# The Grace of Errors

## What an Error Really Is

An error is not a failure. It is a signal that something has been noticed. When a program stops and tells us there is a problem, it is doing us the courtesy of being honest. The screen does not lie or soften the truth. It simply says: here is where our understanding ends. In that moment we are invited to look closer, to ask better questions, to adjust our path. Errors are the quiet teachers that keep us from drifting too far from reality.

## Learning to Listen

Most of us meet our first errors with frustration. We sigh, we swear, we feel personally attacked by a missing semicolon or an unexpected null. Over time something shifts. The error message stops being an enemy and becomes a map. It points to the exact place where our assumptions broke. Sitting with that discomfort, without rushing to fix it, often reveals something deeper than the bug itself. We begin to see our own habits of thought, our blind spots, the places where we were moving too quickly to notice what was actually happening.

- A good error tells the truth plainly.
- A good programmer learns to thank it.
- A good life, perhaps, does the same.

## The Space Between Attempts

There is a gentle rhythm to working with errors. Try. Fail. Understand. Try again. Each cycle narrows the distance between what we imagine and what is true. The errors themselves become smaller, more precise, almost friendly. They mark the edge of our growing competence. On July 13, 2026, I find myself grateful for every red message that ever stopped me in my tracks. They kept me honest. They kept me learning.

*In the end, the errors were never against us.*