Nobody asks for failure. Nobody hopes for rejection. But here’s the irony—you learn the most when things don’t go your way.
Every time you fall short, you walk away with something else: experience. And experience is often more valuable than whatever it was you were chasing in the first place.
Success is nice, but it doesn’t ask much of you. Failure, on the other hand, makes you pay attention. It forces you to adapt, rethink, and sharpen your instincts. It teaches you things you can’t learn by winning all the time.
The best advice? It rarely comes from people who got everything right on the first try. It comes from the ones who’ve fallen, gotten back up, and figured out what actually works.
So, if you didn’t get what you wanted—good. You got something better.
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