# The Grace of Errors

## What an Error Really Is

An error is not a failure. It is a message. When something goes wrong, the world is politely telling us that our understanding was incomplete. The file does not exist. The calculation does not balance. The assumption we carried so confidently turns out to be fragile. In that moment of mismatch between expectation and reality, we are given a small, honest glimpse of truth.

Errors ask us to slow down. They interrupt the smooth story we were telling ourselves and invite us to look again, more carefully this time. There is humility in that pause. There is also possibility.

## The Quiet Teachers

Most of us learned to fear errors early. Red marks on schoolwork. Warning lights on dashboards. Rejection letters. We were taught that mistakes reveal something wrong with us. But the longer I live, the more I see errors as patient guides rather than judges.

They show us where we have not yet looked. They reveal the gaps in our attention. A misplaced word in a letter, a forgotten ingredient in a recipe, a misunderstanding between friends, each one carries the same gentle instruction: pay closer attention next time, with kinder eyes.

## A Small Practice

When an error appears, I have started asking it three quiet questions:

- What did I assume that wasn't true?
- What am I being asked to notice?
- How can I respond with care instead of frustration?

These questions do not always yield clear answers, but they change the tone of the conversation. The error stops being an enemy and becomes a collaborator in understanding.

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