Success can is only truly meaningful after overcoming hardships. No one likes hard and rough times with tears and pain. Someone who has come through the pain often feels like he or she has accomplished something. An individual that has overcome an obstacle achieves a measure of success. As David Brinkley has stated, a man can be proud if he has laid “a firm foundation with the bricks others have thrown at him.” The most valuable lessons can come from failures. Like Dale Carnegie said, “Discouragement and failure are two of the surest stepping stones to success.” And who could understand the meaning of success if they did not experience disappointment? Light would not exist without darkness and success would not be truly achieved without failure. But we all hope that this failure is only temporary.
By why is overcoming obstacles otherwise important? Let’s start with gravity. When you were an infant, it was the ruler of your world. You couldn’t lift your head, and it was an effort to lift your arms and legs. Then you learned go get up on all fours, crawl, walk, and eventually, run. It would have been nice to continue to resist gravity and learn to fly, and we can do that, but we must rely on machines to do the work. But at each step along the way, we were overcoming obstacles. For most adults, walking isn’t a big deal, but when a baby does it, the whole room applauds.
Therefore, I feel success is from overcoming whatever obstacles come into your life. No one is exempt from difficulty and hardship, so the key is not to look for special opportunities but to create opportunities from the difficulties of life. Those