Friday, August 21, 2020
Mistakes vs. Bad Decisions
Mistakes vs. Bad Decisions A politician cheats on his wife, gets caught, and says he âmade a big mistake.â A businesswoman omits a chunk of revenue on her taxes and says something similar to the IRS. A son lies to his mother and later fesses up to his âmistake.â These examples arenât mistakes, thoughâ"theyâre bad decisions. Selecting the wrong answer on a test is a mistake; not studying for that test is a bad decision. The mistake was something you did without intention; the bad decision was made intentionallyâ"often without regard for the consequence. Itâs easy to dismiss your bad decisions by reclassifying them as mistakes. It takes the edge off, it softens the blow. But itâs much worse than that: reclassifying a bad decision as a mistake removes your responsibility, making it no longer your fault. And itâs much easier to live with your bad decisions if they arenât your fault. Consequently, youâre more likely to make the same bad decision repeatedly if you simply consider it a mistake. Such behavior is, by definition, insane. We all make mistakes. We all make bad decisions. They are part of the human experience. We can celebrate our mistakes (failure is often the key to success), and we can learn from our bad decisionsâ"but letâs not confuse the one with the other. Subscribe to The Minimalists via email.
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