To err is to evolve. Clinging to ‘right’ is like hanging onto a sinking ship. It gets you no further but instead takes you down. Being wrong. That’s where growth sprouts.
Consider history’s great minds. Each thrived on missteps and reveled in the fall because each tumble was a step up.
Einstein relished his blunders, for they were but doors to enlightenment. Jobs came back stronger the second time around after the failed Lisa computer. Newton’s alchemy paved the way for his laws of motion.
Blunders are not dead ends—they are detours to brilliance. Each miscalculation is a masterclass in discovery.
The ‘always right’? Dinosaurs in the modern age, bereft of evolution’s path.
Wrongness is a rite of passage to rightness. Cherish it. We need only look at history to know that the most valued treasures are the mistakes that led to mastery.