# The Grace of Errors

## The First Mistake

I used to treat every error like a personal failure. A broken link, a failed build, a misspoken word, all of them felt like accusations. On a quiet evening in early July 2026, I sat staring at a screen full of red messages and realized something had to change. The computer was not scolding me. It was simply telling the truth.

Errors are not interruptions to the work. They *are* the work. They mark the exact place where our understanding meets reality. Each one draws a small map: here is where I assumed too much, here is where I looked away, here is where I need to begin again.

## Learning to Listen

The best engineers I know speak about errors with a kind of tenderness. They do not rush past them. They stop, read the message slowly, and sometimes even smile. There is humility in that pause. It says: I do not already know everything. I am still becoming.

We rarely extend the same patience to ourselves. Yet the pattern is identical. A friendship strains, a plan collapses, a long-held belief proves incomplete. These too are error messages, written in the language of living. They hurt more, but they point with the same clarity.

## A Gentle Reminder

When the next error appears, whether on screen or in life, I want to meet it differently. Not with frustration, but with curiosity. Not as an enemy, but as a quiet teacher who arrived exactly on time.

*Even the shortest error message carries a kind of mercy: it shows us where to continue.*