So apparently I'm a failure????
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Your friend is rude....it sounds like more of an accomplishment to me! :drinker:0
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That's a very ambitious trail to have done especially with kids in tow. If you want to see the rest of it try starting from the opposite end next time! I'm impressed. Camping.....if I saw so much as a bug I would have called the police. I think you accomplished a lot!0
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I say I am not a failure because I DOUBLED my previous longest bike... I didn't once say "I can't do this it's too hard lets go home I'm finished" (although he claims my cutting it short was saying that)... I say I'm not a failure because I don't know many people who can do 140 miles let alone people my age and weight (I'm still 270#)...
So am I a failure? Is this a guy thing I don't understand? My friend has this thing about "completing" things that feels almost neurotic to me...
You have already answered your own question when you said "I say I am not ... "
You set a new Personal Best. That is the ONLY yardstick that counts. (HIS definition of success as stricktly "pass/fail" is irrelevant, because it is HIS, not YOURS)0 -
This is the oddest thread I've come across yet.
Everyone is hating on your friend because they said you guys failed, which you did (you failed to complete what you set out to do). They didn't call you a failure, or at least that's what comes across in your post, yet everyone is telling you to get a new friend simply because they said you both failed to complete what you set out to do?!
Some people are very odd.
But, no, you're not a failure, you did awesome! You also did a great job of making your friend sound like a douche though.0 -
Get another friend. That one is bogus.
ETA: All accomplishments are successes. You fail when you don't try.
THIS0 -
I do have a problem with internalizing things... I am my own worst critic... I have gotten MUCH better... in years past comments like his would have sent me into a fit of depression beating myself up and bingeing on food because I "failed" and I would beat myself up and try to sabotage myself... I would have cried and been miserable for weeks because of a comment like that...
I have gotten to the point where I am not...
I am very proud of myself for how far we went... I think I kicked some serious butt... and I *know* that I can finish the trail... I intend to go again (maybe before the end of this year... when it is cooler ) and maybe with a better seat (I now understand why people pay hundreds of dollars for a bike seat)...
mainly my intent for this post was trying to understand why my friend thinks this trip was a failure... and I understand that from his POV it was... and I am ok with that...
and I need to get over this transition from "we failed" (by which he meant "we didn't accomplish our goal") to "we are failures" (by which I mean "*I* am a failure and worthless and nothing I ever did is worth anything") that kind of thinking is what got me to where I was... and I spent over a year living on my couch in depression because I beat myself (mentally) into a bloody pulp...
I really love the amount of growth and reflection that this comment shows. I believe that we need to acknowledge failures (in the technical sense, as in not achieving a goal) in order to be able to overcome the obstacles and succeed in the first time. This has nothing to do with your worth as a person. I've seen this confused a lot and it is one of my pet peeves (obviously judging from my previous comment :-) ) . But it is the first thing you need to learn as an athlete in order to better your performances.0 -
We set out this last week to do the greenbrier river trail... About 160 miles in five days... Myself and the kids and two friends...
We didn't make it... Decided to stop ten miles from the end (saving us twenty miles round trip) and did 140... Slept out four nights... Rain one of them forcing us to seek shelter in a gazebo instead of sleeping in our hammocks (pain in the back as it were) butt blister (almost made me stop and hitchhike back to the car at mile forty...)
I decided to cut it short mainly because I have to work tomorrow and I don't want to be dead... I'm already very sore... I'm not sure how the extra twenty miles would have done me...
So my friend says we failed because we didn't "finish" what we set out to do... We didn't finish the trail and I have never seen the last ten miles of it... (we have section biked it before)
I say I am not a failure because I DOUBLED my previous longest bike... I didn't once say "I can't do this it's too hard lets go home I'm finished" (although he claims my cutting it short was saying that)... I say I'm not a failure because I don't know many people who can do 140 miles let alone people my age and weight (I'm still 270#)...
So am I a failure? Is this a guy thing I don't understand? My friend has this thing about "completing" things that feels almost neurotic to me...
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I agree with this!0 -
You failed to reach your goal, but you are by no means a failure.0
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not a failure in my eyes ha it would take me a yr to go 140 miles...lord have mercy your friend must of bumped his head..:noway:0
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NO WAY are you a failure!! :flowerforyou: :flowerforyou:0
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I really love the amount of growth and reflection that this comment shows. I believe that we need to acknowledge failures (in the technical sense, as in not achieving a goal) in order to be able to overcome the obstacles and succeed in the first time. This has nothing to do with your worth as a person. I've seen this confused a lot and it is one of my pet peeves (obviously judging from my previous comment :-) ) . But it is the first thing you need to learn as an athlete in order to better your performances.
Exactly. I've been in a competitive sport for over 35 years, where failing to reach a goal has nothing to do with one's standard of excellence. In fact, only serious athletes tend to strive for reaching an ultimately high standard--but if they equated anything less than a gold medal (the obvious goal) with complete failure as a person, they'd never compete and never achieve. It's not a winning attitude, in life or sport.
I agree with Maverick above...this thread and the responses surprise me. Your friend is not "making you" feel like a failure, for stating an obvious truth, or even for his regretting that you both didn't finish. (The number of people here who think he can, or that he is being malicious is phenomenal.) You choose your responses to what people say. From what you said, your friend was expressing his feelings (of regret) for failing to meet the original goal you both shared. And you can express yours, too--possibly of regret that this time wasn't the time you made it all the way, but moreover that you are excited by how much you DID achieve given the considerable personal cost and effort.
Teresa of Avila used to say "comparison is odious." That is true. Hateful to yourself, most of all. Resist judging yourself by others' standards or externally imposed ones; resist measuring your accomplishments by anything other than your own personal efforts and progress towards your goals. You'll save yourself much unneeded misery, and your confidence and peace will rub off on those around you as well.0 -
I think you did very well! Congratulations on setting a new personal best record!0
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Your goal is not his goal. He has no business telling you that you failed. As I posted recently, a good response might have been, "Thanks; yours is the opinion I count on most." You took an amazing trip, collecting adventures and memories, having fun. You are awesome.0
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