One
of the most intense movies I’ve ever watched is Apollo 13, the
story of the space mission that was to land on the moon but went awry. Based on
the true story of the ill-fated mission, it was a gripping tale starring Tom
Hanks, Ed Harris, Kevin Bacon, and Gary Sinise.
At
one point, Ed Harris, playing Gene Kranz at Mission Control in Houston, tells
his colleagues that they have no choice but to figure out how to save the
astronauts’ lives. “Failure is not an option,” he says – in the movie.
The
real Gene Kranz said something like that during the actual crisis, but it took
Hollywood to turn what he said into a line both memorable and enshrined in the American
cultural lexicon.
In
the case of Apollo 13, failure was indeed an option – and three lives hung in
the balance. In fact, in anything worth doing, be it space missions, writing a
novel, implementing a new program at work, or anything else, failure is always
a possibility, and it is always an option. We can experience failure through
unforeseen circumstances, and we can choose to fail by the actions we take and
the decisions we make.
The
question is, is the possibility of failure sufficient to stop us from trying in
the first place?
Over
the years, I’ve worked for several large organizations, mostly in the corporate
and educational fields. Organizations become large for many reasons –
marketplace success and natural monopolies (like school districts or county
governments) are two of them. One thing all large organizations have in common
is the desire to minimize risk.
It’s
a natural phenomenon. You become successful, and the desire to remain
successful leads you to minimize risk and seek control over things that can
upset your success, or challenge your natural monopoly. The problem is that
that the desire to control or reduce risk comes with a cost – the stifling of
creativity and innovation. Over a long period of time, creativity and
innovation can become anti-cultural, which may explain what happens to so many
Fortune 500 companies that have disappeared forever.
This
desire to avoid risk isn’t limited to large organizations. It also applies to
individuals. “It’s our survival instincts that help us judge when to take a
risk of failure and when to retreat,” writes Matt Appling in Life
After Art. “But we’ve reprogrammed our instincts with the assumption
that failure is not an option. So we stay home and protect ourselves from
failure and deprive the world of our gifts.”
If
we believe in what we’re doing, or what we want to do, we have to accept the
reality that failure is an option. Creativity is dangerous. It upends the
status quo. It challenges vested interests. It challenges the whole notion of “this
is how we do things here.” If we are being creative, we should expect
opposition, or worse, indifference.
Failure
is always an option. The fear of failure is always present.
We
can play it safe. Or we can choose to create, knowing we may fall flat on our
faces.
We’re
discussing Life After Art over at The High Calling. To see the
discussion, please visit the site.
Photograph: The
damaged Apollo 13 Service Module, seen after separation from the Command and
Lunar module; via Wikipedia.
We need to talk more about failure. It is the true F-word.
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