The end is always the beginning! When
you fail, love that moment. Because it teaches you how to face Life! Failure
always prepares us for trying better the next time!
The reason why all of us struggle
with coping with failure is because we think we are in control. We feel we have
put in the best effort. And so, we believe, we must pull off every plan that we
embark on. In a way it is our ego, of us knowing what the outcome will be, that
makes our failures unbearable.
On the other hand, failure can be a
great motivator if we shed our ego. When we understand that what’s within our
control are only the motive, the means and the effort. Beyond that we don’t
have any control and therefore no right to the outcome. When this thinking is
firmly established in our sub-conscious, we will treat failure as a teacher.
And worship failure than abhor or loathe it!
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Abhishek and Vikram: Expressive and Intense! |
Yesterday I had the opportunity to
meet and converse with one of India’s finest film makers, Mani Ratnam. A good
friend, and one of India’s finest cinema critics, Baradwaj Rangan’s new book ‘Conversations
with Mani Ratnam’ was launched by Penguin yesterday. And I caught up with Mani
on the sidelines of the event. Everyone around there at the event was keen to
talk of and toast to Mani’s fine body of work, and his most successful films. I
wanted to learn from him how he dealt with failure.
Me: “Mani, the director, as the captain,
the leader, often takes some momentous decisions. They work out well sometimes.
And they backfire sometimes. In recent times, your decision to cast Abhishek
Bachchan as ‘Raavan’ in the Hindi version of the Tamizh film ‘Raavanan’ (Actor
Vikram plays the title role in the Tamizh version!) completely backfired. How
do you deal with a situation when you realize you have perhaps blundered with such
an important decision?”
Mani: “Failure at and with something
is not the end of the road. I still feel both choices__Vikram in Tamizh and
Abhishek in Hindi__were right ones. And both actors delivered masterfully. They
have very distinctive styles of delivery. One is intense and the other is
expressive. As his director, I believe Abhishek gave me what I wanted. He gave
me a stellar performance in that role. The audience rejected it though. And I
accept that verdict. Did I fail? Commercially perhaps. But creatively, I
learned more than what others may even understand. And that’s the only way to
look at things when they don’t work out the way you planned them to be.”
That’s a great quality. A mark of a
winner. To be himself in the face of both success and failure. When you fail,
despite your best planning and efforts, it only reinforces that the Master Plan
has no flaws. So, that moment of failure does not call for grief. It calls for
exultation, celebration. Because you have just discovered something that has
the potential to break your ego __ which is that YOU are NOT in control of any
of the outcomes of your efforts! And why would anyone not want their ego bubble
bursted? Because only in the absence of the ego does bliss arrive and thrive!
When the ego dies, a new awakening, a new YOU is born!
Which is why the end is always the
beginning. So, love it, love yourself when you fail. Because you have one more
opportunity at Life and__hopefully, intelligent__living!
True and blame non for failure. It is the result of disorganised or mismanagement of time or unplanned actions of self
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