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Home » How To Use Micro-Risks To Pursue Your Goals:​ Sugata Biswas (Transcript)

How To Use Micro-Risks To Pursue Your Goals:​ Sugata Biswas (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Sugata Biswas’ talk titled “How To Use Micro-Risks To Pursue Your Goals” at TEDxUTD 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Fear of Failure

SUGATA BISWAS: “What if I fail? What if I fail?” Those four words and the fear they engender can crush dreams in their infancy and keep a person from stepping into a life filled with meaning, purpose, and fulfillment. What if I fail is not a question that we’re born with.

The fear of failure is something that we are taught. And over time, it becomes a filter through which we experience our lives.

Childhood Innocence

When I was four, I immigrated to the United States with my family. There I am in the leopard print. As you can see, I had a much bolder sense of fashion back then. I was on an adventure and everything was new. My dad had told me about something called snow. Snow was white, it was cold, it fell down from the sky like rain but floated. You could make things with it, but then it could turn to water and disappear in an instant. Now if that’s not magic, I don’t know what is.

When people would ask me, “What’s the first thing you want to do when you get to America?” Easy, collect snow in a cup, sprinkle some sugar on it, and eat it. What else would you do? I wasn’t too worried whether I’m not supposed to say that or if I’m going to get laughed at by saying that. I just simply answered the question. The fear of failure was not something that existed in my world.

Learning to Fear

This is third grade me. This is the boy that learned to fear the consequences of failure. Our teacher had asked us to copy down a series of long numbers that she’d written on the board. Now, the way she wrote it, you could see it one of two ways. As rows of numbers stacked on top of each other, or as columns of numbers standing next to each other.

One of my friends, Andrew, he and I saw it the exact same way, that we saw it as columns and we were writing it down vertically. Our teacher was walking around checking our work. She got to Drew and asked him what he’s doing. Clearly, she was upset. He tried to mumble something, but before he could, she grabbed his paper, held it up in the air and said, “Look, look how stupid he is.” Everybody laughed. Everybody but me.

I just remember feeling really, really scared. That year, I saw Drew transform. The teacher labeled him as stupid and he started to act the label. Somehow, by meeting their low expectations, he lessened the punishment. By the end of the year, he had become his label. The message was clear. Fear on any level will be severely punished. Don’t take any risks.

“What if I fail” became a mantra for my inner critic. That fear then became this filter and I started living through it. Over time, it became invisible to me.

Breaking the Hold

A leadership workshop many years later would begin to break that hold. Halfway through the workshop, we played a game that involved solving a puzzle. The rule was you could only move a puzzle piece one at a time. Each of us had our own puzzle and we had a support person behind us. If we made a correct move, the support person would applaud. If we made an incorrect move, there’s no response.

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The game started and I sat frozen, motionless. I was trying to do the whole game from start to finish in my head because I didn’t want to seem like I made a mistake. And then, corner of the room, applause. Instantly, I could feel my stress rising, my inner critic getting louder and louder and my fear response kicking in. Then, more applause from all around the room.

So frustrated with myself, I just grabbed a piece and I moved it. Shockingly, applause. It was a correct move. I grabbed another piece, moved it. Nothing. Incorrect move. Put it back. Took another piece, moved it. Again, applause. Then, I figured it out.

I still didn’t know all the moves I needed to make to solve the puzzle, but I understood how to go about it. I just needed to try. Even if it’s wrong, I’ll learn something from it. And that will inform my next move.

The lesson was clear. Action is part of the learning process.

A Life-Changing Accident

The fear of failure still had me in its grip and it would continue to do so until an accident changed everything. Later that year, I attended the final business meetings for my company. I flew to Dallas to come and do the meetings. When the meetings ended, we were all very excited. Those were the last meetings. And we all want to get back to our families. We want to enjoy the holidays. And we’re all so excited.

Driving down the highway, it was complete incessant chatter. We approached an overpass. And when we crested the overpass, we saw that on the other side, two large trucks had gotten into an accident and were blocking our way. I didn’t really think very much of it. It was still quite a ways away. But I do remember thinking, we need to slow down.

Then, the entire car got silent. We weren’t slowing. The overpass was completely covered in black ice. Jake desperately tried to slow the car and then maybe veer it to one little gap so we can avoid the accident.

When we hit the truck, a suitcase that was behind me came and hit me on the head, momentarily knocking me out. From there, my memories are just bits and pieces, smelling the gunpowder from the deployed airbags, shattered glass everywhere, helping Willie to the side of the road, looking back, and seeing him raise both arms, begging for cars to slow down, and witnessing another truck hit our car, where Amy was still trapped inside.