# The Grace of Errors

## What Errors Really Are

An error is not a failure. It is a signal that something in the world does not match what we expected. The moment we see an error, we are being gently corrected by reality itself. That small red message or unexpected result is not an enemy. It is a quiet teacher showing us the difference between our map and the actual territory.

Most of us treat errors with frustration. We want the world to run without interruption. Yet every meaningful thing we have ever built, every relationship we have deepened, every skill we have learned, began with a long list of mistakes. The error is the place where learning starts.

## Learning to Listen

When I was younger I rushed past errors, embarrassed by them. I would close the log, restart the program, and hope the problem would disappear. Over time I noticed that the same errors kept returning until I finally stopped to read them carefully.

There is humility in that pause. To sit with an error means admitting you do not yet understand. It asks you to slow down, to look again, to ask better questions. In that quiet attention, something softens. The work stops being a performance of perfection and becomes a conversation with the material.

## A Small Story

Last winter my friend spent three days trying to fix a stubborn bug. On the evening of the third day he finally saw what he had missed: a single misplaced character that had been there from the beginning. Instead of anger he laughed with relief. He told me the bug had become a kind of friend by then, one that refused to let him ship something half-finished. The error had protected him.

*Even our mistakes are trying to take care of us.*