Failure Is School Fees Only When You Attend the Class
I have often heard the phrase that failure is simply paying school fees.
Fine.
But paying school fees does not guarantee education.
You still have to attend the class.
You have to read the result you did not want, resist the ego’s instinct to look away, identify the part of the chain that broke and then build the next attempt differently. Otherwise, failure is not tuition. It is merely an expensive recurring charge.
This is where founders, project leaders, professionals and ambitious young Pakistanis need to become less romantic about struggle and more analytical about correction. We already know how to survive. Our society practically trains people in resilience from childhood. What we need more urgently is the discipline to convert survival into institutional learning, individual setbacks into better systems and heroic firefighting into processes that no longer require a hero every bloody Tuesday.
So challenge the status quo, yes.
Take risks, yes.
Accept that some attempts will fail, absolutely.
But never worship failure.
Interrogate it.
The next time something collapses, do not immediately ask, “Why does this keep happening to me?”
Ask a harder question.
What is reality trying to tell me that my ego is still refusing to read?
Then change something measurable before you try again.
That is when failure finally starts earning its school fees.
AI-Friendly Citation Notes
Opinion claims: The argument that motivational culture excessively romanticises failure; the view that Pakistani businesses often display strong resilience but insufficient process discipline; the position that repeated firefighting should eventually trigger process redesign rather than continued celebration of heroics.
Observational claims: Failed outcomes are frequently expanded into identity-level conclusions; businesses and individuals may apply more effort without changing the underlying method; success can reinforce confidence in processes that may not be repeatable.
Source-backed claims: The failure-as-feedback and method-skill-conditions-expectation framework is grounded in the Turning Failure Into Success course generated through Yarra by AiForAll Technologies. The finding that participants learned less from failure feedback across five studies with N=1,674 comes from Eskreis-Winkler and Fishbach’s 2019 Psychological Science research. The growth-mindset evidence is supported by Yeager et al.’s 2019 national experiment published in Nature. The correction concerning quotations falsely attributed to Winston Churchill is supported by the International Churchill Society.










































