Ghostman

Daily writing prompt
How has a failure, or apparent failure, set you up for later success?

“Pepaw, it’s like you forgot you are Pepaw.”

My granddaughter said it casually, like she was pointing out something obvious. I laughed.

But the words stuck.

Because she was right.

For a while there I had forgotten exactly who I was.

The question I was asked recently was simple enough: how has a failure set you up for later success? That could mean a lot of things. So rather than wander through half a dozen stories, I’ll narrow the lens and use one point of reference—Memoirs of Madness.

Years ago I was told that if I was serious about writing, I needed a website. Back then the advice was simple: start a blog, create accounts everywhere, and your audience would follow.

At the time I had a decent following on Facebook, so I assumed the readers would move with me.

They didn’t.

Around that same time my wife was dying. When life drops something like that in your lap, internet exposure and audience growth stop mattering. I stopped publicly writing for years. I taught theory, hosted a radio show, and kept moving forward the best I could.

Twelve years later, I rediscovered the blog.

Someone close to me kept nudging me to write again, and I realized something simple—I still had something to say. Years earlier another writer once told me she reread my work because there was always a message hidden in it. I hadn’t even realized I was doing that.

So I opened the blog again and gave it another try.

At first it was rough. I paid attention to engagement and adjusted my writing based on what seemed to connect with readers.

The results were sketchy.

Eventually I stopped worrying about it. I said to hell with it and just started writing again. I took photographs. I explored ideas. I filled gaps and chased unfinished thoughts. Sometimes I circled the same topic from three different directions just to see what I had missed.

Friends started telling me the work felt more relatable. My editor once said something that stuck with me.

“I knew you had it in you. You just didn’t bring it every time. Now you do.”

But there was another problem quietly sitting in the background.

Doubt had become normal.

Somewhere along the way I convinced myself I couldn’t do things the way I used to. I started telling people I would need to ask someone else for information about things I had handled many times before.

One day I had two conversations about two different projects. Both people gave me the same strange look.

They had asked me about things I already knew how to do.

One of them was my granddaughter.

She tilted her head and said, “Pepaw, it’s like you forgot you are Pepaw.”

Sure, I have physical limitations now. That part is real. But the problem solving, the critical thinking, and the thirst for knowledge never left.

For a while I forgot that.

In my own mind I had become something else.

Ghostman.

Still here, but faded. Present, but no longer the man who used to step forward and figure things out.

Then my granddaughter reminded me.

The abilities never disappeared.

Only my confidence in them had.

Now, my blog isn’t what you would call a true failure—at least not in the way we’ve been taught to measure these things. We live in a world programmed for instant gratification. When success doesn’t show up quickly, we assume something must be wrong.

Sometimes nothing is wrong at all.

What I experienced with Memoirs of Madness was closer to an apparent failure.

Here I try every day to take my pain, my indecision, my doubts, and all the strange little thoughts that wander through my head and turn them into something with substance.

Some days I fail miserably.

Other days something clicks. I grab hold of a concept and ride it all the way to the end.

And when that happens—

that’s alchemy, baby.

Alchemy in its truest form.

So I stopped asking permission from my own doubt and poured that energy back into my work, my writing, and the philosophy that now guides everything I do.

Truth over Popularity … No Exceptions.