"There Is No Such Thing as Failure" with Michael Lindfield & Joseph Carenza
What if everything you've been taught about failure is wrong? This conversation examines three interconnected concepts that completely reframe how we approach life's challenges: crisis, failure, and perfection. Drawing from the Alice Bailey teachings and Agni Yoga, the discussion reveals that crisis isn't something to avoid, rather it is the essential mechanism through which consciousness expands and wisdom emerges.
On this week's episode of Musings From The Mount, Michael Lindfield joins the conversation with an examination of crisis as opportunity rather than disaster. The Chinese characters for crisis mean both "danger" and "opportunity," and this dual nature becomes the key to understanding growth. Without crisis, life would settle into stagnation where nothing moves and nothing evolves. Crisis brings everything floating in the atmosphere to a point of precipitation where we can actually see it, feel it, and work with it. The teaching goes further: "Man has the habit of crisis" – however this does not refer to crisis as a bug in the system but rather the fundamental pedagogical approach of evolving life on Earth.
Perhaps most liberating is the reframing of failure itself. The Alice Bailey material states clearly: "There is no such thing as failure. There can only be loss of time." This doesn't mean mistakes don't matter, but rather that failure simply prolongs the process of revelation. The ultimate outcome, the revelation of truth, goodness, and beauty within us, is inevitable. We can accelerate or delay the journey, but we cannot ultimately fail. Every apparent failure becomes a lesson learned, acting as a safeguard for the future and leading to rapid growth. The episode explores how this perspective transforms our relationship with risk, experimentation, and the courage to keep trying.
The conversation also tackles perfectionism versus what Agni Yoga calls "perfectionment"—the fiery striving toward the ideal. This isn't about achieving some impossible standard, but about responding to the call of life itself. We are returning to a perfection that is already our essential nature, and the striving is what catches us up in the magnetic momentum of life's evolutionary wave. It's an invitation to examine your own relationship with crisis and failure: Are you avoiding the very experiences designed to expand your consciousness? And can you hold the tension between accepting where you are while simultaneously striving toward what you're becoming?
Meditation Mount and HeartLight Productions are pleased to present Musings from the Mount – a weekly podcast with host Joseph Carenza and guests in conversation exploring a range of topics drawn from the Ageless Wisdom teachings. New episodes every Monday.
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