# The Grace of Errors

## What Errors Really Are

An error is not a failure. It is a signal that something has been noticed. When a system stops and says "this does not work," it is offering attention. The name errors.md feels like a quiet room set aside for exactly that kind of attention. A place where we stop pretending everything runs smoothly and instead sit with the places where it does not.

We spend so much time trying to hide our mistakes. We edit them out of our stories, delete the awkward drafts, and rush past the moments when we misunderstood. Yet the errors are often the most honest parts of our days. They show us where we were reaching beyond what we already knew.

## Learning to Listen

I once watched a friend debug a small program late at night. Each time the code failed, he would lean forward instead of back. His face showed curiosity, not frustration. "There it is again," he would say softly, as if the error were a shy visitor who needed gentle questioning. After an hour the bug was gone, but something else had arrived: a clearer understanding of what he was actually trying to build.

That is the quiet gift hidden inside every error. It slows us down. It forces us to look more carefully at our intentions. The places where we break are the places where we begin to see more clearly.

- Errors reveal assumptions we did not know we held.
- They ask us to be specific when we have been vague.
- They turn abstract ideas into concrete problems we can actually solve.

## A Gentle Reminder

We do not need to fear mistakes. We only need to stop long enough to hear what they are trying to tell us. The file errors.md becomes a small act of hospitality, a modest acknowledgment that being human means getting things wrong on a regular basis, and that this is not a flaw in the design. It is the design.

*Even our errors are trying to help us find our way.*