Don’t Read Self-Help Books to Know About Success

Read the ‘CV of Failures’ written by successful people and dig deeper into their stories

Mukundarajan V N
4 min readApr 6, 2021
Accomplishment is only the tip of the iceberg (image credit:pexels.com)

Success is visible, and people flaunt their successes with gusto. Nobody wants to talk about their failures. It’s not because they lack humility; people are not just interested in listening to uninspiring tales of setbacks.

Success is the most popular and bestselling self-help genre. We have thousands of titles beginning “How to Succeed………”, but very few books screaming with headlines like, “How to Fail and Then Succeed” or “Six Lessons I Learned from My Failures”.

In 2016, Johannes Haushofer, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Princeton University, (now Assistant Professor of Economics, Stockholm University) took the academic world by storm by publishing a two-page CV of Failures. He began his resume of failures with a profound statement. His opening lines summarised a pearl of wisdom that the self-help industry seldom cared to examine:

“Most of what I try fails, but these failures are often invisible, while the successes are visible. I have noticed that this sometimes gives others the impression that most things work out for me. As a result, they are more likely to attribute their own failures to themselves, rather than the fact that the

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Mukundarajan V N

Retired banker living in India. Avid reader. I write to learn, inform and inspire. Believe in ethical living and sustainable development. vnmukund@gmail.com