I have been thinking a lot this week about the nature of resiliency. Why? As Programme Director for a global MBA, it pops up a lot on the job. It turns out that resilience is important: it is a key quality of effective leaders and managers, it is vital for companies trying to survive in fast-changing business and technological environments, and it is an important factor in whether students will flourish and grow (not to mention graduate) during their MBA studies. Given how crucial resilience is, we might think about how one develops it. How does one learn to be resilient? Well, it often derives from failure.
I once read an essay written by a professor at an Ivy League university who had served for decades on admission panels. He commented that these elite schools have a tendency to accept students who have never failed at anything. These students arrive at university and suddenly find themselves in a high-stress environment filled with high achievers who have always been at the top of their class. The point of the essay was that these students often turn out to have very poor resiliency; one little setback and they crack. A history of continual success can lead to perfectionism and unrealistic expectations. On the other hand, exposure to failure often leads to resiliency and the development of skills which allow you to pick yourself up and flourish. This professor speculated that accepting students who had overcome barriers or difficulties would be a better barometer of success.
One of the things which I try to impart to students is that failure can be good; that success is built upon learning from mistakes. This is true of business and true of design – a good design usually develops by prototyping, an iterative process which often consists of getting things wrong in order to get them right. Many successful companies develop this way too, starting small and building on mistakes, a type of constructive prototyping analogous to the design process. I try to give students skills to help them become more adaptive and more resilient; I encourage them, in the safe space of the classroom, to push past their comfort zones and embrace risk.
Why am I blabbing on about resiliency and failure in my knitting blog? Well, we knitters can tell you people one or two things about failure! Knitters positively crow about their failures! Ripping and frogging (that is, pulling out your work by unravelling it) is almost a badge of honour. We learn by doing, and often that means learning by doing it wrong. It helps, of course, that knitting is so intrinsically unravel-able (I made up that word!): if you don’t mind the loss of time and effort, almost everything in knitting is fixable by ripping it out and starting again.
Not only are we knitters experts at failure as a part of the learning process, but we do it with a sense of humour! If you don’t believe me, you can look at some of my posts detailing failed efforts, like How to be stupid at knitting, How not to block a sweater, and Stupidity strikes again!
Business consultants, self-help gurus, professional coaches – even futurologists – make a fortune by teaching people to be resilient. We knitters have no need to pay for such advice. We learn it the natural way!
Knitters of the world, stand up straight and proud, and repeat after me:
“I AM A KNITTER!
I LAUGH IN THE FACE OF FAILURE!
RESILIENCE IS MY MIDDLE NAME!”