But again, this is the emotional side of what we just talked about. Growth requires failure the same way that gaining strength requires pain. You have to break it down and then grow back slightly stronger each and every time. See, there's a funny cognitive bias that happens around failure and dread that is really interesting and also just completely inaccurate. If you think about somebody who has an unhealthy relationship with failure, let's say they have a goal. The goal is here and they're starting here. Now, the person with an unhealthy relationship, the failure, thinks, "I'm going to shoot for the goal, and then if I fail, I'm going to crash and burn and it's going to be a disaster." This is completely inaccurate. This is not what happens at all. Somebody who has a healthy relationship with failure understands that you shoot for the goal. Something's not going to go quite right and you're going to fail. But you're going to fail at a higher level than you started because you will have learned things. You will have gotten some experience. You will have met certain people. You will have gotten over the first initial jitters of of trying in the first place. So when you give it a second try, you're working off a stronger base and then something else goes wrong. But you're still once again further. Now you've gone from here to here and here to here. And then let's say it's like finally you make it. All of life is like this. It's like a stock chart. No stock just goes up and to the right. Everything is like, you know, doing this thing. And so even though it feels like failure is going to be cataclysmic and it's actually going to leave you in a worse place than when you began, the truth is is that you're going to end up in a slightly better place than where you began. And you simply have to tolerate enough failures to condition that into yourself. Because ultimately the only difference between a successful person and an unsuccessful person is the successful person has just tolerated more failures over a longer period of time. the strongest person you know, they've felt all the same fear, the same doubt, the same insecurity that you do. They've just learned to act despite it. Again, this is the biggest misconception when it comes to doing great things in the world. You don't get rid of the anxiety. You don't get rid of the self-doubt. You just learn how to develop the ability to act despite it. Abraham Lincoln struggled with severe depression his entire life. He was widely hated and judged throughout his presidency. He used to be stuck in bed for days at a time, unable to get out and he journaled to himself that he was going to be the biggest failure in American history, that he was going to be the reason that the country collapsed. Deep, deep, deep, profound insecurities. It's just that the difference between Abraham Lincoln and say you is that Lincoln went through so many of these failures on his ascent up to being president that he's getting depressed about this over here while you're still getting depressed about the thought of being here. The thing to understand is that this is what growth actually looks like. Growth is not getting rid of the self-doubt. It's not getting rid of the fear. It's simply being fearful of bigger and better things. It's doubting yourself for greater and greater achievements. Because happiness is not a lack of problems. Happiness is having better problems. Success is having better failures. Discipline is in a way having better addictions. So you don't really get rid of the struggle. You simply learn to upgrade it. All right, that's it for this video. If you love the harsh truths and you want to see 40 of them delivered in rapid fire, check out my video, 40 harsh truths that I know at 40 that I wish I knew at 20. It's a banger. I'll see you over there.