In the fairytales, the heroes and heroines overcome one or two major problems, and then they live โ€œhappily ever after.โ€ It sounds idyllic and wonderful, butโ€ฆ I imagine it might be pretty boring and awfully monotonous. I like the phrase โ€œhappy for now,โ€ because how can we enjoy our triumphs and relish the feeling of contentment if every day is the same?

Cinderella gained a hundred and fifty pounds, and wonders if her marriage to Prince Charming will survive. Snow White develops eczema, the Beast loses everything in a Ponzi scheme, or Simba faces challenges from Scarโ€™s offspring. Life happens, which is why failure is necessary.

When someone triumphs despite everything, celebrate that moment, but recognize it canโ€™t last forever. Iโ€™ve received rejection letters, been told Iโ€™ll โ€œNever amount to anything,โ€ failed at marriage (the first one!), am a high-school dropout, and was a teen-aged father. Would I be who Iโ€™ve become without those perceived โ€œfailures.?โ€ Probably not.

When life punches you in the mouth, itโ€™s all about how you recover. If every day and every season were perfect, we would have no barometer for happiness. I earned a GED, have almost enough college credits for a degree (one day!), am a proud daddy and grandfather, fair-to- middling as a husband, and am chasing daydreams on a daily basis. The fear of failure pushes me, while at the same time forcing me to acknowledge the moments of contentment, fulfillment, and happiness.


Itโ€™s all about pushing through, despite failure. Keep on swimming.


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