# The Grace of Errors ## The First Mistake I used to treat every error like a personal failure. A broken link, a wrong turn, a sentence that landed flat. Each one felt like evidence that I had not thought hard enough or cared enough. But over time I began to see errors differently. They are not interruptions to the work. They *are* the work. On a quiet evening in early July 2026 I sat with a page that refused to behave. Every fix created two new problems. Instead of forcing it, I left the document open and walked away. When I returned, the mistakes had become a map. They showed me exactly where my thinking had been careless or rushed. The errors were honest in a way my first drafts never were. ## What Errors Ask of Us Errors slow us down, and that is their quiet gift. In a world that rewards speed, they insist on attention. They ask us to look again, more gently this time. They remind us that clarity is not something we summon on command but something that arrives after many small corrections. A good error does not shame us. It simply says: *Here is the edge of what you understood.* Everything beyond that edge is possibility. - They teach precision without cruelty. - They reveal assumptions we did not know we held. - They turn finished thoughts back into living ones. ## The Kindness of Being Wrong There is a tenderness in admitting an error before anyone else notices. It is an act of trust. You hand someone the unpolished version of your mind and say, *Help me make this better.* Most people respond with generosity. We forget this because we spend too much time performing certainty. *Errors are how we stay in conversation with reality.* *July 2, 2026*