Learning from failure: 

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I found the concept behind this panel be very interesting. It talked about how people succeed even after points of failure. These notes are from LTUE 2013.

  • Build bridges to work around our shortcomings.
  • Realize that not everyone success is everything.
  • Find people you trust. You can give you honest reviews
  • The book, a wrinkle in Time, was rejected 135 times.
  • Failure is not a permanent condition, unless you accept it and discontinue trying.
  • Sometimes the passage of time can break us, to Moshe disconnect and you may see that it wasn’t as bad as you thought it was.
  • Consider that you have different times of your life to accomplish different tasks.
  • Consider the area as a transition in your life and a new direction of your life.
  • When you see your own shortcomings. For example, in your own writing, you begin to realize that you can now recognize quality. And you can advance forward on your skills.
  • Some things fall open, so some things can fall apart, Marilyn Monroe.
  • When do you know when to abandon the project? Besides this, but it away for a certain period of time, and you can see if you get inspired. Later on the project if not, then you with other projects. Time to meet you see an old project relies.
  • Never as to a project away. You can come back later.
  • It takes time to determine if you’re just coming across a hard spot in the book, but the project is not worth pursuing. It is what you can and put it on hold. Time will pass and you’ll see if you can come up with an answer to continue the project.
  • Some parts of the book that don’t work, take them out and see if you need those items need to go back in or not.
  • If you get stuck in a spot. Write a note to yourself to come back and fix that area. Skip it and move on to the snow.
  • You need a version before you can come back to the best version.
  • Moved to new project. The chance to break emotional attachments to a previous project

Have something to add to the list? Please do so in the comment section of this blog.

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