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Last week whilst talking with someone about how they wanted to change career direction, they said to me, "I just wish I knew that this was the right thing to do. It feels like the right thing to do, but I just wish I knew for sure it wasn't going to be a mistake".
But what are mistakes anyway? The "mis" in mistake comes from the Latin for wrong, and so the word mistake literally translates as to "take wrongly". So when you make a choice to take one course of action over another, and your choice fails to produce the results you wanted (i.e., you got it wrong), you have literally made a mistake.
Obviously there are things you can do to maximize the chances that your actions will produce the results you seek. You can do your "homework," research your options, create a spreadsheet and analyze the numbers. You can consult your financial advisor, your attorney, your mother or your fortune teller. But, if you want to actually do something beyond what you've done up to now, then at some point you are going to have to let go playing safe and risk stuffing up!
Without Risking Mistakes, You Limit Success
No one likes to "stuff up". Well, no one I've met anyway! But look at anyone who has accomplished anything of significance in their life, and you will find they've made a lot more mistakes than someone who has accomplished a little. Any achievement worth your time and energy doesn't come with a guarantee of instant success. That's why it takes courage. Only by having the courage to take a risk now and then can you ever hope to have what you want most - whether in your relationships, your career or business or your life in general.
You Are Not Your Mistakes
Whenever you make a mistake, it's important to distinguish who you are from the results (or lack thereof) that you produced. The fact is you are not your mistakes. So if your actions produce result "y" instead of intended "x," see it as just that. You may have stuffed up, but that doesn't mean you're a stuff up. Not at all. Don't make your mistakes mean anything more or less or different than what they are. You made a mistake. That's it, period. It's time to learn the lesson and move on.
So let go of having to achieve a perfect score when it comes to making the right decision every time. Cut yourself some slack and give yourself permission to not get things 100% right 100% percent of the time. Of course, I am not advocating reckless abandon or irresponsibility. However, I am suggesting that once you've decided what you want to do (and done your due diligence) that you step into action toward it despite your doubts and misgivings. It's better to choose to do something than to sit idly by waiting for the day to arrive when you know with 100% certainty which move to take (or choice to make) next. That day may be a loooong time coming.
Fear Regret More Than You Do Failure
Eleanor Roosevelt once said "Most folks tiptoe gently through life only to make it safely to death." So, what new challenges would you take on (and what changes would you make) if you had no fear of stuffing up? Life is way too short to sit on the sidelines wondering what it would be like to play down on center field. So if there is something you'd really love to do, there is no better time than now to make a plan and get started toward it; for if not now, then when, and if not you, then who?

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