OK. Maybe it has less to do with actually making the mistakes, and more to do with letting other people down, or making them look bad.
This post was inspired by a mistake of my own. I missed a pretty important meeting because of an email I had missed (while on vacation – an honest mistake, but a mistake nonetheless).
The specific ‘ins’ and ‘outs’ of my unfortunate blunder are not what I want to focus on here, but more so the opportunities that are often birthed out of such mistakes.
The reality is that if we’re doing anything that:
> involves other people,
> attempts to do more than one thing at a time,
> or requires near perfect attention to every last detail,
… then we are bound to make mistakes… and ultimately, let other people down.
So what do you do? How do you respond?
As I see it I had three options in that moment:
1. Ignore it and hope that it would go unnoticed,
2. Quickly attempt to ‘pass the buck’ by coming up with a story about how this was not my fault, or
3. Own it
I’m not the kind of person that likes to have things weighing on me for very long… and I think the first 2 options would have left me weighed down and waiting for the proverbial ‘other shoe’ to drop. So I owned it.
It required contacting the President’s assistant (which means it may ultimately get back to the president) and my boss. I wasn’t sure how ‘coming clean’ would be received, and I still don’t know for certain, but I do know that I feel a lot better about the whole situation.
I may have some ramifications to deal with (some relationships to mend, some trust levels to restore, some pride to swallow, etc.), but I know that in the long run it will serve to make me a better person – hopefully someone who more resembles, and even exemplifies, what it means to be a Christ-follower.
An opportunity for growth arises from the embarrassment of a mistake. Not how I would have desired to experience growth, but one that I will now choose to step in to.
How about you?
- How do you deal with mistakes you make?
- How much of your reaction is based on whom your mistake impacted (ie. – those you lead, peers, those who lead you)?
- What does it mean to be a Christian, a ministry leader, who ‘owns’ his/her own mistakes?
Hope you’ll share your insights and stories in the comments section below!
3 thoughts on “Owning Your Mistakes”
Wow, Guy. Me, too. I made a mistake recently and had to own it. Trust to rebuild.
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