# The Grace of Errors

## What Errors Really Are

An error is not a failure. It is a signal that something has been seen. When a program crashes, a bridge sways, or a sentence falls flat, the system is speaking. It says: here, pay attention. Most of us treat these moments as interruptions. We rush to silence them. But the error itself is patient. It waits for us to listen.

On a quiet evening in 2026 I sat with an old notebook full of crossed-out lines. Each strike-through was an error I had once hated. Looking again, I saw they were the only honest parts of the page. They showed where I had tried, where I had cared enough to be wrong out loud.

## Learning to Stay With the Mistake

There is a kind of gentleness that arrives when we stop running from what breaks. A misplaced word can lead us to a better one. A failed plan can reveal what we actually value. The error does not shame us; it simply removes the illusion that we were ever in complete control.

I remember watching my daughter learn to walk. She fell dozens of times each hour. Not once did she look embarrassed. Each tumble was information. Her small body kept translating the error into balance. We lose that innocence somewhere along the way and begin to treat every misstep as proof that we are not enough.

## The Quiet Gift

Errors ask us to be humble and curious at the same time. They invite us to look closer, to adjust, to try again with kinder eyes. In that way they are generous. They keep us human.

*Even our mistakes are trying to bring us home.*