Mistakes as a blessing in disguise

red green and black dartboard

On what was one of my last tournament water polo games, one person in particular made a mistake that cost us the game. It wasn’t an important game, probably for 7th or 8th or something, but this one act cast a pretty deep shadow on our tournament as a whole.

But it really shouldn’t have. We should have been good enough that any such situation was avoided in the first place. We should have covered our bases and made sure that small mistakes like these aren’t enough to cost us the game.

It’s amazing how such small mistakes can have such profound implications. The implications are so profound, often it is easy to blame the person that made the mistake. But if it’s a team effort, it’s a team mistake.

Likewise, when you make a mistake that can cost you dearly, that mistake is more of a symbol than the deciding factor. As such, you shouldn’t focus too much on the smaller mistakes, but think of how you can make it so even if these mistakes happen, you still come out on top.

If you treat these mistakes as casting a shadow on your tournament, that negative energy carries on into the future, which helps no one. These mistakes give you the chance to learn what can go wrong, and they give you the chance to address them in future, so really they are a blessing in disguise.

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

person holding blue ballpoint pen writing in notebook
Better communication, better results.
Languages shouldn’t be learnt alone
More easy activities for the low-level language classroom

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

Mt. Ubagatake in autumn
Focus on what you can change
white fish under water
How Cup Noodles and Kawaii Culture made Axolotls famous in Japan
people inside room
Fix your attitude, fix your problems

RANDOM POSTS

Tim Bunting AKA Kiwi Yamabushi on Zao-san
Stop and breathe
Fleshing out ideas to fish out interest: How to find the interesting stuff to share
two man hiking on snow mountain
It’s the experience that counts
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top