Spring of my eighth grade year. Cheerleading tryouts. I wasn’t athletic. My hand-eye coordination was iffy. And learning steps to a routine? Forget about it.

But I tried out anyway.

Looking back, I marvel at my confidence. I mean my rhythm has always been questionable. I’ll never forget performing the dance routine for the judges wondering why the girls in my group weren’t keeping time with the music like me.

I knew my name was going to show up on the roster. But it didn’t. I was cut. I tried. I failed.

But I was no failure.

My momma consoled. She loved. She supported. She encouraged. She helped me face my inadequacies. She didn’t say the judges made a mistake. She didn’t run up to the school demanding a second try.

Instead? The most painful thing she could have done—The best thing she could have done. She let me hurt. She let me fail.

And I’m grateful.

I didn’t make the team, but I slowly discovered my niche. I’m better for the struggle.

As a momma myself, I’ve realized I must let my children fail. It sounds counter-intuitive. Ridiculous even. It goes against every momma-gut feeling I have.

Because I ache to think of their pain. My role as mom is to protect Ella and Caleb from hurt. To shield them from loss. To guard their tender psyches from the devastation of failing.

Right?

But what if I’m wrong? What if our children need to fail?

Is our goal as parents to raise winners? Or is it to raise children who know how to rise above their struggles and failure?

If I want my children to be able to get back up and dust the dirt off after a fall, I must teach them how to do that—how to get back up. If I never allow them to fail as children, they may never rise above failure as adults.

But it’s. so. hard!

I’ll never forget the day my Ella was riding her bike. She was just a little-bit, maybe four or five. She raced down a small hill only to crash and burn. Through salty tears and some scratched-up hands, my husband sat her back on the bike.

He cheered. He encouraged. He applauded. He forced her to get back up.

Letting My Kids Fail
Letting My Kids Fail
Letting Our Kids Fail
Letting My Kids Fail

With tears running down her sweet face, and with this momma’s heart squeezed tight, she raced back down the hill. She conquered her defeat. Then? Sweet-holy-moment, she raced back up the hill to do it again. And again.

She had fallen, but my Prince Charming taught her how to get back up. He taught her it was okay to fail. He taught her how to keep from being a failure.

Because the difference between failing and failure is the ability to stand up and brush ourselves off.

I’m in my 12th year of teaching. I see it everyday. Straight A’s. Football team captains. Student government presidents. These accolades do not define success. The students who have been taught to deal with their failings, their weaknesses? These are the hardest workers, the ones advocating for their own future.

A successful child is the one who has been taught how to face adversity, to work hard, to climb high on her own. Because let’s face it momma—the world is a scary place. I can’t follow my children around with elbow pads and five-point harnesses.

But I can teach my children how to stand back up when they don’t make the team. To learn from their mistakes. To take responsibility for their actions. To fail…

Learning to rise above failure leads to strong, successful children.
Learning to rise above failure leads to strong, successful children.

15 COMMENTS

  1. Wish I’d known you better in HS Heather. Thank you for helping us all to see that we’re only human…imperfect humans. Keep going! Julie

    • Oh, Julie. Thank you so much…I believe in my deepest heart our imperfections can become our beauty marks if we allow them to be. Wish I had known you better too…Then again, I wish a lot of things about HS.

    • Patricia, I would be honored if you would use this blog. Please make sure to link back to this as the original:-) And as a teacher of juniors and seniors, I’m all about building strong leadership in our future leaders. Thank you so much for your support!

    • Thank you so much, Heather! It’s been hard learned for sure. And I know I will still have to walk through much more difficult moments with my kids…

  2. Oh, Heather….your loving words are filled with such wisdom….which only comes from failing…and getting back up–again and again and again…as many times as needed;) Your children–ALL your children will eventually reap the benefits of your ‘momma wisdom’ to guide them in life. And they will be successful and secure because you cared.

  3. You’re absolutely right, Heather! Just as I taught that I was a failure way back then, but then I tried and now I can say that I am a learned individual. And it’s really a good point to ponder on the young minds. It’s not all about winning, anyway. It’s how you face failure and rise up again.

    • Cristina, Thank you for sharing…Our struggles and weakness can and do make us stronger when we allow ourselves to learn from them and when we get back up. Your experiences have helped shape who you are. Thank you for the encouragement you’ve brought!

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