeldt5
7979 ratings
To fail is human.
It’s built into our experience from childhood.
We begin to walk and we fall.
We begin a project, we work toward a goal, or we start a business and we may fail.
We experience these moments -
And we come up short.
And in these moments there is an opportunity for practice -
Learning to relate to these moments from a place curiosity, care, and compassion (vs. criticism, blame, and judgment).
In my recent conversation with Amy Edmondson we dove into the topic of failure and explored this opportunity under the backdrop of larger questions:
How do we stay open to learning in the face of failure?
How do we stay open in the moments where we come up short?
Today’s practice (which is being re-released) offers some options for opening that build upon the conversation with Amy and the insights that came out of it, including:
An invitation to slow down
To breathe deeply
And to make an intentional shift to curiosity, awareness, and compassion.
When you do, it may just open up more opportunities for learning, growth, and getting better next time.
If you want to dive deeper into this topic I would encourage you to check out the interview with Amy Edmondson (if you haven't already):
Or pick up a copy of her book: Right Kind of Wrong: The Science of Failing Well
Thank you for your practice.
I look forward to continuing together next Thursday!
-Joshua
Looking for more practice opportunities?
Check out:
Support the show

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