10 Famous Failures to Success Stories That Will Inspire
You to Carry On
Failure occurs everyday, in school, jobs, housework, and within
families. It is unavoidable, irritating and causes pessimism.
While the thought of flinging your hands in the air and walking
away is all too appealing, take a second to connect with the people who have
been there and survived.
Here are 10 famous failures to success stories around the world
that will inspire you to keep going and achieve greatness:
1. J.K. Rowling
During a Harvard commencement speech, Harry
Potter author J.K. Rowling outlined the importance and value of
failure.[1]
Why? Simply because she was once a failure too.
A few short years after her graduation from college, her worst
nightmares were realized. In her words,
“I had failed on an epic scale. An exceptionally short-lived
marriage had imploded, and I was jobless, a lone parent, and as poor as it is
possible to be in modern Britain, without being homeless. The fears that my
parents had had for me, and that I had had for myself, had both come to pass,
and by every usual standard, I was the biggest failure I knew.”
Coming out of this failure stronger and more determined was
the key to her success.
2. Steve Jobs
The now revolutionary Apple started off with
two men in a garage. Years later we all know it as a $2 billion
company with over 4000 employees.
Yet, almost unbelievably, Steve Jobs was fired from the
very company he began.
The dismissal made him realize that his passion for his work exceeded
the disappointment of failure. Further ventures such as NeXT and Pixar
eventually led Jobs back to the CEO position at Apple. Jobs said in
2005:
“I didn’t see it then, but it turned out that getting fired from
Apple was the best thing that could have ever happened to me.”
Lost your job today? Keep kicking and you could be just like
this guy!
3. Bill Gates
ill Gates was a Harvard dropout. He co-owned a business called
Traf-O-Data, which was a true failure.[2]
However, skill and a passion for computer programming turned
this failure into the pioneer of famous software company Microsoft, and
the then 31-year-old into the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.
In his own words:
“It’s fine to celebrate success but it is more important to heed
the lessons of failure.”
This isn’t to say that dropping out of Harvard will make you
into a billionaire, but maybe that shiny degree isn’t worth as much as the
drive and passion to succeed.
4. Albert Einstein
The word ‘Einstein’ is associated with intelligence and synonymous
with genius. Yet it is a famous fact that the pioneer of the theory of general
relativity, Albert Einstein himself, could not speak fluently until
the age of nine. His rebellious nature led to expulsion from school, and
he was refused admittance to the Zurich Polytechnic School.
His earlier setbacks did not stop him from winning the Nobel
Prize in Physics in 1921. After all, he believed that:
“Success is failure in progress.”
To this day, his research has influenced various aspects of life
including culture, religion, art, and even late night TV.
Just because you haven’t achieved anything great yet, doesn’t
mean you can’t be an Einstein yourself.
5. Abraham Lincoln
Failing in business in 1831, suffering a nervous breakdown in
1836, defeated in his run for president in 1856, Abraham Lincoln was no
stranger to rejection and failure. Rather than taking these signs as a
motivation for surrender, he refused to stop trying his best.
In this great man’s words:
“My great concern is not whether you have failed, but whether
you are content with your failure.”
Lincoln was elected in 1861 as the 16th President of the
United States of America.
The amount of rejection you receive is not a defining factor.
Success is still within your reach.
6. Michael Jordan
“I’ve missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I’ve lost almost
300 games. 26 times, I’ve been trusted to take the game winning shot and
missed. I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I
succeed.”
This quote by retired basketball legend Michael Jordan in a
Nike advertisement speaks for itself.
It would be an easy misconception that Jordan’s basketball
skills revolve around natural talent. In fact, in his earlier years,
basketball coaches had trouble looking past the fact that Jordan didn’t reach
the minimum height. It was years of effort, practice, and failure that made the
star we know today.
7. Steven Spielberg
Regarded as one of the most influential filmmakers of all
time, Steven Spielberg is a familiar household name. It is surprising to
realize therefore that the genius behind Jaws and E.T. had poor
grades in high school, getting him rejected from the University
of Southern California three times.
While he was in college, he caught the eye of executives at
Universal, who signed him as a television director in 1969. This meant that he
would not finish his college degree for another 33 years.
Perseverance and acceptance of failure is the key to success,
after all.
“Even though I get older, what I do never gets old, and that’s what
I think keeps me hungry.”
Bad grades in high school aside, there is no questioning the
genius involved.
To date, Spielberg has directed 51 films and has been awarded
three Oscars.
8. Walt Disney
Mickey Mouse creator Walt Disney dropped out of school at a
young age in a failed attempt at joining the army. One of his earlier
ventures, Laugh-o-Gram Studios, went bankrupt due to his lack of ability to run
a successful business. He was once fired from a Missouri newspaper for “not
being creative enough.”
Yet today, The genius behind Disney studios is responsible for
generations of childhood memories and dreams. From Snow White to Frozen, Disney
will continue to entertain the world for generations to come.
The logic behind this is simple:
“We don’t look backwards for very long. We keep moving forward,
opening up new doors, and doing new things, because we’re curious… and
curiosity keeps leading us down new paths.”
9. Vincent Van Gogh
During his lifetime, Vincent Van Gogh suffered mental illness,
failed relationships, and committed suicide at the age of 37.
He only ever sold one painting in his life, pinning him a
failure as an artist. However that did not put a damper on his enthusiasm and
passion for art.
He would never know that years and years after his death he
would become known as a key figure in the world of post-impressionism, and
ultimately, one of the greatest artist that ever lived.
He would never know that he became a hot topic in art classes
and his image was going to be used in TV, books and other forms of popular
culture.
In the words of this great, but tragic man:
“If you hear a voice within you say ‘you cannot paint,’ then by
all means paint, and that voice will be silenced.”
10. Stephen King
As a paranoid, troubled child, tormented by nightmares and
raised in poverty, it is no surprise that Stephen King grew up to the title:
“Master of Horror”.[4]
An addiction to drugs and alcohol were his mechanisms to cope
with the unhappiness he felt with his life. The frustration he felt towards
multiple rejections by publishers in combination with illicit substances caused
him to mentally contemplate violence towards his own children.
These intense emotions were those that he focused onto his
writing. And that’s why he said:
“We make up horros to help us cope with the real ones.”
Writing became his new coping mechanism, and this is how the
master author we know today grew to success.
Fail more often in
order to succeed
Like Albert Einstein said, failure really is just success in
progress. If you’d rather not to fail, you will probably never succeed.
Success comes from moments of frustrations when you’ll be most
uncomfortable with. But after you’ve gone through all those bitter times,
you’ll become stronger and you’ll get closer to success.
Don’t be afraid to fail. In fact, start failing, and start
failing often; that’s how you will succeed.
Elizabeth Andal
https://www.lifehack.org/articles/communication/10-famous-failures-that-will-inspire-you-success.html
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