Originality Begins at the Risk of Failure
If you’re not prepared to be wrong, you’ll never come up with anything original.
-Ken Robinson

Most of us were taught to fear being wrong. Our wrong answers were circled in red and wrong moves were laughed at. Wrong choices came with consequences we learned to avoid, so we grew careful.
We learned to stay within what was proven, familiar, and safe. But in all honesty, originality doesn’t live there. Being wrong is not the opposite of intelligence. It is often the doorway to it. Every new idea begins as a risk, a thought without permission, a step without guarantee.
To create something new, you must be willing to stand in uncertainty and let yourself look foolish before you look brilliant. The people we admire most did not avoid mistakes, they collected them. They tested ideas that failed, spoke before they were fully sure and trusted that clarity would come through movement, not perfection.
Preparation does not mean having all the answers. It means having the courage to try anyway. So allow yourself to be wrong. Say the thing before it’s polished, start even before you feel ready, learn in public and adjust as you go.
Because, I have never seen originality that was born from certainty. It is only born from bravery, the steady kind that chooses growth over the comfort of always being right.
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