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マシュー・サイド著 失敗の科学 をAmazonのオーディオブックサービスであるAudible で聞き読みしています。
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This is Yasui, a solo entrepreneur managing a company primarily engaged in inspecting high-pressure gas equipment. On this blog, I share my thoughts, daily life insights, and experiences during business trips in a casual and varied manner. I hope you'll stick with me until the end!
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I’ve been listening to Black Box Thinking by Matthew Syed through Amazon’s audiobook service, Audible. This audiobook makes it incredibly easy to visualize concepts in your mind, and despite being a challenging book, it’s so engaging that I can’t stop listening.
The idea of learning from failure is something everyone likely agrees with when they hear it.
However, haven’t you sometimes repeated the same mistakes or found yourself making similar errors over and over?
It appears there are two types of mindsets: the growth mindset and the fixed mindset. Both types recognize their mistakes because failure is evident and undeniable.
However, brainwave studies reveal differences in how the brain reacts afterward. These differences determine whether someone learns from failure or not. Simply put, if you don’t even try to learn, you won’t.
If failure doesn’t evoke any emotional response, it may stem from a deliberate lack of awareness.
For instance, if you view a failure as mere coincidence, a random event, luck, or a gamble, the mindset to learn from it will not emerge. This parallels the understanding of why success happens.
If success is merely coincidental, it lacks reproducibility. Understanding why something succeeded or failed is essential.
Failures often carry the potential for wasted costs or materials. However, by scientifically analyzing failure, you can turn even those missteps into something meaningful. Applying this mindset to everyday life could be highly beneficial.
For jobs involving safety, such as ours, where human error can easily lead to injury or accidents, this book provides highly valuable insights.
Sometimes, it’s the smallest and seemingly trivial things that lead to significant accidents.
Let’s keep our minds sharp and approach our daily tasks with renewed focus!
See you next time!