"Failure is the Mother of Success" ---After Reading
Today, I picked up the book "Smart Decisions" and read it carefully. After I read one of the articles titled "Failure is the Mother of Success", I had a deep feeling and learned a lot.
I believe you also want to know what kind of story this article tells, let me tell you! This is a story about the great inventor Edison, who is familiar to all of us. It tells that he experienced more than 2,000 failures when inventing the electric light, but he never gave up but persevered, and finally invented the electric light for us. The electric lamp that brings light. For us, failure is a pressure. Putting more than 2,000 pieces of pressure on our shoulders will definitely be unbearable. However, Edison regarded failure as success. He believed that the more times he failed, the richer his experience would be. This belief made him not despair no matter what kind of failure he experienced. Instead, it served as motivation. After experiencing more than 2,000 failures in nearly two years, he invented the electric light and successfully rescued people from the darkness.
After reading this story, I remembered an incident that happened in the first grade. At that time, our physical education teacher asked everyone to skip rope. I held the skipping rope and saw that everyone was jumping very well and enthusiastically, but I could only jump clumsily and it broke. I was very anxious, but the rope didn't listen to me at all. I couldn’t dance well either, and everyone was secretly laughing at me. Looking at those disdainful looks, I felt my face burning. I felt very inferior and embarrassed, so I secretly made up my mind to learn how to jump rope to prevent everyone from looking down on me. So after finishing my homework every day, I took the skipping rope in the yard and started practicing. I was sweating profusely at the beginning because I couldn't jump quickly. My mother told me not to be anxious, but to take my time. I must first master the rope skipping movements and coordinate my hands and feet well before I can jump over the rope. I calmed down and danced slowly. After repeated failures and practicing day after day, I finally learned how to dance. And with continuous practice, I danced better and better. I could dance more than 100 times at a time. Already. In another physical education class, everyone was surprised to see my performance and asked me how I could dance so well. I smiled slightly, because I knew in my heart that it was my perseverance in the face of failure that led to today's achievements.
Although this is a small thing, it makes me understand that this small setback is the same as Edison's more than 2,000 failures. As long as each of us has the belief to persevere and not give up when facing failure. , and remember the saying "Failure is the mother of success", then success will be very close to you. How about we make an appointment to work together towards success!