As the saying goes, "Failure is the mother of success." It is easy to say but difficult to practice. I have truly felt this myself.
It was an art class where the teacher taught us how to make paper flowers. With wrinkled paper and wooden chopsticks in hand, the teacher's skillful movements brought a lifelike paper flower to life. After watching the demonstration, I thought it would be simple and eagerly started my own. However, the paper that seemed so obedient in the teacher's hands became unruly in mine; the petals kept sticking together. After several unsuccessful attempts, I looked at the vibrant flowers in my classmates' hands and then at the ugly clumps of paper on my desk. I began to feel discouraged and even thought about just giving up and faking it. But then I thought: If my classmates can do it, so can I!
So, I gathered my courage and tried again. This time, I realized the mistake: I had applied too much glue, causing the petals to stick together. Instead of spreading glue haphazardly like before, I used my finger to apply small amounts carefully, bit by bit. Finally, a beautiful paper flower was born in my hands. But before I could even celebrate, the flower collapsed with a "whoosh." Deeply disappointed, I tossed the flower aside in frustration, saying, "It's too hard, I'm done!"
After sitting quietly for a few minutes, watching my classmates busy at work, I thought to myself: How can I just give up like this? Thomas Edison failed thousands of times while inventing the light bulb without ever backing down; I have only failed twice, so how can I quit now? I carefully observed my classmates' process and discovered that they wrapped the base of the flower with a paper strip to prevent it from falling apart. I made another one, and this time, it was a success! I excitedly handed it to the teacher, who said, "Not bad, an A for you!" Hearing this, I felt incredibly proud. Although it wasn't the most beautiful flower, I felt it was more beautiful than any other, for it was a testament to my perseverance.
Indeed, Failure is the mother of success. Failure itself is not scary; what is scary is losing confidence after a setback. I must learn from my failures to make my journey through life smoother.