10moresteps

10 Steps to Let Go of Past Mistakes

Mark here.

I still remember a game I played during my NFL days

that haunted me for months.

It wasn’t a playoff game,

but it felt just as significant.

I made a critical error that cost us yardage—

and while my teammates moved on, I couldn’t.

Every time I stepped on the field after that,

it lingered in my mind.

It made me hesitant.

Second-guessing myself.

And I realized something:

the mistake wasn’t holding me back—

my inability to let it go was.

Years later, as a mountaineer, I faced similar emotions

A misstep on a climb almost sent me back down the mountain.

But this time, I approached it differently.

I didn’t dwell. I adjusted, I learned, and I climbed forward.

Here’s the thing:

Letting go of past mistakes doesn’t mean forgetting them.

It means carrying the lesson, not the weight.

Let me show you how to do the same.

10 Steps to Let Go of Past Mistakes

1. Acknowledge the Mistake

Pretending it didn’t happen doesn’t help. Own it so you can move forward.

2. Separate the Mistake from Your Identity

One failure doesn’t define you. You are not your mistakes.

3. Find the Lesson

Ask yourself: What did this teach me? Every mistake has something to offer.

4. Apologize if Necessary

If your mistake hurts someone, a sincere apology can bring closure—for them and you.

5. Shift Your Focus Forward

Stop replaying what went wrong. Start thinking about what’s next.

6. Take Action to Prevent a Repeat

Identify one small change you can make to avoid the same mistake in the future.

7. Forgive Yourself

Talk to yourself like you would a friend. Would you hold their mistake against them forever?

8. Surround Yourself with Supportive People

Share your experience with those who will lift you, not tear you down.

9. Celebrate How Far You’ve Come

Look back at your growth since the mistake—you’ve made more progress than you think.

10. Keep Climbing

Mistakes are just bumps on the road. The summit is still ahead, and every step counts.

The WYE Challenge

Think of one mistake you’ve been holding onto. What did it teach you?

Write it down and let that lesson replace the regret.

This reminds me of a quote I turn to often:

“Success is not final; failure is not fatal:

it is the courage to continue that counts.”

— Winston Churchill

Mistakes aren’t the end of the road—they’re a turn onto a new path.

The Next Step Toolkit

Here’s a resource that will help you take your next step:

‘Daring Greatly’ a book by Brené Brown.

It’s a powerful reminder that mistakes refine, not define us.

Mistakes are inevitable,

but they don’t have to define our journey.

Every misstep is an opportunity to grow, learn, and keep climbing.

The summit is still ahead,

Keep moving forward, one step at a time!

Best,

Mark

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