How to Protect Yourself from Failure
- After the Setback
In many ways the two states, before and after, call for the same steps.
In particular,
1.
Have a good support group around you at work.
2.
Communicate with
your spouse or partner.
3.
Don't isolate
yourself and carry the whole burden by yourself.
4.
Identify with
core values that sustain your sense of worth.
5.
Build your
self-esteem.
6.
Develop
interests outside work.
. It's realistic to accept that for most of us, preventing future failures
is something we pay little attention to. Our focus is on immediate challenges
and their success. Therefore, when a setback actually does occur, we are left
vulnerable and open to a rush of negative emotions. The more that a setback
feels like a failure, the more likely it is to scar you. You become more wary
of risk, sometimes to the point of genuine anxiety. You feel a range of
emotions from guilt and shame to anger and fear. Your mind obsesses over
"What did I do wrong?" and "Why did this happen to me?"This composite of reactions differs for each person, but the major setbacks for most people are similar: divorce, losing your job, having a small business go under, and bankruptcy. To make full use of the points already listed, you have to get over the trauma first.
Here's a general guide.
1. Give yourself room to grieve over the loss. Healing takes time.
2. Don't hide from your pain. Denial makes healing take longer.
3. Notice the signs of depression and seek help for them.
4. Spend minimal time with commiserating and indulging in "what if."
5. Find a confidant who has survived the same setback you are suffering through.
6. Revise your vision of the future in a positive way.
7. Make clean breaks with the past where it's necessary.
These points are all action steps; they get you moving instead of brooding. It's unfortunate that the most common way of dealing with crisis is to watch more TV and play more video games, although surveys show that this is so. Sometimes laying low helps your battered emotions to recover, but more importantly, they will recover, in time. Everyone has an emotional set point that returns to normal, usually within six months of a major trauma. Even so, recovery isn't the same for everyone. At one extreme are people crushed by a setback, who internalize it as "I'm a failure." At the other extreme are people who say they thrive on stress and only want to fight harder when they go down.
Most of us fall somewhere in the middle of the spectrum, and therefore we vacillate between discouragement and hope, self-disparagement and self-belief. Beneath all of this turbulence, there is a steady state of the self that can be accessed with meditation, contemplation, and other practices that connect you to your center. It's very worthwhile to explore these techniques, because at the very least you will begin to have a sense of inner purpose.
Most men in particular feel compelled to move on as a first response to setbacks. Something bad has happened to them, so they are determined to find something good as a remedy. The impulse is commendable, but too often what gets ignored is the inner turmoil created by a setback. As a society, we are so used to efficiently organizing the externals of life that we ignore where the real damage occurs, which is inside. You can be swindled out of a hundred dollars in a shady investment and feel enormously angry and resentful, or you can lose a million dollars honorably and walk away from it a better person. The choice is yours, and it depends on how much attention you pay to building a self. In the coming posts I'll talk more about this lifelong project, which is the most valuable thing you can do for yourself and others. Someone who is successful at building a self doesn't fear the ups and downs of his inner world, because he has created an unshakable foundation in the true self.
-Deepak Chopra, MD, author of instant New York Times bestseller, What Are You Hungry For?
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