Would you erase your biggest failure if it meant losing everything it taught you?
Most of us would.
At least in the moment.
What if, instead of assuming that bad things happen to us, we began asking whether they might actually happen for us?
Recently, I had an experience that brought that idea home.
I had parked my car legally in a private lot while conducting a leadership workshop. When I returned, I found a ticket on my windshield. Apparently my vehicle registration had expired without my realizing it. A police officer with nothing better to do than roam parking lots looking for hardened criminals like me decided I needed a reminder.
Needless to say, I was annoyed.
I paid the ticket, renewed my registration, and moved on.
Or so I thought.
Later that same week, I was scheduled to conduct training at the Washington Navy Yard. Had I not received that ticket, I would have arrived at the gate with an expired registration and been denied access to the base. I would have missed the workshop entirely.
What I initially viewed as a frustrating inconvenience turned out to be a blessing in disguise.
Life often works that way.
Many people have experienced hardships far greater than an expired registration.
Candace Lightner lost her 13-year-old daughter to a drunk driver. Out of that unimaginable tragedy came the creation of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, an organization that helped change our culture and strengthen laws surrounding impaired driving.
Jessica Cox was born without arms. Rather than allowing her circumstances to define her, she became the first licensed pilot to fly an airplane without arms.
Walt Disney was reportedly rejected hundreds of times while seeking financing before introducing Mickey Mouse to the world.
Resilience is rarely built through great victories.
It is forged through adversity.
Every one of us will encounter setbacks, disappointments, failures, and hardships. The question is not whether adversity will arrive. The question is what we will do when it does.
Will we allow it to break us?
Or will we allow it to shape us?
Nobody should have to endure tragedy. It is painful. It is unfair. It is difficult.
Yet history is filled with people who chose to use adversity as fuel rather than an excuse.
What might happen if you chose to turn your mess into a message today?

