Comeback in Five

Maybe you just now flunked your driving exam. Or maybe you just received a rejection letter from the school or job of your choice. Don't despair – good news is on the way…

3 min

Rabbi Lazer Brody

Posted on 02.04.24

It really hurts. Maybe you just now flunked your driving exam. Or maybe you just received a rejection letter from the school or job of your choice. Everyone hurts all over from a setback; that’s natural and expected. Remember, we’re flesh and blood…

The good news is that there’s no law one must stay down from a setback. Indeed, getting back on our feet requires far more strength of character than staying on our feet without ever having been knocked down. For that reason, King Solomon, the wisest individual who ever walked the face of the earth, said, “A righteous man falls seven times, and gets up again” (Proverbs 24:16). In other words, he doesn’t merit the title “righteous” until he has fallen at least seven times.

Don’t let a setback get you down. You can’t have a comeback until you’ve had the setback. Don’t forget too that even the halfback and the linebacker of the winning team are full of bruises and sore muscles.

Take five minutes and ponder the following five points – one point per minute. They’ll put you back on your feet and give you the motivation and power to make your own fantastic comeback.

1. Only doers fail. People who drive sometimes get traffic tickets. People who don’t drive don’t ever make wrong turns. Wouldn’t it be ridiculous if an elderly person bragged that he never committed a traffic violation, if he never drove a car? The first consolation of a setback is the knowledge that you are a doer.

2. Setbacks teach, and usually trigger a stronger second effort. Failure guards us against complacency and arrogance. When we fail, we realize that we need to improve. Oftentimes, a second effort is far superior to even a best first effort. Don’t be angry with yourself; just try harder. Failure is like your soccer team losing a goal – the other team may have scored a point, but the game’s not over! A setback helps us try harder and reach higher, thereby enabling us to fulfill a higher level of our potential. And, if you failed that driving test, it simply means that with a few more lessons and additional practice, you’ll be a much better driver on the road, for your own safety and for the safety of everyone else on the road.

3. Setbacks strengthen faith. If we were constantly successful, we’d probably walk around with our noses in the air. Then, we’d be ugly, heaven forbid, because few things are uglier than arrogance. The Creator loves humility and wants us to realize that He is the source of both our setbacks and comebacks, failures and successes. He gives us a setback (yup, it’s not your fault!) because He wants us to pray a lot harder and earnestly seek His assistance for our next effort. If our lives were a perfect string of successes, we’d almost certainly neglect our spiritual development.

4. Experience is life’s best teacher. The experience of a setback, especially a painful one, drives a lesson home immediately. Usually, we are slow to internalize and implement what we learn. After a setback, we have a golden opportunity to better ourselves immediately.

5. Small-scale setbacks assure large-scale success. Where would an actor prefer to forget a line, in rehearsal or on stage? A failure in rehearsal often assures a better performance on stage, since the actor makes a special effort to polish the rough edges in his or her performance. Sometimes, small failures are none other than preparations for large successes. Rejections are Divine filters to keep you away from unwanted paths. Rejected? Don’t be dejected. Something much better (job, soul-mate, etc.) is on the way.

Therefore:

Don’t ever despair when you have a setback. Try harder, ask the Creator for help, and then be positive that you’ll do much better the next time. Depression and despair stem from the dark, spiritually impure side, and prevent you from being happy. Despair perpetuates inner turmoil and creates a barrier between you and Divine light. With these five minutes of motivating ourselves, we now mobilize the strength within us to make a great comeback. It’s the real deal.

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