There isn’t anything fun about making a mistake but that’s what being wrong is, in its entirety; is taking a wrong turn. My first thought is being a gameshow and telling Steve Harvey that crocs do indeed fall under the category of wearable shoes to meet your mother-in-law for the first time. Really, multiple people won’t take advantage of there afters and if making mistakes, the experience may go a long, long way, when it comes time to make a decision – the quote: “you learn from your mistakes” is alike the cousin of the golden rule: “don’t do to others what you wouldn’t want done to you”. Throughout all this it is important to note how human it is to make consistent mistakes. All while realizing your wrong doesn’t mean subsequently heading backwards. You may appear to be backtracked from a constituent perspective with the reality placed before looking like you’ve never made a mistake in your life. Because no one’s perfect, and passing a speed bump means you can stop and look around to relive the good, natural intentions you were once taught. You’re able to come up with something better while giving yourself the time that the mistake still exists; avoid being stamped as lazy for atleast trying when that’s what you’ve legit been doing, amiright? Here over you’re making up for lost work and the lingering pest you’ve threatened your own sanity with (yes, yourself) getting into the habit and grind of unlearning what you thought was a reasonable ransom for your miscalculation thus leading on with your beautiful, ingenious life.
The part of this humane lifestyle I speak of comes with an imperfectionist ideal: flaws, human error, and misconceptions. Being human never meant you were supposed to lead the perfect life, it meant you were supposed to work with the rules the universe set out for you. When you’re born, you’re a baby, trial and error is nothing – now you’re grown up and your belief is your own, one simple mistake can threaten your whole conquest. This rules out the past generations’ guidelines set before us as they were simple to comprehend but even more difficult to abide by. The learning process is always before the end goal (equaling the losses to the wins) in the age of data. With tech at it’s peak we’re bound to make thousands of mistakes – while appearing the most confident, the strange part is we are indirectly winning because in condescending context we legit learn as we go, we filter out the bad and unfortunately when we don’t communicate efficiently enough or take our endgoals serious: we block our own blessings and future successes.
To keep our heads clean without pollution we have to realize how much haziness our head can carry while breeding new thoughts because we are forced to learn from our mistakes as we go on with life. Whether it’s through a first person or third person view, what we can immediately gain from our losses is something we can take from the past as acceptable. But not enough to hold onto as a tool for our future – indirectly is how we go about it and how we make up for the damage done in the exterior. What we teach ourselves through a third person perspective can help us learn more about society and make for better, more affluent decisions that are essential to our lives and others. The main principle is to basically let our guard down and allow ourselves to be taught; nothing is forced only dealt with.