
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Messing things up is part of the human experience.
But what happens when you fail at something so big, and so publicly...how do you come back from that?
On this episode, four people confess their most epic fails, and what they're doing to dig themselves out.
Edmonton’s Kayla Huszar used to cajole, bribe and beg her children to brush their teeth. But her "gentle parenting" approach led to both her kids needing emergency dental surgery, and feelings of failure. How Kayla created boundaries, stopped getting bullied by her kids, and ditched the permissive approach.
When Jeremy Campbell first dreamed up the Line Spike Frontenac music festival this summer, he pictured 20,000 fans in a field, singing along to an all-Canadian lineup featuring Chantal Kreviazuk and Burton Cummings. Instead, his liquor license got revoked, fewer than 4000 people showed up, and he's now over $225,000 in debt. He tells us what went wrong, and why he still has the confidence to try again next year.
Ify takes her mic to Toronto's Metropolitan University, where students confess their biggest academic fails.
After years of gruelling training and international marathons, long-distance runner Natasha Wodak failed all of her attempts to make it to the 2024 Paris Olympics. Now 43 years old, the life-long competitor is learning how to accept where her body is at during this stage of her career — although she still hasn’t ruled out the 2028 Olympic Games.
After an existential crisis in her early 20s, Erica Rankin decided to quit her 9 to 5 job and start a protein cookie dough business. Things were going well at first, but after a mouldy cookie dough incident and some retail flops, Erica was forced to file for bankruptcy and move back in with her parents. She tells us why she's still determined to live the entrepreneurial life, and how she's doing it despite a lot of burned bridges.
By CBC4.6
1414 ratings
Messing things up is part of the human experience.
But what happens when you fail at something so big, and so publicly...how do you come back from that?
On this episode, four people confess their most epic fails, and what they're doing to dig themselves out.
Edmonton’s Kayla Huszar used to cajole, bribe and beg her children to brush their teeth. But her "gentle parenting" approach led to both her kids needing emergency dental surgery, and feelings of failure. How Kayla created boundaries, stopped getting bullied by her kids, and ditched the permissive approach.
When Jeremy Campbell first dreamed up the Line Spike Frontenac music festival this summer, he pictured 20,000 fans in a field, singing along to an all-Canadian lineup featuring Chantal Kreviazuk and Burton Cummings. Instead, his liquor license got revoked, fewer than 4000 people showed up, and he's now over $225,000 in debt. He tells us what went wrong, and why he still has the confidence to try again next year.
Ify takes her mic to Toronto's Metropolitan University, where students confess their biggest academic fails.
After years of gruelling training and international marathons, long-distance runner Natasha Wodak failed all of her attempts to make it to the 2024 Paris Olympics. Now 43 years old, the life-long competitor is learning how to accept where her body is at during this stage of her career — although she still hasn’t ruled out the 2028 Olympic Games.
After an existential crisis in her early 20s, Erica Rankin decided to quit her 9 to 5 job and start a protein cookie dough business. Things were going well at first, but after a mouldy cookie dough incident and some retail flops, Erica was forced to file for bankruptcy and move back in with her parents. She tells us why she's still determined to live the entrepreneurial life, and how she's doing it despite a lot of burned bridges.

238 Listeners

258 Listeners

121 Listeners

393 Listeners

154 Listeners

47 Listeners

166 Listeners

24 Listeners

749 Listeners

207 Listeners

77 Listeners

769 Listeners

45 Listeners

28 Listeners

49 Listeners

2,046 Listeners

175 Listeners

734 Listeners

27 Listeners

270 Listeners

92 Listeners

160 Listeners

193 Listeners

269 Listeners

27 Listeners

342 Listeners

64 Listeners

227 Listeners

388 Listeners

176 Listeners

192 Listeners

18 Listeners

270 Listeners