© Chris Leong 2010

Friday, December 05, 2025

Goof Once, Don’t Stage a Re‑Run

The post conveys that making mistakes is natural, but repeating them is avoidable. It encourages self-awareness, learning and accountability without shame. The original quote has no verified source attribution, making the sentiment appear authentic and safe for personal use.


Disclaimer This quote is frequently attributed to a public figure, yet no verified primary source has been found. Use it cautiously — consider it inspirational rather than historically documented.


🎭 Mistakes Happen – But Let’s Not Turn Them Into a Series!


We’ve all been there. That moment when you realise you’ve goofed — big or small. Maybe you hit “Reply All” when you shouldn't have, wore mismatched shoes to a meeting (yes, it happens), or confidently used the wrong acronym in a presentation. Oops.

And you know what? That’s fine. Totally human.
What’s not fine? Giving your mistake a sequel. Or worse… a trilogy.


Because here's the thing:

There’s nothing wrong in making a mistake — as long as you don’t follow it up with encores.

Mistakes are teachers, not touring acts. They show up, smack us with a bit of discomfort and ideally… help us course-correct. But if we start repeating them, we’re not just learning slowly — we’re building a reputation.


Funny Antidotes? Oh, plenty:
  • Once saw someone save over an important file three times in a row, thinking “Undo” would bring it back. It didn’t.
  • A friend kept calling their boss "Uncle Ben" (because the boss looked like the rice guy). Didn't stop, even after being corrected.
  • I personally once sent an invoice with “Thank you for your payment!” before they even paid. Got ghosted for a month.
Moral of the story? One stumble is forgivable. Repeated tumbles on the same stone? People will start handing you a flashlight.


Conclusion:

Own your bloopers. Laugh at them, learn from them — then retire them.

Let mistakes be a limited edition release, not a box set.





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