Dear friend,
We’ve all failed.
And we’ll fail again.
It’s uncomfortable, but it’s also the way we learn.
But today, I want to talk about a different side of failure:
what happens when someone close to us is about to fail.
You’ve probably seen it before:
someone you care about making mistake after mistake…
walking straight into a wall you can clearly see…
and no matter how much you try to warn them, they keep going.
Here’s my take:
oftentimes, we have to let them fail.
Not out of coldness.
Not out of indifference.
But because some lessons can’t be outsourced.
Some things can only be understood by going through them.
You can help, guide, suggest, support, absolutely.
But you can’t save someone from their own learning curve.
And here’s the hardest part:
feeling guilty doesn’t help them – it only puts the spotlight back on you.
Presence means understanding something simple but difficult:
their struggle is not about you, it’s about them.
So let them fail.
Let them learn what only failure can teach.
But when they’re on the ground, and there’s nowhere else to go,
be there. Offer your hand.
Let them fail, but don’t fail to help them up.
Both are part of love.
One Line to Carry With You:
Presence means remembering this: their struggle is not about you.
Truly yours, this moment.
Armando
PS
If this message made you think of someone who’s struggling – or someone who once helped you back up – forward this to them.
Sometimes the quiet reminders matter most.