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Loser Avoidance: How You Nurture Fear of Failure to Excuse Your Refusal to Try

Is fear of failure the ultimate dream killer, or do you nurture it as an excuse for your refusal to try?

Is fear of failure the ultimate dream killer, or do you nurture it as an excuse for your refusal to try? Loser avoidance behavior can become a compelling drug to paralyze you from taking action.

Bill Whittle and Zo Rachel step into the battle. The Virtue Signal is a production of our Members, who have succeeded in advancing great ideas for more than a decade with their generous contributions. Join the team.

Video below hosted at Rumble.

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6 replies on “Loser Avoidance: How You Nurture Fear of Failure to Excuse Your Refusal to Try”

Zo, your remarks in the previous episode about Shame were absolutely liberating to me. God has given you a spirit that is sensitive and obedient to His Spirit, and that is invaluable. I will always be eager to hear what He has to say through you.

To Bill’s point about the consequences of failure being less catastrophic than our imaginations make them out to be, I have repeatedly reminded my wife that ninety nine percent of the things we worry about never actually come to pass. Her response: “See, it works!” All kidding aside, this is a great topic to discuss, as this is something that has hindered most people from fulfilling the God given potential that they were created with.
Most of us have heard the story about Thomas Edison trying 1,000 times before he finally succeeded in inventing the light bulb, and his response when allegedly asked what it felt like to fail that many times was something like, “I didn’t fail 1,000 times, it just took that many steps to succeed.” While this is likely ridiculously over exaggerated, the point remains – those that view what many would call “failure” as simply another step on the road to success, are those who are the most likely to succeed.

I think there are a number of factors involved. Pride is definitely one of them, but I think competitiveness combined with good sportsmanship is also up there. Other areas that contribute are:

  • Team dynamics
  • How to lead or follow as the situation dictates
  • How to be accountable

Back when I was working, (I’m now retired), sometime in the late 80s / early 90s we had to take a number of classes in personal accountability. Does anyone remember the Accountability Ladder? It went something like this:

ACCOUNTABLE BEHAVIORS – Things that happen because of you

  • Make it happen
  • Find solutions
  • “Embrace it!”
  • Acknowledge Reality

VICTIM BEHAVIORS – Things that happen to you

  • Wait and hope
  • “I Can’t”
  • Personal excuses
  • Blame others
  • Unaccountable and unaware

Sadly, I think the lower half of the ladder describes where a vast majority of the younger portion of our society exists.

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