How To Use Failure To Your Advantage

How To Use Failure To Your Advantage
One of the biggest roadblocks to success is the fear of failure. Fear of failure is worse than failure itself because it condemns you to a life of unrealized potential.
A successful response to failure is all in your approach. In a study recently published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, researchers found that success in the face of failure comes from focusing on results (what you hope to achieve), rather than trying not to fail. While it’s tempting to try and avoid failure, people who do this fail far more often than those who optimistically focus on their goals.
“Success is stumbling from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.” –Winston Churchill
This sounds rather easy and intuitive, but it’s very hard to do when the consequences of failure are severe. The researchers also found that positive feedback increased people’s chances of success because it fueled the same optimism you experience when focusing solely on your goals.
The people who make history—true innovators—take things a step further and see failure as a mere stepping stone to success. Thomas Edison is a great example. It took him 1,000 tries to develop a light bulb that actually worked. When someone asked him how it felt to fail 1,000 times, he said, “I didn’t fail 1,000 times. The light bulb was an invention with 1,000 steps.”
That attitude is what separates the successes from the failures. Thomas Edison isn’t the only one. J. K. Rowling’s manuscript for Harry Potter was only accepted after twelve publishers denied it, and even then she was only paid a nominal advance. Oprah Winfrey lost her job as a Baltimore news anchor for becoming too emotionally involved in her stories, a quality that became her trademark. Henry Ford lost his financial backers twice before he was able to produce a workable prototype of an automobile. The list goes on and on.
“If you think you can do a thing or think you can’t do a thing, you’re right.” –Henry Ford
So, what separates the people who let their failures derail them from those who use failure to their advantage? Some of it comes down to what you do, and the rest comes down to what you think.
The actions you take in the face of failure are critical to your ability to recover from it, and they have huge implications for how others view you and your mistakes. There are five actions you must take when you fail that will enable you to succeed in the future and allow others to see you positively in spite of your failure.
Break the bad news yourself. If you’ve made a mistake, don’t cross your fingers and hope that no one will notice, because someone is going to—it’s inevitable. When someone else points out your failure, that one failure turns into two. If you stay quiet, people are going to wonder why you didn’t say something, and they’re likely to attribute this to either cowardice or ignorance.
Offer an explanation, but don’t make excuses. Owning your mistakes can actually enhance your image. It shows confidence, accountability, and integrity. Just be sure to stick to the facts. “We lost the account because I missed the deadline” is a reason. “We lost the account because my dog was sick all weekend and that made me miss the deadline” is an excuse.
Have a plan for fixing things. Owning up to a mistake is one thing, but you can’t end it there. What you do next is critical. Instead of standing there, waiting for someone else to clean up your mess, offer your own solutions. It’s even better if you can tell your boss (or whomever) the specific steps that you’ve already taken to get things back on track.
Have a plan for prevention. In addition to having a plan for fixing things, you should also have a plan for how you’ll avoid making the same mistake in the future. That’s the best way to reassure people that good things will come out of your failure.
Get back on the horse. It’s important that you don’t let failure make you timid. That’s a mindset that sucks you in and handicaps you every time you slip up. Take enough time to absorb the lessons of your failure, and as soon as you’ve done that, get right back out there and try again. Waiting only prolongs bad feelings and increases the chance that you’ll lose your nerve.
Your attitude when facing failure is just as important as the actions you take. Using failure to your advantage requires resilience and mental strength, both hallmarks of emotional intelligence. When you fail, there are three attitudes you want to maintain.
Perspective is the most important factor in handling failure. People who are skilled at rebounding after failure are more likely to blame the failure on something that they did—the wrong course of action or a specific oversight—rather than something that they are. People who are bad at handling failure tend to blame failure on their laziness, lack of intelligence, or some other personal quality, which implies that they had no control over the situation. That makes them more likely to avoid future risk-taking.
Optimism is another characteristic of people who bounce back from failure. One British study of 576 serial entrepreneurs found that they were much more likely to expect success than entrepreneurs who gave up after their first failure. That sense of optimism is what keeps people from feeling like failure is a permanent condition. Instead, they tend to see each failure as a building block to their ultimate success because of the learning it provides.
Persistence. Optimism is a feeling of positivity; persistence is what you do with it. It’s optimism in action. When everybody else says, “Enough is enough” and decides to quit and go home, persistent people shake off those failures and keep going. Persistent people are special because their optimism never dies. This makes them great at rising from failure.
Bringing It All Together
Failure is a product of your perspective. What one person considers a crushing defeat, another sees as a minor setback. The beauty is that you can change how you see failure so that you can use it to better yourself.
How do you handle failure? Please share your thoughts in the comments section below as I learn just as much from you as you do from me.

How To Slow Down & Stay Present—Even Under Major Stress

How To Slow Down & Stay Present—Even Under Major Stress Hero Image
A friend of mine once told me that she purposefully arrives 10 minutes early to every appointment. “That way I’m never stressed,” she explained.
Her simple tip has stayed with me for years. I’m not saying that I’ve successfully adopted her easygoing style or disciplined manner of managing time, but at least I always consider arriving early.
Tibetan Buddhist meditation master Chogyam Trungpa taught that we generally experience less stress and fewer struggles in life when we move and speak slowly and mindfully. In other words, speeding through the day and multitasking along the way causes mishaps, oversights, stress, and suffering.
Imagine yourself driving behind the proverbial little old lady who is driving 30 mph while you are trying to get to work. She's happily taking her time and probably feeling calm as she motors along. You, on the other hand, are a ball of stress with your fists clenched around the wheel and your shoulders tight and up by your ears. Who's suffering, you or the little old lady?

How do we slow down?

When we move and speak slowly and mindfully in our life, we experience less stress and less suffering. When there is no speed, there is no struggle.
Here are three simple ways that you can slow down in a matter of moments. Choose one or two practices for this week or this month and then commit to incorporating them into your daily life.
Practice no speed, no struggle by slowing down how you breathe, drive, walk, talk, eat, write an email, clean, shop, and/or cook.
Place a sticky note that reads “No speed, no struggle” on your steering wheel or your computer screen.
Quietly whisper, no speed, no struggle or slow down at random times as you move throughout your day.

Tips to be consistent

In this article, I’ve collected a handful of tips that can help you remember to slow down. I’ve found the following tricks and strategies help create the strong inner support necessary to stay consistent and committed to training your mind to slow down.

Phone reminders:

I love my smartphone and use my alarm and reminder apps to remember my practices. I get a kick out of my reminders. They make me smile and give my friends another reason to roll their eyes at me! My advice is to keep your reminders light and playful, otherwise, they become just another thing to add to your to-do list. You and I both know that there are already enough things on that list.

Sticky notes:

If technology stresses you out, then put the reminders on sticky notes and place them on your steering wheel, refrigerator, and computer screen. “Slow down” is a perfect reminder for most of our daily activities.

Bells:

Meditation teacher Thich Nhat Hanh is a big proponent of using everyday occurrences as practice reminders. He suggests that the sound of a bell ringing can remind you to slow down. Bells can include the sounds made by your phone, appliances, computers, or alarms.

Red lights:

Sitting at a red light is a perfect time to practice slowing down. Focused breathing is particularly helpful when sitting at a light or in traffic or standing in line at a store.

Thresholds:

Another well-known practice reminder is to pause whenever you enter a room or cross a threshold. Pause and take a deep breath as you walk into your home or enter a building. Paying attention to the transition of entering a new space is an effective way of becoming present.
Now, years later, I understand what my friend was trying to teach me. She knew that if I could slow down physically, I would also slow down mentally, which in turn, would cause me to suffer less, focus more, make me happier, and ultimately more powerful. As the body slows, the mind slows, and as the mind slows, there’s less stress. Why not give it a try? Why not show up for appointments 10 minutes early or slow down how you eat or speak? Remember, when we slow down, we struggle less. When we struggle less, we are open and available to enjoy life’s experiences.

13 jobs with the highest earning potential in Nigeria

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f you want to earn big bucks, you will have to acquire the right set of skills 
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You may not be one for the belief that money can buy you anything. But if research is anything to go by, you’ll soon learn that many people still consider salary and compensation to be top of the list when thinking about whether or not to accept a job.
So we scoured the web to find out which jobs currently offer the highest pay potential:
13. Developer or Programmer
Highest earning potential: N11 774 880 p/a
12. Managing Director
Highest earning potential: N11 880 000 p/a
11. Accounting or Finance Controller
Highest earning potential: N13 392 000 p/a

10. Sales Engineer
Highest earning potential: N14 400 000 p/a
9. Human Resources Manager
Highest earning potential: N15 390 000 p/a
8. Senior Insurance Underwriter
Highest earning potential: N17 400 000 p/a
7. Logistics Manager
Highest earning potential: N17 400 000 p/a
6. Electric and Gas Operations Manager
Highest earning potential: N19 006 500 p/a
5. Equipment Engineer
Highest earning potential: N22 800 000 p/a
4. Water Treatment Superintendent 
Highest earning potential: N25 300 000 p/a
3. Chief Executive Officer
Highest earning potential: N32 400 000 p/a
2. Legal Services Director
Highest earning potential: N36 000 000 p/a
1. Company Vice President
Highest earning potential: N60 000 000 p/a
However, remember that in this digital age, a great paycheck is not the be-all and end-all of job satisfaction. One important aspect to remember is developing skills that will be in high demand in the future. The increase in artificial intelligence machines is threatening to replace certain job skills, and form a bigger part of our workforce by 2020 (that’s 4 years from now)!
Those who want to keep their place in this progressively competitive job market and of course earn the big bucks will over the next few years have to change the way they think and act and acquire the right set of skills.

4 ways to spot a great boss during your next job interview

Image result for boss pictures
When you’re on the hunt for a new job, you’re probably worried about whether the company – and the boss – you choose is going to be awesome or terrible. If you think about it, the whole point of pursuing a different job is to move towards greener pastures. The last thing you want is to regret the job change only to work under the world’s worst boss. So, here are the clues to look out for during the job interview to ensure that your new boss is going to be an amazing boss:
She’s authentic
A great boss is natural, genuine, sincere, and doesn’t appear to be hiding anything.
If you leave the interview with a funny feeling about your potential boss being 'weird' or 'off' but you can’t quite put your finger on it, let this be the first warning sign that something’s up. Think hard: who does she remind you of and is that person someone you'd be happy to work with? If you’re usually a good judge of character, it’s best you trust your gut.
She’s a good listener
An indication that she is a terrible boss, is in her demeanour. If, while you’re talking, she's very fidgety, on her mobile device, or staring at nothing, chances are she's not listening to you at all.
Also, if she has no follow-up questions or doesn't respond to your answers, she's having trouble connecting with you. Someone who engages with you, gives you a chance to finish your thoughts, reacts to your contributions, and refrains from going off on a monologue, are all positive indications that they’re a great boss and treat subordinates with respect.
She's confident
If her answers are vague and include phrases like “I’ll have to check,” “I’m not sure,” or even worse – she circumvents the question like a politician, she probably isn't as involved as she should be.
A good boss knows what each person on the team’s role is. A good boss knows the ins and outs of their department.  And a good boss speaks passionately about the company, its goals, and their team’s role within the bigger picture.
Oh, and if she becomes annoyed with all your questions, she's definitely someone you don’t want to work with at all – much less work under!
She's a good leader
The last thing you want is a boss who brags, refuses to share credit, is somewhat of a bully and thinks the company or department will collapse without them. This person's language choices are a good indication that they possess a low EQ.
Instead, you want a team player, someone who inspires and creates an atmosphere of growth. Pay attention to the way in which your potential boss interacts with her co-workers. Also, look for clues in the manner that your potential boss discusses her department’s goals and achievements during the interview. "We did it” and “we’re busy with,” are signs of her team spirit. However, if she speaks of I, I, I... “I orchestrated it" or “I’ve told them to…", she's not keen on team collaboration.

Resistance to standardized testing: A racial divide?

Resistance to standardized testing: A racial divide?
A major outcome of standardized testing and an annual review of those results has been a persistent gap in performance (in general) between wealthier, whiter students and poorer students of color. After nearly 15 years of required annual testing of students in math and language arts under either "No Child Left Behind" or its successor "Every Child Succeeds Act", the gap in performance has been persistent and unchanging despite its illumination and proposed solutions.
Converting traditional public schools to charter schools has not eliminated the achievement gap between students of means and students in poverty.
Changing teacher tenure laws to allow for easier dismissal of teachers whose students have not performed up to expectations has not eliminated the disparity of performance between schools with larger numbers of students new to the United States (and the English language) and those in areas where only English is spoken at children's homes since they were born.
Annual standardized testing has merely shown a spotlight on the problem, but testing is not the solution that policymakers suggest will fix these gaps in performance.
As more and more families learn about the folly of testing, a form of civil disobedience began to grow over the past few years. However, another gap grew - this time in the background of families that chose to not permit their children to be tested each year. This year, a hashtag on Twitter became a symbol of this gulf, playing off of the Academy Awards' persistent omission of actors, actresses, and directors of color - #OptOutSoWhite.
This hashtag reflected Arne Duncan, former Secretary of Education, and his comments in late 2013 about "white suburban moms" who were, in his words, upset that "their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were, and their school isn’t quite as good as they thought they were." These comments were directed at criticism of the Common Core standards rather than annual testing, but his words clearly tried to minimize families' critiques about testing, and brought race into the conversation.
The New York Times included an article about #OptOutSoWhite, remarking that more families from "urban schools" - an unfortunate synonym the Times decided to use to refer to schools with larger populations of children of color - are expressing their displeasure with the standardized testing regime, possibly observing that the more money that goes into these tests, the less money there is for classroom teachers, for adequate resources to support enriching programs like art and music, along with some genuine conspiracy theories about tracking and predicting future criminals. 
Lots of validity in the first two concerns, but the conspiracy theories might be a stretch.
I write with caution about what non-white and non-wealthy families and schools should think or do. But the criticisms the  Times names are those that impact all schools regardless of the color of their students or the wealth of their parents.
The more money that states and school districts are required to allocate towards standardized testing and the curricula that is taught to the Common Core standards is less money that schools can have for art, for music, for drama, for mental health professionals, for school nurses, for up-to-date science laboratory equipment, for enriching field trips, for gifted and talented programs, for interventions for struggling students. (this list is incomplete)
This is a zero-sum game - there are finite resources that schools and school districts have, and if each student is charged a minimum of $24 according to thePARCC web site (PARCC is the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Career and is one of the nationwide standardized assessments), then that means less money schools have to make choices about what enrichment programs they can provide outside of the Common Core standards.
More and more families are now seeing this as a problem, and more and more families of all backgrounds are pushing back by refusing permission for their children to be subjected to these annual tests. And as the Times' article concludes, quoting Warren Simmons from Brown University,
Student testing is like using a thermometer to try to diagnose what kind of cancer an individual has...I think what people are understanding is we don't need another round of testing to tell us that schools are struggling.
Budgetary decisions are moral choices, as Jim Wallis from Sojourners Magazine has said. These decisions about where to allocate money for public education - to people, programs and materials vs. standardized testing and its accompanying instructional curricula - have pushed families of all backgrounds to question that moral decision.

When the Teacher Becomes the Student: The Advantages of Travel(ing) & Study(ing) Abroad

Traveling is an essential part of learning because it allows engagement of the world’s citizens and many of its cultures through first-hand experience. Many U.S. college students miss the opportunity to gain a wealth of understanding and global engagement with a plethora of study abroad scholarships that go unused yearly.
With the onset of globalization playing an integral part in money flows, employment, communication, and moving through life in general, study abroad is becoming more than an elective, but I see as something that is a necessity. While the numbers of students studying abroad has increased. U.S. News reports that 1 in 10 American students head overseas at some point in their academic careers. This is even more disconcerting with the following data:
“... China and Saudi Arabia together account for 73 percent of the growth of international students coming to the U.S., countries such as Brazil, India, Kuwait and Iran accounted for an additional 18 percent.”
Making the effort to learn about these resources and taking advantage of every program your college has to offer, is what sets students apart in many ways. Traveling abroad is better than any class instruction because it is a hands-on. It makes you grown intellectual, emotionally, culturally, and socially. Removed from American comfort zones, U.S. students are forced to mature by learning cultural sensitivity, daily social protocols in another society, culinary styles, and simple everyday navigation such as figuring out public transportation or shopping for food.
During these exciting journeys during your college career, there are many things to consider prior to setting foot on the airplane. One of the most important facets of leaving home, especially in the beginning of study abroad, is the ability to stay connected with friends, family, and coworkers at any time or place in the world. With technology and telecommunications constantly evolving, communicating overseas is extremely easy.
A study abroad essential is the phone application “WhatsApp,” an app that is a cross-platform instant mobile messaging application that allows users to exchange messages without having to pay for SMS fees. Not only is it a brilliant invention and technological advancement, but it truly breaks down barriers for international communication.
WhatsApp allows people from anywhere in the world to send and receive text messages instantly, almost as if they were in the same city. It is a tool that allows students studying abroad to feel much safer in an unfamiliar place wherein they are completely foreign to the language.
A great way to stay connected and share photos or memories during the trip is by using social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram. Using these two platforms allows students to edit and upload their pictures and share them with a tailored audience. However, there a more limitations with these apps including Internet censorship (China, Korea, etc.), or only being able to use them with Wi-Fi or on a specific domain.
Another important app are travel apps such as TripAdvisor, a digital platform allowing users to post and rate their experiences, use of tours, hotels, eateries, and other pertinent travel information. Now TripAdvisor added hotel and flight planning too.
In addition, Google Flights, AirBnB, and the updated platforms on Expedia, Travelocity, Priceline, Hotwire, Yelp, FourSquare are instrumental in navigating food, shelter and gathering foreknowledge of the area that you are preparing to travel. For movement, Uber, Waze, GoogleMaps, GoogleTranslate are excellent apps. And to understand currency, XE Currency works, but make sure that you have a PayPal account and Venmo.
In whole, having the ability to use these media platforms to constantly keep in touch with loved ones is an added bonus and makes the transition into a foreign country much easier. There are so many ways to stay connected no matter where you are in the world, and I think it is important to gain experience through traveling and see the way our fellow human race live their lives. The opportunities are bountiful, especially on a college campus, and I want every student regardless of grade, class, or financial standing, to take advantage of their resources and explore another piece of the world.

How to Be the Luckiest Person Alive, Again

This is a story by James Altucher
He Said..........
I am mentally ill. And I’m in a mid-life crisis. I’m dishonest. And I’m a horrible father. And I think with my dick.
Thanks to all the kind strangers these past few days who wrote me these insightful facts about myself.
Here is the evidence: I don’t spend all my money on useless things.
I don’t believe in college, or voting. I have never had credit card.
A lot of people didn’t like my article the other day about minimalism.
About the fact that I have two bags of ALL of my possessions in the world and I have no steady address.
Comments ranged from what I said above to, “This douchebag should get a haircut” to “He is probably screwing crack whores”.
I hope none of these things are true. But if I am mentally ill I probably can’t tell. That’s the sad problem with mental illness.
I am not sleeping in the street, by the way, I just don’t feel like ever signing a lease or buying a home again. And yes, getting a haircut today.
America has a negative savings rate.
That means the average American spends more than they earn so they have to borrow money to buy the rest of the things they spend on.
Which means if you do the reverse of spending (throwing 99.9% of your things away), you are practically the opposite of average.
And what happens when you go the other way while everyone is running to catch the train leaving the station behind you?
People think you are crazy. People think you are missing the train. The train they rushed to get to.
People think you are having a crisis or you are depressed. People think you are less than them because you are not living their lifestyle.
If you stretch beyond what is normal, then you find out who you are.
I have never owned a credit card. So when I had to find an apartment recently and potentially sign a lease, I had a problem. I had no credit history.
My accountant had to write a letter. My lawyer had to write a letter. I had to show my bank statements. And I had to meet every other resident of the building.
I still had to explain why it was that unlike everyone else in America, I have never gotten into credit card debt.
By the way, debt is not a bad thing. Debt is what fuels almost all small businesses. And small businesses are responsible for more than 50% of all job creation in the United States.
For me, though, I have mental problems when it comes to debt. I really am mentally ill.
When I saw my parents lose all of their money and then get severely depressed because of debt I decided never to have any debt.
It’s ok to have money in the bank and not spend it. I value my freedom more than anything. I value being able to create things. Being able to spend time with people I love.
People with debt can do those things as well. No judgment. But I can’t do it. I get anxious.
For me, this helps with freedom. If I lose all my money, as I have many times before (and written about in detail), I go back to what I always do.
I wrote several years ago about something called “The Daily Practice” that I do to bounce off bottom.
One time, I had lost all of my money for maybe the third time in a row. I asked myself, “What am I doing wrong ALL of the time? And what am I doing right when things are going well??”
And then I cried and pretended to be a psychic on Craigslist to meet women.
Bad idea.
But the then I figured out what I was doing on the way up. And I started doing it. Every day. Every single day.
It’s worked for me. I don’t know if it works for others. But I do it.
I wrote about it in great detail in my book, “Choose Yourself!” but in the past few years I’ve modified it a little.
I called the chapter, “How to be the Luckiest Person Alive.” And I really feel that way. Just like people in a mental institution think they are Jesus, I think I am the luckiest person alive.

My New Daily Practice

For context here is the old daily practice:
Every day, work on physical health, emotional health (strengthening your relationships), mental health (creativity), spiritual health (solving “difficult gratitude problems” and cultivating compassion).
If I just do this every day, I know I will bounce back very fast from any hardship.
It used to take me years to bounce back from a hardship. Like losing all my money. Or a ruined relationship.
Now I bounce back so fast people almost think I’m a sociopath about it. I guess better that than being depressed all the time.
When I’m depressed I end up face down in the gutter with cars heading in my direction.
But I have new things that I do that have helped me to bounce back and thrive even faster.
And the new daily practice:

The 1% Rule 

In each of the areas above try to improve 1% a day.
It turns out if you don’t improve, you decline. This is based on research in almost every area of life where there are peak performers: sports, music, chess, art, etc. I like to apply it to life in general.
My podcast with Anders Ericsson, who is the worlds greatest expert on peak performance (discoverer of the famous “10,000 hour rule” of world class performance), discusses this.
I want to be world class at life. But I’ll settle with better than yesterday.

Don’t Ask “Why?”

Every year, people will do things that seem irrationally bad. They will do those things TO us.
You can’t ask “Why?” If someone fires you from a job and you ask “Why?” They are not going to give you a good answer.
If someone lies to you or cheats on you or leaves you and you ask “Why? they will not give you an honest answer. Often there is no answer.
If a lion chases you, humans for four million years never asked “Why?” Actually, that’s totally not true. YOUR ANCESTORS never asked why.
Losers who died asked “Why?” But they don’t have living descendants.
Only in the past 100 years we have the luxury of “Why?” It’s a luxury we abuse.
Only ask “WHY?” when you can gain. Never ask it when you know there is no answer.

ABR

Always Be Reinventing. Reinvention never ends. Once we fall into a routine, we fall in a rut.
I appreciate articles like, “routines of successful people.” But life is too big to be stuck in a cage at the zoo.
A lion in the zoo has the same routine every day. But he is no longer king of the jungle.
It’s ok to experiment with your routine to see what works better.
I don’t mean have sex with crack whores. I mean, miss a bus because you performed an act of kindness.
Do it every day.
Its ok to say, I want to wander. I’m not a young person but I still want to wander in life. To experiment. To enjoy things. This is how I stay young.
I write these types of posts every day. I need to do other things also. I am trying to reinvent myself.

I don’t know. Shit in your pants once in awhile and learn what it’s like to be alone.