“The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing you will make one.” -Elbert Hubbard
The other day I read that most of our fears can be boiled down to a fear of inadequacy, and, consequently, rejection. I know this is true for me.
When I feel a sense of panic about the potential to fail, it’s really more about being seen as a failure. When I make mistakes without witnesses, assuming the mistakes don’t cause me immense discomfort, I generally rebound fairly quickly. It’s almost like a tree falling the wrong way in the woods–if no one sees it, did it even happen at all?
I suspect this is true for most of us. A stumble that no one saw isn’t nearly as mortifying as a stumble with an audience.
When you factor in assumptions about other people’s judgment, suddenly a mistake seems like more than a poor decision; it seems like an admission of weakness. It seems less about our choice in a moment and more about our character on the whole.
But there’s something ironic about fearing judgment for being fallible, since this is something we all have in common. If we can just embrace our vulnerability and accept that our mistakes don’t define us, they can lead to a greater sense of meaning and connection.
Most of the purpose-driven people I’ve met feel motivated by the need to help people with struggles they’ve already faced. Because we err and hurt, we can feel for other people and do our part to help ease their pain. And because we know we’re fallible, we learn to be humble, which helps us appreciate and forgive.
There’s no denying that there are some mistakes that we wouldn’t make if we could re-live those moments. But the reality is that’s never an option. All we can ever do is make the smartest, bravest choice based on what we know in this moment.
The bravest choice is to do what we really want to do, regardless of who might see and form opinions. It might not always feel comfortable to risk being seen as inadequate, but the alternative is to risk feeling partially alive.
Photo by Wonderlane

About Lori Deschene
Lori Deschene is the founder of Tiny Buddha. She started the site after struggling with depression, bulimia, c-PTSD, and toxic shame so she could recycle her former pain into something useful and inspire others to do the same. You can find her books, including Tiny Buddha’s Gratitude Journal and Tiny Buddha’s Worry Journal, here and learn more about her eCourse, Recreate Your Life Story, if you’re ready to transform your life and become the person you want to be.
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“The bravest choice is to do what we really want to do, regardless of who might see and form opinions.”
As someone who spent the bulk of her life relying on external validation to form my self-esteem, this is precisely what I try to do now.
“And because we know were fallible, we learn to be humble, which helps us appreciate and forgive.”
Oh, yes. It took the biggest hurt I ever imposed on someone else to teach me this. My world came crashing down and I learned humility, and from there I started to rebuild myself in a healthier way.
The thing is, when we see people who don’t appear to make mistakes – we don’t love them any better, or respect them more. We sniff at them as phonies, or wait gleefully for them to make a mistake. Making mistakes – big, public, embarrassing ones – actually join people together, rather than push them apart. (At least, I tell myself this when my latest writing project has been eviscerated – kindly – by my crit group, lol.)
This article totally spoke to my heart – I’m going to print it off and pin it up as a reminder that the mistakes we make do not define us, but provide valuable lessons from which we grow and develop. Thank you x
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This really goes hand in hand with a TED talk I found over the weekend. http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/brene_brown_on_vulnerability.html
Excellent post Lori. This fear can be so paralyzing in all areas of life – work, love, parenting, friendship…
One thing I have found that helps abate this fear is to replace negative, toxic, critical relationships (in all of the above areas) wherever possible, with positive, affirming relationships. If the people in your life accept your humanity (thereby accepting that you will make mistakes) and value you all the same it goes a long way toward silencing the voices of the inner critic that tells us we are inadequate. Thanks for addressing this so articulately. I will be sharing it:)
You are most welcome. =)
Yes, I love that TED talk! I’ve actually posted it on the blog before. I think vulnerability is definitely the key to connection.
You’re most welcome–and great point, Cindy! It makes such a difference to have a supportive network of friends and family.
I think it was Elizabeth Gilbert who wrote “Ruin is the road to transformation.” Sometimes we have to lose everything to create what we really want.
Yes, so true! I think that when people disguise their humanity, they seem less accessible. We’re all human–why not just embrace it together?