On Multiplying Mistakes
January 1, 1970
We have all had the experience of trying to find a place we haven’t been before, and somehow
sensing that we had turned off the right road. But despite the warning sense within us, we may doggedly
have pursued the wrong road until we arrived at a dead end, or until we had gone so far that we had
lost much time and had much distance to return. There are many ways in which men find themselves on
wrong roads, and seemingly there are many reasons why they don’t turn sooner back to the right one:
sometimes because of stubbornness, of pride or perverseness; sometimes because of the fallacy of
supposing that if a person has taken one wrong step he had just as well take two; that if he has slipped
somewhat he had just as well slip farther; that if he has made one mistake, it doesn’t matter too much if
he makes more. These are all flagrant fallacies that cause carelessness to lead to more carelessness,
misconduct to more misconduct, to the ultimate hardening of habits, and to heartbreak and
unhappiness. It was said of the prodigal son that he “came to himself.” But it was only after he had gone
a long way in the wrong direction and after he had lost his inheritance and his self-respect. If those who
have erred would come to themselves sooner, they wouldn’t have so far to return. There is no reason
why a man who has made a mistake should multiply his mistakes. The sooner a wrong course is
corrected, the less time is lost, and the less penalty imposed, and the sooner is found the peace that
comes with the awareness of being on the right road. Let no foolish pride, no stubborn perverseness
cause delay in correcting a wrong course. Let false pride be pushed aside; let men come to themselves
sooner, let the principle of repentance enter the picture, wherever they are – for the awareness of
moving in the right direction, after having moved in a wrong one, is a wonderful awareness.