Where have you struck out recently? And more importantly — what did you do with it?
Did you learn?
Did you adjust?
Did you grow?
Or did you allow the failure to discourage you from stepping back into the batter’s box?
Babe Ruth was one of the greatest hitters in the history of baseball. He finished his career with a remarkable .342 batting average and held the career home run record with 714 for nearly half a century.
Yet he also struck out 1,330 times, nearly twice as often as he hit home runs, and at the time of his retirement he held the all-time strikeout record as well.
By most conventional standards, that many failures could have discouraged anyone.
But Ruth understood something essential.
If he wanted extraordinary results, he had to be willing to take extraordinary swings.
The aggressive swing that produced the home run was the same swing that produced the strikeout.
He could have shortened his swing.
He could have played it safe.
He could have focused on avoiding failure.
But had he done so, he would never have changed the game.
In 1927, Ruth hit 60 home runs in a single season, a record at the time — and more home runs than several entire teams managed that year.
He stood out not because he avoided failure, but because he refused to let failure define him.
Greatness requires risk. Risk invites failure. But failure, when approached with the right mindset, becomes the very mechanism through which growth occurs.
The lesson for us is clear.
Do not allow the possibility of failure to discourage you from pursuing your potential.
Swing the bat.
Take the risk.
Step into the arena.
So today ask yourself:
Where have you been holding back because you fear striking out?
What action could you take today — despite the fear — that might move you closer to becoming the person you are capable of becoming?
Takeaway: Big rewards require big swings.

