Personal Failure
When someone moves to a new area or country, often, it is because they have new and exciting opportunities in which they would like to capitalize. And this is what I first thought would be the case when I transferred to the UK for my studies. Higher education allows a person to take the path that best suits them and will lead to fulfilment in their career and life. The transitioning however, left me at a loss and with a sense of being alone that I started as a failure in my new life.
Change requires that a person adjusts to rising above, develop, and grow in life. This lesson should have been what happened to me when I first moved to the UK. However, the sense of loss in the life I once had made it less easy to cope and settle in the new country. The period in which I was required to transition was the period in which I experienced failure in managing my funds, learning in school and even in my social life.
The period of failure did not last, and I soon realized I had to adapt quickly, or I would lose the new life I was trying to build. Three months into the period I failure, I realized I had to change quickly. I made schedules and budgets that enabled me to keep track of my responsibilities. At school, I asked for help and agreed to have social visits with the friends I now have. I learned that instead of wallowing in sadness, it is essential to allow oneself to experience loss and grief but just enough to inspire positive growth and development.
The period of failure did not last, and I soon realized I had to adapt quickly, or I would lose the new life I was trying to build. Three months into the period I failure, I realized I had to change quickly. I made schedules and budgets that enabled me to keep track of my responsibilities. At school, I asked for help and agreed to have social visits with the friends I now have. I learned that instead of wallowing in sadness, it is essential to allow oneself to experience loss and grief but just enough to inspire positive growth and development.
The period of failure did not last, and I soon realized I had to adapt quickly, or I would lose the new life I was trying to build. Three months into the period I failure, I realized I had to change quickly. I made schedules and budgets that enabled me to keep track of my responsibilities. At school, I asked for help and agreed to have social visits with the friends I now have. I learned that instead of wallowing in sadness, it is essential to allow oneself to experience loss and grief but just enough to inspire positive growth and development.