Manage Your Life

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Rebooting after failure, from the former CEO of Pets.com

Julie Wainwright for SuccessTelevision.com

I know a little bit about failure as most people do when the hit their 40s.   I had a double whammy effect of failure, though. My marriage and my company failed in the same week.   The company was a publicly held one that was well
reframing failure and perspective

reframing failure and perspective

known in its time.  No, not Lehman Brothers or General Motors, but Pets.com.  And the marriage, well, that was my own private failure . The combination sent me into a tailspin.   

I spent the next few years valiantly dog paddling in my own emotions.  I worked and socialized almost every day and to many, I seemed fine.  But when I got home, I was miserable.  I internalized my failure and identified with it.  I eventually moved on with my life and realized how much I had learned during my transition period .

Here are some tips that may help embrace your own healing and move past your failures:

1) Recognize that you and failing are not synonymous.   Resist the temptation to identify yourself with this trait.  I am not suggesting that you just shrug and walk a way from a failure.  No, take responsibility for your mistakes , just don’t integrate the emotion of failing into your being, and integrate the learning.  This is easier said than done and it may take some time before you can truly let go of the negative emotions .  But you have to do so in order to heal.

2) Give yourself time and compassion .  Failure is a death of sorts and, if it is traumatic enough, can result in true shock to the system.   Your actions may fluctuate for some time after a failure; the extremes ranging from being very regimented to behaving erratically.   Trust yourself that you will find a better balance in your life as time goes on. 

Love your craziness or your fixed routines.  Embrace them until they stop working for you and then let them go.  Do not let them rule you or define you; just let yourself be who you are in the moment.  Love the process you are going through even if it feels odd.  It is also very important to be kind to yourself and others through this time of transition.  If you are being irresponsible, then let those around you know that you need to be irresponsible for a while. 

3) Get help if you are depressed.   Depression is a normal emotion when loss occurs.  However, if you are depressed two years later, well, then something more than normal has you in its grip.   If you can afford to, see a professional during the first year of your transition.  This might help you avoid being stuck.  If you can’t afford private sessions with a therapist, talk to your family doctor.  He/she will know free clinics or other services that can help you. 

4) Exercise.  This is key to healing.  Science has proven time and time again that exercise improves your mental and physical states.   Get up and get moving.  It will change your attitude and your body.  

5) Get involved in your community.  Volunteer, go to church, attend town meetings, raise money for causes you believe in it.  Whatever you do, get out and get busy.  You will see that life has been generously and beautifully going on without you and that getting back into other life issues will help move you past your own.

Julie Wainwright’s new book is ReBoot:  My Five Life-Changing Mistakes and How I Moved On.   This book chronicles her life from rising star to her subsequent failure as CEO of Pets.com and in her marriage.  She wrote ReBoot after a blog on her website generated over 100,000 visitors with many requesting more information.


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Comments 1-10 of 21
  • Ogunlade's Avatar
    Posted by Ogunlade Thu May 7, 2009 10:44am PDT

    how can one overcome educational fialure?i'v got throug with my secondary education since year 2005, i'v sart 4 several exarm, which seem to yield no good result.pls how do i go about it?

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  • cynthia's Avatar
    Posted by cynthia Thu May 7, 2009 12:00pm PDT

    Life is for the living, and the past is gone. You either live your life or it will consume you. It is a sin to squander the gift of life, of hope, of energy for the possibility of renewal. Something else: if you get through the difficulty with graciousness and wit, you will find an even greater success.

    Let it go and move on. You will be so glad you did.

    I had two long term important relationships before I got married. I would never talk about them in public, because I have too much class to do so, I never talk about my men. Never. As in never ever. Private. I have dated scores of men. I do not believe in invading other peoples privacy for idle chatter. I can only hope they are the same. I am a disinterested party at this point, and do not care about the past. Each time a relationship ended, my career took off. How much more obvious can you get, in terms of karma.

    This confluence serves to show this lady that she was on the wrong path in her life, and needed to correct her karma. I wish her the best.

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  • meneither123's Avatar
    Posted by meneither123 Sat May 9, 2009 7:04am PDT

    Failing in your education...your fault. Study. May be ADD also. Look into it.

    My failure? Maybe so. I've gotten over it but have employers? Do I tell the truth "lost my mind" thanks to you crazy people I work for, or do I say the truth of "my husbands family ran me nuts" or just say " Family issues needing to attend to".

    My career has nothing to do with my love life but family issues have everything to do with it. Getting out of a bad relationship is a good thing. Wish I could figure out how to get out of this one without his family coming after me with pitchforks and torches. Yes, his family is like this and he has no guts to stop them, reason with them or flat put his foot down as he should have 20 years ago with his kids.

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  • Lucky's Avatar
    Posted by Lucky Sun May 10, 2009 1:12pm PDT

    If you are failing in education, look into getting a tutor. Ask your teachers to recommend someone that you can afford. Sometimes it is the WAY that you study that is at fault. Good luck to you and keep trying. An education is the best investment in your future.

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  • ColleenM's Avatar
    Posted by ColleenM Wed Sep 9, 2009 4:14am PDT

    Getting a tutor is a good idea. If you're trying really hard, though and it isn't working, look at what you are studying. Play to your strengths maybe you aren't academically inclined, but you're great with people or good at fixing things. Meneither was quick to blame you, but if you read her post, none of her problems are her fault. She's stuck in a negative cycle where everything is the fault of someone else. Don't let people like this get you down. Work hard at school, but make sure you are playing to your strengths, you'll be happier, more successful and you won't have so much stress.

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