Everybody makes mistakes but not everyone learns from them.
Some people make the same mistakes over and over again, fail to make any real
progress, and can’t figure out of reasons. Why?
When we make mistakes, it can be hard to admit them because
doing so feels like an attack on our self-worth. This tendency poses a huge
problem because new research proves something that commonsense has told us for
a very long time—fully acknowledging and embracing errors is the only way to
avoid repeating them.
Yet, many of us still struggle with this.
Researchers from the Clinical Psychophysiology Lab at
Michigan State University found that people fall into one of two camps when
it comes to mistakes:
- those who have a fixed
mind-set (“Forget this; I’ll never be good at it”)
- those who have a growth
mind-set (“What a wake-up call! Let’s see what I did wrong so I won’t
do it again”).
Ø Those with a growth mind-set land on their feet because they acknowledge their mistakes and use them to get better.
Ø Those with a fixed mind-set are bound to repeat their mistakes because they try their best to ignore them.Smart, successful people are by no means immune to making
mistakes; they simply have the tools in place to learn from their errors. In
other words, they recognize the roots of their mix-ups quickly and never make
the same mistake twice.
Some mistakes are so tempting that we all make them at one
point or another. Smart people learn from these mistakes and never make them
twice.
1. Believing in someone or something that’s too good to be true
Some people are so charismatic and so confident that it can
be tempting to follow anything they say. They speak endlessly of how successful
their businesses are, how well liked they are, who they know, and how many
opportunities they can offer you. While it’s, of course, true that some people
really are successful and really want to help you.
Smart people only need to be tricked once before they start to think twice about a deal that sounds too good to be true. The results of naivety and a lack of due diligence can be catastrophic.
Smart people ask
serious questions before getting involved because they realize that no one,
themselves included, are as good as they look.
2. Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different
result
Albert Einstein said that insanity is doing the same thing and expecting a different result. There are a lot of people who seem determined that two plus two will eventually equal to five. Smart people, on the other hand, need only experience this frustration once. The fact is simple: if you keep the same approach, you’ll keep getting the same results, no matter how much you hope for the opposite.
Smart people know that if they want a different result,
they need to change their approach, even when it’s painful to do so.
3. Failing to delay gratification
We live in a world where books instantly appear on our e-readers, news travels far and wide, and just about anything can show up at our doorsteps in as little as a day. Smart people know that gratification doesn’t come quickly and hard work comes long before the reward.
They also
know how to use this as motivation through every step of the arduous
process that amounts to success because they’ve felt the pain and
disappointment that come with selling themselves short.
4. Operating without a budget
You can’t experience financial freedom until you operate under the constraint of a budget. Sticking to a budget, personally and professionally, forces us to make thoughtful choices about what we want and need.
Smart people only have to face that insurmountable pile of bills once
before getting their act together, starting with a thorough reckoning as to
where their money is going. They realize that once you understand how much
you’re spending and what you’re spending it on, the right choices become clear.
A morning latte is a lot less tempting when you’re aware of
the cost: $1,000 on average per year. Having a budget isn’t only about making
sure that you have enough to pay the bills; smart people know that making and
sticking to a strict budget means never having to pass up an opportunity
because they’ve blown their precious capital on discretionary expenditures. Budgets
establish discipline, and discipline is the foundation of quality work.
5. Losing sight of the big picture
It’s so easy to become head-down busy, working so hard on what’s right in front of you that you lose sight of the big picture. But smart people learn how to keep this in check by weighing their daily priorities against a carefully calculated goal. It’s not that they don’t care about small-scale work, they just have the discipline and perspective to adjust their course as necessary.
Life is all about the big picture, and when you lose sight
of it, everything suffers.
6. Not doing your homework
Everybody’s taken a shortcut at some point, whether it was
copying a friend’s Mathematics assignment or strolling into an important
meeting unprepared. Smart people realize that while they may occasionally get
lucky, that approach will hold them back from achieving their full potential.
They don’t take chances, and they understand that there’s no
substitute for hard work and due diligence. They know that if they don’t do
their homework, they’ll never learn anything and that’s a surefire way to
bring your career to a screeching halt.
7. Trying to be someone you’re not
It’s tempting to try to please people by being whom they
want you to be, but no one likes a fake, and trying to be someone you’re not
never ends well. Smart people figure that out the first time they get called
out for being a phony, forget their lines, or drop out of character.
Other people never seem to realize that everyone else can see right through their act. They don’t recognize the relationships they’ve damaged, the jobs they’ve lost, and the opportunities they’ve missed as a result of trying to be someone they’re not.
Smart people, on the other hand,
make that connection right away and realize that happiness and success demand
authenticity.
8. Trying to please everyone
Almost everyone makes this mistake at some point, but smart
people realize quickly that it’s simply impossible to please everybody and
trying to please everyone pleases no one. Smart people know that in order to be
effective, you have to develop the courage to call the shots and to make the
choices that you feel are right (not the choices that everyone will like).
9. Playing the victim
News reports and our social media feeds are filled with
stories of people who seem to get ahead by playing the victim. Smart people may
try it once, but they realize quickly that it’s a form of manipulation and that
any benefits will come to a screeching halt as soon as people see that it’s a
game. But there’s a subtler aspect of this strategy that only truly smart
people grasp: to play the victim, you have to give up your power, and you can’t
put a price on that.
10. Trying to change someone
The only way that people change is through the desire and wherewithal to change themselves. Still, it’s tempting to try to change someone who doesn’t want to change, as if your sheer will and desire for them to improve will change them (as it has you).
Some even actively choose people with
problems, thinking that they can “fix” them. Smart people may make that mistake
once, but then they realize that they’ll never be able to change anyone but
themselves. Instead, they build their lives around genuine, positive people and
work to avoid problematic people that bring them down.
Bringing it all together
Emotionally intelligent people are successful because they never stop learning. They learn from their mistakes, they learn from their successes, and they’re always changing themselves for the better.
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