The first attempt wasn't the failure. It was the planting.
You're measuring this season against the one that didn't work, and calling yourself behind. But nothing that grows skips the part where it's underground and looks like nothing is happening. What felt like a loss was root work. This is the season it surfaces.
A field doesn't yield on the first pass every time, and a good farmer doesn't burn it down over one thin season — they read the soil and try again with what they learned. Most people treat a setback as a verdict. It's closer to a soil test. It tells you what needs adjusting, not whether to keep going.
What did the version of this that 'didn't work' actually teach you that you're now applying without noticing? Where is that lesson already showing up?
Name one specific thing your last setback taught you, out loud or in writing. Then name one way you're already doing it differently because of it.
One short reading, sent quietly, before the day gets loud. No spam, unsubscribe in one click.
TODO: connect to GetResponse list + double opt-in workflow.