Thought Of The Week

TRYING IS BETTER THAN NOT TRYING AT ALL…

2 min · 1 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio TRYING IS BETTER THAN NOT TRYING AT ALL…

Descripción

This week, I want to talk about why trying and losing is better than not trying at all. This is a very important principle to drill into children from an early age. As we used to say to our kids when they were growing up: “If you try something, you may fail or succeed, but if you don't even try, you will definitely fail!" If you try something, your dream stays intact so, even if you fall short, you can still tell yourself you nailed it. But the moment you do something and lose, that story goes, and that hurts; really hurts. It’s not the failure that stings; it's the exposure to other people, as you then let people see what you really wanted, revealed your hand, and showed something didn’t work out. You then think safe would have been better. It's no wonder we therefore often talk ourselves out of trying things for fear of failure and exposure like this. But that logic ultimately betrays us, as short-term sting of losing fades, but the long-term ache of knowing you never even tried lingers. Here are some examples: - A parent accepts a school or Local Authority decision they think is wrong, fearing the cost of losing against an insurmountable opponent, and particularly in the school situation, feeling that losing in front of other parents or staff feels too exposing. But, ultimately, it is their child who loses out. - Someone doesn’t apply for a promotion at work because they realise that their colleagues will know if they fail. Although that person tells themselves that they will go for the next opportunity, they don't. - A business idea sits in somebody's notebook for a few years because, after one rejected pitch, the owner realises that humiliation isn’t worth it; so their idea just dies quietly. However, you must realise that not every battle is worth fighting, so choose your battles and sit one out sometimes. It’s important to know, though, that you made a genuine, considered and wise choice, rather than just one made out of fear, dressed up as common sense. So, this week, remember that the sting of losing fades faster than you think. However, the quiet regret of never trying lingers on for years to come. Remember that trying is better than not trying at all!

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Thought Of The Week!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

213 episodios

episode THE MORE YOU CHASE A FORGOTTEN THOUGHT, THE MORE IT RUNS AWAY... artwork

THE MORE YOU CHASE A FORGOTTEN THOUGHT, THE MORE IT RUNS AWAY...

Today, I want to talk to you about why the more you chase a forgotten thought, the more it runs away from you. I've noticed this happens to me constantly, and I'm guessing it happens to you, too. The moment you start chasing a thought that you have or want to remember, you've already lost and you have forgotten it. That tight, desperate grip we place on our memory sometimes only pushes it further away. The harder we squeeze, the more it escapes. It's really frustrating and irritating, isn't it? This is because your mind usually works better when you're not interrogating it. It's almost as though focusing conscious attention on a blank space makes it deeper, whereas you've got to stop looking to actually find it. There's something almost spiritual about letting go. It's not laziness, it's just knowing when to step back and realising that the best way through sometimes isn't always pushing straight ahead. Here are some examples: 1. You're mid-sentence talking to someone new and, even though they just told you it, their name just vanishes. You search and search your brain, feeling foolish. Then you're buttering toast later and suddenly there it is. 2. That song you always loved plays constantly in your head, but, try as you might, for the life of you, you just can't remember its title. You hum it obsessively for days, getting nowhere. Then one morning, it just appears in your mind without warning. 3. Your keys. You've lost them again! You ransack the house frantically, growing more panicked. You stop, breathe, and give up the search, then spot them on the windowsill immediately. Some will always argue that you need discipline and deliberate practice to strengthen memory. They're not entirely wrong: focused study does help sometimes. But there's a real difference between learning something new and recovering something already known. So, today, try to notice when you're gripping too tightly at a thought. Loosen your hold, breathe, and let it breathe and remember that the more you chase a forgotten thought, the more it runs away from you!

31 de may de 20262 min
episode LASTING HABITS DEVELOP THROUGH CONSISTENT PRACTICE… artwork

LASTING HABITS DEVELOP THROUGH CONSISTENT PRACTICE…

Today, I want to talk about how lasting habits only develop through consistent practice. Strangely, you don't always need motivation or determination to achieve something; you simply need to show up, sometimes day after day, and do the same thing, no matter how small that thing is. Over the years, I've discovered through trial and error, that it’s usually the tiny repeated actions which compound into significant and real change. Our brains are endlessly adaptable, and every time we repeat something, the neural pathways in our brain and body become stronger. Before you know it, that behaviour becomes second nature. A good example is learning a new language or musical instrument. If you study something new like this for just 10 minutes daily, you find your competence builds naturally and you become more expert at it, without even noticing it happening. Here are some other examples: 1. Try to start your morning with just 10 minutes or so of gentle stretching or movement and within days or weeks you will find that you feel physically different in the mornings, as your body will remember what it has enjoyed doing. 2. Try to write just a few hundred words daily, and you find over time that your writing improves in ways that feel almost magical. The pages that you write will also accumulate faster than you'd ever believe. 3. Try calling someone you care about weekly, and you soon find that your relationship with them becomes richer and more real; any distance usually disappears when you stay consistently connected with someone. However, it is really important to stress that some people argue that this type of approach sometimes ignores practical circumstances or genuine hardship. Not everyone has the luxury of stability, that can support a routine. Additionally, life is sometimes chaotic and time isn't always within our control. So, today, remember that showing up consistently can often transform everything for you, but remember also that the truth is messy sometimes, as some days you'll miss your practice. If that happens, the only thing that matters is returning, as lasting habits only develop through consistent practice!

31 de may de 20262 min
episode FOCUS ON ONLY NOW SOMETIMES… artwork

FOCUS ON ONLY NOW SOMETIMES…

Today, I want to talk about how focusing solely on the present may not always be a smart strategy. It's essential to prevent distractions from affecting you when you need to focus, but sometimes, to prevent yourself from being distracted more, you actually need to allow a brief distraction! We often hear people say that we need to be present, be mindful, or only live in the moment. However, whilst this is sound theoretically, trying to adhere practically to this without fail, can be both exhausting and counterproductive. Your mind needs space to breathe, plan, and imagine, and being trapped entirely in the present sometimes prevents you from building something worthwhile for tomorrow. Yes, the moment now is important, probably quite profoundly, but you can't focus all the time. Balance is crucial in these situations. You have to do your best to position yourself where you can focus without losing perspective, but you also have to allow yourself to be distracted by something that will benefit you in the long run. Here are some examples: 1. You may be focused on deep work when a brilliant idea strikes you. It's vital to jot it down quickly before diving back in, as this allows you to develop that idea properly later, when you have the mental space to do it proper justice. 2. You might find worries about the next week surfacing, whilst you are concentrating on something else. You need to write them down and release them. Knowing that you've captured them helps clear your mind to settle properly into the present again. 3. You may be in a meeting, when personal ideas surface, or relaxing with family, when work ideas appear, both out of context. You need to capture them quickly if possible and then rejoin the moment, genuinely, to unburden yourself. You must also do this without guilt, mental clutter, or distraction. Some argue that this kind of approach weakens true presence or mindfulness. That's fair enough, but in my experience, balance, as I've described, works better than extremes, as you won’t achieve anything without focus, but you also won't achieve anything, without allowing yourself to drop out of focus sometimes. So today, try to remember that true focus means respecting both now and later equally; neither trumps the other. Ultimately, remember that sometimes you must not only focus on now, but sometimes you must also focus only on something else!

31 de may de 20262 min
episode DON'T FIX SOMETHING THAT ISN'T BROKEN... artwork

DON'T FIX SOMETHING THAT ISN'T BROKEN...

Today, I want to talk to you about why you can't fix something that isn't broken. Most things in life aren't broken. They're just not perfect. And not perfect doesn't need fixing. That's the wisdom. Here's the thing: we're always so obsessed with improving everything all the time. Self-help books, productivity apps, life coaches—they're everywhere, telling us to upgrade, refine, and optimise every single part of our existence. But I've learned something over time that's genuinely changed how I live: when something actually works, the smartest thing you can usually do is to just leave it completely alone. Full stop. Most tinkering just creates problems you probably didn't have before and probably also didn't need. Think about it. At work, at home, in your relationships, how many times have you actually wrecked something that was working perfectly well before, all because you thought you could make it better or more impressive? Here are some examples: 1. Your morning routine is solid. You wake at seven, shower, have coffee, eat something, and leave by eight-thirty for school or work. Never rushed. But then you read something about morning rituals being good for you, so you add things like meditation, journaling, and cold showers into your morning routine. Within a week, you're now stressed, skipping things, and late! 2. Your team has a working system. Email, spreadsheets, file management - everyone knows what they're doing and how to do it. Deadlines happen. Then management introduces new 'better' software, which it says will help and do everything quicker and make everyone more productive. Six months in, still nobody properly understands it, nothing really works anymore, and everyone, including management, are all less productive and frustrated. 3. Your finances are stable. Money comes in, bills get paid, you save a bit, you sleep well. Then you hear how you need to budget very carefully, so you try to optimise every expense obsessively. Suddenly, you're tracking everything minutely. You then sleep worse because you're constantly worrying and then enjoy almost nothing as a result. Now, I'm not saying that you can never improve anything. Obviously, if something is genuinely broken or actually failing you, fix it. Go ahead. But the thing that actually matters is knowing the difference between something that's genuinely broken and something that's simply not perfect. So, today, remember to resist that urge to tinker with what's already working properly. As people say, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it". Let the good things stay good and remember that you can't fix something that isn't broken!

31 de may de 20262 min
episode DON'T BE TOO DRASTIC WITH THINGS YOU DO. artwork

DON'T BE TOO DRASTIC WITH THINGS YOU DO.

Today, I want to talk about why dramatic change usually disappoints and you therefore shouldn't try to be too drastic with things you do. It's really tempting sometimes to overhaul everything in your life at once, but sustained progress normally only comes from measured steps. Does this sound familiar? You tell yourself that, starting today, you'll be someone new, or do something new. Or you promise yourself you’ll now do all the things you’ve been avoiding.  However, days, weeks, months, and even years pass by, and you may find that you haven’t really changed anything. Think about the last time you tried something radical. More often, the dramatic approach crumbles under pressure, as it fights against natural habits. Even though you may have initially altered your behaviour, you usually discover you have just returned to your old ways. Counterintuitively, the problem isn’t willpower. Life has a rhythm to it. When we rush too quickly into drastic or significant changes,  we overlook the delicate balance we've gradually built up. Moderation normally wins over extremism, which just exhausts. The truth is simple: incremental change sticks. Explosive transformation rarely does. Small adjustments also compound into remarkable results over time. Here are some examples: * Trying to go from zero exercise to intense daily workouts just leaves you injured and discouraged. Personal trainers joke about people who join gyms in January but drop out by the end of the month. Instead, start with just ten minutes of gentle exercise, three times a week. * Completely overhauling your diet overnight ends in failure, leaving you miserable. Cutting out all sugar and processed food too quickly also feels like punishment. However, if you swap one thing at a time, change is more permanent. By adding just one healthy habit each week, real changes unfold. * Quitting social media cold turkey just triggers anxiety and isolation, leading to loneliness, and you crave connection. Deleting everything completely backfires, leading to FOMO as well.  But if you start using social media for just twenty minutes less per day, you wean yourself off any addiction. Gradually reduce screen time for lasting results. Some people always argue that radical action produces faster results, and sometimes it does. However, most people who go all in just end up right back where they started. Slow and consistent change over time has staying power, as how many radical transformations actually last in the long run? So today, remember to take steady steps forward, instead of leaping into transformation. Dramatic starts usually lead to dramatic stops. Sustainable progress is built on consistency, not intensity. Don't be too drastic - the story of the tortoise and the hare isn’t just a children’s tale!

31 de may de 20263 min