Ah, that common refrain.
You shouldn’t just get a trophy for participating.
When everyone gets a trophy, nobody wins.
If everybody is special, nobody is special.
Second place is last place.
And on and on.
It’s a criticism pointed at millennials. Or, wait — Gen Y. No! Wait. Gen X.
SOMEWHERE ALONG THE WAY SOMEONE DECIDED THAT YOU ONLY DESERVED A REWARD IF YOU ACHIEVED TRUE APOTHEOSIS. YOU ONLY GET THE GOLDEN CUP IF YOU SLAUGHTER THE OTHER TEAM AND WEAR THEIR SKIN AS A CAPE AND TRANSFORM INTO THE GREAT BEAST WHO WILL DESTROY THE WORLD. THERE CAN BE ONLY ONE CHAMPION, HIGHLANDER. EAT YOUR WEAKER FOES. REMAIN STANDING ATOP A HILL OF INFINITE CARCASSES.
Except, that’s kinda horseshitty, isn’t it?
When did we become so cynical about participation?
So sour-faced about people who are doing stuff?
This is usually aimed at children — or the environment around children (meaning, parents, schools and other institutions), and it is aimed very squarely as a criticism, but let me tell you something as the parent of a five-year-old: getting a child to participate in something can feel like a Herculean task. Just getting your kid to sit down and DO THE THING THAT IS PRESENTLY BEING DONE can feel like the completion of an epic quest. You’d have an easier time stimulating the prostate of a galloping bison. Getting children to do the thing is difficult for an unholy host of reasons. Maybe they’re scared of the other participants. Or scared of failing. (Or scared of what you’ll think of them when they fail.) Maybe they’re bored. Could be that they don’t understand what’s being asked of them, or instead that they’re obstinate and would much rather do the OTHER THING instead of THIS THING. This only gets worse as a kid gets older because kids gather a lot of baggage about doing things, and sometimes that baggage is weighted with the (arguably capitalist) rhetoric of success and failure: you either WIN or you LOSE, it’s either PASS or FAIL, you’re the CHAMPION or you’re a SUCK-FACED SHITBABY. And teenagers kinda figure out that game, and they check right the fuck out. They stop participating, in part because it’s not cool, and in part because I think teenagers are actually surprisingly good at smell-testing bullshit. They can detect these cultural shenanigans, and so they cynically give the middle-finger to the entire process and they piss off somewhere to get drunk and grope each other.
But doing stuff? It’s how the world works. It’s what makes the world happen. Participation is pretty much everything. Winning is a narrow selection without much meaning. Most of life is just showing up and doing the work — whether that’s work with family, or school, or friendships, or a proper job. Show up. Do the work. Do the best. Be the best you. And if you do that? That’s amazing. Because most people don’t actually do that.
So.
When I was a kid, I did soccer afterschool. I hated it. Fuck soccer. Fuck everything about soccer. Fuck practice and the drills and the coach and any of the kids who liked soccer. I was young — this was elementary school — and even then the focus was on leagues and getting better not to get better but getting better to win. It was a competition.
Now, to be clear, there’s nothing inherently wrong with competing. At a certain level, that’s what you’re in to do, and why you get involved. But at that level, at the elementary school level, the purpose is — or should be — different. The purpose is, hey, here’s how you work on a team. Here’s how you follow instructions. Here’s how you exist as a physical being who moves his body around in the world instead of sitting in front of a television. Here is how you participate.
But that’s not how they treated it.
I didn’t get an award for participating even though that’s the whole point of me being there. Everyone should’ve been hopping up and down because HEY HOLY CRAP YOU’RE HERE ON THE FIELD AND YOU’RE SCARED AND YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’RE DOING AND THAT’S EXCITING AND DAMNIT IF IT’S NOT A VICTORY JUST FOR SHOWING UP AND PUTTING IN THE TIME. Doing a new thing! Being present! Partaking in the task at hand! I wanted to feel good for that, not for enduring an onerous afterschool program driving me to be an elementary school soccer champion and by the way did I mention I fucking hate soccer. I would’ve been happy with a participation trophy — and no, I wouldn’t have gotten confused thinking that somehow it was equal to actually being the winner, because winning still feels like winning. Kids aren’t confused by participation trophies. They’re not idiots. Yet we disdain participation because it is expected.
The disdain of participation is tied in with our disgust surrounding failure. Participation is barely above loserdom, and many associate the two (remember: second place is last place). But that’s not how the world works. Or, more importantly, it’s not how the world needs to work.
As a writer, I meet lots of aspiring writers who want to write but are, for various reasons, afraid to do so. They’re afraid they’ll get it wrong. They look so far ahead they see a world where they won’t be able to accomplish the thing, so why bother? They have the desire to do the thing but are somehow afraid to participate for fear of failing and not winning.
Except, there is no winning.
There exists a sliding scale of various milestones, sure — cascading victory conditions that open up, but this is less like WIN THE GAME AND GET THE GOLDEN TROPHY and more like PLAY YOUR CHARACTER IN THE RPG SO YOU SECURE MORE EXPERIENCE POINTS TO BUY COOL UPGRADES TO YOUR LIFE. Writing doesn’t come with a golden cup. It’s not like once a year one writer gets to shed her carapace and emerge as J.K. Rowling to become the temporary headmaster of Hogwarts’ School of Storytelling Magic. Further, failure is an essential part of what we do. I wrote five books before I got the sixth one published. I wrote countless unfinished books in and around those first five. Life is constant failure. I’m sure I fucked up the first sentence I ever tried to write. I’m sure I shitted up the first paragraph. I have one of the first stories I ever wrote in elementary school, and newsflash: it is about as entertaining as watching a turtle fuck a hot jockstrap. (Actually, that might be pretty entertaining.) Failure is a critical state. My son does things all the time, and most of those things he does poorly — then he does them better, and better still, until he succeeds. And you might say, THERE, TA-DA, HE WON, and that’s true.
But I didn’t chide him for trying all the while until he got there.
Every time he tried and failed to write his alphabet, I didn’t play a fart sound buzzer and boo him from the bleachers. I did not merely champion him upon success, I cheered him for trying. For doing. For participating. Because that’s how you get there. And it’s the hardest part!
My writing career has been all about participating. Participating when it was hard. Participating when I did not know what the floppy fuck I was doing. Participating when other people told me not to bother because I was going to fail, because it was an impossible career, because I would make better money if I just dug ditches instead. Why try when you might fail? Doesn’t participation just lead to failure anyway? Why bother at all?
Participation has been my everything. And rejection has been vital to that. Rejection is a battle scar. It’s proof I’m in the arena. It’s some Viking-level shit. It’s two gladiators showing off their injuries: “I GOT THIS ONE WHEN I FAILED TO UNSEAT THROMGAR THE INCONTINENT FROM HIS WYVERNOUS TIGERWOLF. I LOST THE FIGHT THAT DAY, BUT I HAVE THIS COOL-ASS SCAR TO SHOW FOR IT. AND I LIVE TO FIGHT AGAIN.” Rejection is a sign of doing the thing and surviving. You know who doesn’t ever get rejections? People who don’t participate. Most people write a novel once every never, and if you’re writing a novel — or doing whatever the thing is that you wanna goddamn do — then that is a victory worth celebrating.
Here’s the thing: we say, we shouldn’t reward people for the bare minimum, and when we say that, we mean participation. But participation is not the bare minimum. Observing? That’s the minimum. Watching instead of doing is about as low as you go. The kids on the field kicking the ball? They’re doing shit, man. That’s awesome. Good for them. The parents in the stands decrying the trophies those kids will get for participating? They’re fucking spectators. They’re only bystanders, not doing a good goddamn thing except placing their own proxy hopes and dreams on their little genetic champions.
I cheer my kid when he tries a new food. I cheer him when he draws, or reads, or does something he’s afraid to do. I cheer his participation in life, because that’s what matters. That’s all we have. Winning is hollow. Getting to the end of the road only happens by walking it. Participation is its own special victory, and fuck anybody who says different. Double-fuck you if you hate on your own kids for not coming home with the win. Huzzah to adults for participating, too. You vote? Good for you. You participate in a charity? Fuck yes. You DO THE THING THAT MUST BE DONE? Have a lollipop, you wonderful person, you.
Get shut of the illusion that winning is everything, participation is nothing, failure is the end.
Perfection is the enemy. Failure is more important to us than victory. You will fail a lot more than you win, and you learn a lot more when you lose — you don’t improve through victory. Victory is a plateau. You improve by capitalizing on your loss.
Be present.
Participate.
No, it isn’t the only victory. Yes, it’s only a small one.
But it’s a victory just the same.
We all die. Nobody wins that contest. Life is not The Hunger Games, man.
But we are all here. We can all chip in. We can all do the thing.
Participate, and don’t be made to feel small for doing so.
GO DO THE THING. And celebrate doing it.
Michelle at The Green Study says:
I get tired of this refrain on participation trophies as well. It seems like unless someone kicks a kid in the head every time they fail, people wax nostalgic for their abusive little league coach. They wish to rain the same cruelties on others that they experienced. Tough love didn’t work out too well for them, turning them into petty, sadistic shits who only participate in crabbing about the generation-du-jour. Somebody give them a trophy.
May 23, 2016 — 9:20 PM
Marsha says:
I hear you, Brother! Preach on! I was so tired of living by someone else’s standards as a kid. Who made up these rules anyway? I will probably fuck up this comment, but at least I bothered to speak up. Like you, I am tired of kids not being allowed to do things for fun and exploration of their personalities. They are always expected to win or at least be the star. I cheer my 9 year old nephew on as a defensive player in basketball. My brother thinks he should score baskets, but the kid likes defense. Now he says he won’t play next season. I think that is sad. Even if he wasn’t good at any of it, I would have still cheered for him because he is my kin. Stage parents suck!
May 23, 2016 — 9:21 PM
Steve Fahnestalk says:
On the other hand, we shouldn’t shit on those who actually win trophies and stuff, I think. (Even though we’re the ones who usualy watch others win the trophy.) Participation is, right enough, good. Winning is cool, too.
May 23, 2016 — 9:31 PM
terribleminds says:
Nobody’s shitting on trophy-getters, and nobody is saying winning isn’t fun or great or whatever. Winning just isn’t everything, but we treat it like it is.
May 24, 2016 — 7:46 AM
decayingorbits says:
Actually, the realization that “winning” or being #1, or being the girl that gets the job (when lots of others don’t) because you busted your ass and prepared, and committed yourself means something. Likewise, realizing you can do all of that and still not get the job, or win, or whatever — yeah, you need to realize from an early age that not everyone wins. People shouldn’t be conditioned to think that showing up is enough. It’s not. Not even close.
May 26, 2016 — 9:12 PM
cat says:
Well, that kinda depends on the situation. Sometimes just showing up is an important first step in busting your ass to get prepared and if you tell people not to bother if they haven’t already busted their ass they’re caught in a catch-22 because you can’t get experience without trying and you’re not allowed to try until you have experience. I don’t think the point of the article was to expect to win without putting in any effort? It was to not shit on yourself for not winning while you’re putting in the effort.
June 6, 2016 — 3:27 AM
conniejjasperson says:
Sometimes a small acknowledgement goes a heck of along way toward making a lonely job worthwhile. I played hockey because the rule in our house was we had to play sports, and in hockey I got to hit things. While I have no trophies to show for it, I do have the bad knees, lol. So now I write. When I get a tweet or a message from a reader saying they liked something I wrote, suddenly I’m not isolated–some one saw it, bought it, and let me know they liked it.
May 23, 2016 — 9:36 PM
Diane says:
You had me at my first read when u said”you might rabbit, you might”. And here you have me, completely. If u were curtains, I’d wear them.
May 23, 2016 — 9:41 PM
Dean Chalmers says:
I also get tired of hearing Millenials decried. I can still remember, as a Gen-xer, graduating college in the midst of recession and being told what a slacker I and my peers were for “settling” for crappy jobs and “slacking.” People need to stop sh*tting on the latest generation of young adults for trying to make sense of a world they inherited.
May 23, 2016 — 9:53 PM
cuttydarke says:
One of the best pieces of advice I got as a parent is that if you only praise success then you’re training your children to only do things that they’re good at. So praise effort, praise improvement and acknowledge success while reminding them how hard they worked for it.
May 23, 2016 — 9:54 PM
WTF Pancakes says:
A “participants” trophy? Something for the people who didn’t win but ought to be rewarded for just trying so darned hard? Sounds perfect for the Puppies!
May 23, 2016 — 10:05 PM
Elizabeth West says:
Amen, brother.
I may never publish any of these damn book things, but the last two are good. I know they’re good. People who’ve read them say they’re good. Other writers have read them and say they’re good. I know I can only get better.
And goddamn it, I may just actually succeed one of these days!
May 23, 2016 — 10:16 PM
janemcgonigal says:
TRUTH!!!
May 23, 2016 — 10:23 PM
Hillary says:
I wrote this a while ago, about my experience as the kid who DIDN’T get a trophy. It might be relevant. https://hillaryjmonahan.com/2015/05/02/trophies/
May 23, 2016 — 10:44 PM
Jessie says:
I agree with you 100%. And that’s because I used to be one of the people who thought participation trophies were stupid. I thought I was edgy. HAHA. I was not. It was a stupid mindset. it brought others down and brought me down. It took me years to get over the whole “my writing is SHIT I’m not perfect what’s the point?” mindset and move towards “yeah my writing is shit but at least I’m trying.”
Sometimes I wonder what goes through the minds of people who don’t like participation trophies. Are they mad because there’s actually a physical reward being given to people who did something? Are they mad because they never got participation trophies as a kid and are giving others a hard time because “WHEN I WAS YOUR AGE!” Or perhaps they think everyone needs to get a sense of intrinsic pleasure when doing anything and they shouldn’t do a thing just for the physical object? Which, as I imagine, not everyone is like “You know what’s a great idea? DOING THIS THING I HATE FOR THE PARTICIPATION TROPHY.” Please. No one’s like that.
May 23, 2016 — 10:45 PM
amniehaushard says:
Thank you so much for saying this. As the parent of a monkey demon about the same age as yours, I see how stickers, trophies, medals, etc motivate my son to do harder things, more complicated things, scarier things. Hell, I run half marathons for absolutely NO other reason than to get a medal at the end (and sometimes free beer.) My son runs and just completed his first “half marathon” (in quarter and half-mile increments) and yes I bought him a trophy at the end of the whole thing. He runs kids races and usually comes in last but by god he’s DOING it and I’m damn proud of him for that.
May 23, 2016 — 11:01 PM
Dawn Napier says:
I’m getting all verklempt. You just vomited truth straight into my brain and summed up everything I hate about sports and childraising. *sniff*
My middle kid plays lacrosse–badly. But he plays, he shows up for every game and practice, and yes by all the gods both divine and infernal he gets donuts after every game and a trophy when it’s over. He’s a weird, goofy, introverted kid who would rather play Five Nights At Freddy’s 24-7 than ever see the light of day. You are god damned right I reward the shit out of that kid just for showing up and playing. When a kid leaves his comfort zone willingly, that’s a pretty big fucking deal.
May 23, 2016 — 11:19 PM
Beth says:
Also the thing about “you only get a trophy for winning” is… that the people pushing that agenda are also the one defining what a win looks like, which usually comes with a big bonus shifting of the goalposts. And fuck all of that.
May 23, 2016 — 11:28 PM
R.C. Lewis (@RC_Lewis) says:
As a math teacher of the mid-teenager set, I see major after-effects of this. Students who struggle a bit in math but won’t even try, because somewhere along the way they internalized the idea that trying and failing is worse that not trying at all.
And I’ve seen how it can be remedied little by little, if I can get a little effort out of them and praise that effort along with any bit of it that IS right, if I can gently build on that tiny shred of momentum and confidence … sometimes kids turn it around and make a lot of progress. Learn how to take that risk of being wrong because they can’t learn without DOING.
But it’d be so nice if they hadn’t had that willingness to try and do smothered out of them in their earlier years.
May 23, 2016 — 11:44 PM
brdubard says:
As the parent who got her kids to those practices, and Saturday morning games, and washed the uniforms and found the socks and dammit the shin guards! that always seem to disappear, YES, those kids deserve trophies, and so do the parents who make it all happen, by bringing their kids, volunteering to coach or referee, bringing snacks, cheering on the team. Later, when they’re older, say, playing on a travel team or a high school team, they won’t get trophies unless they win. The little kids? They’re learning about teamwork and participation and showing up even when you don’t feel like it because your coach and your team are depending on you. They’re learning that you play when it’s raining, you play when it’s miserably hot, and sometimes you lose even when you try your hardest, but you show up again next Saturday anyway. Determination, perseverance, follow-through. Think that doesn’t deserve a trophy? Think again.
May 24, 2016 — 12:16 AM
moteridgerider says:
This post is so awesome I made a meme of that 8th paragraph. Chuck, you’re up there with Morpheus and Gene Wilder.
May 24, 2016 — 1:11 AM
Lizbeth A. Lopez says:
Thank you. I’m slowly crawling back from the ledge of rejection due to your post. I needed to read this today.
May 24, 2016 — 1:30 AM
NextInLine says:
Fucking brilliant. Drops mic, walks away confident of ironic victory.
May 24, 2016 — 1:47 AM
Mozette says:
It wasn’t Gen X – they tried pushing that crap onto us when I was young… didn’t happen… we didn’t want that shit.
It’s Gen Y who loves participation trophies and all that crap; because well, they all love coming home with something to say they were there – you know FOMO.
May 24, 2016 — 2:12 AM
terribleminds says:
It was Gen X who started with participation awards, for the most part, and it was Gen Y who was the recipient of them.
And I’m Gen X and I love coming home with something to say I was there. My parents loved souvenirs from places they visited, and they were boomers. Everybody loves getting something. That’s not a generational thing, sorry.
May 24, 2016 — 7:46 AM
UrsulaV says:
My refrigerator is covered in magnets of places I’ve been on book tour, and I too remember when GenX were the scapegoats.
It wasn’t anything nearly as grandiose as “we didn’t want that shit.” It was that we aged out and now there’s a new set of people to blame. Because when WE were young, we EARNED our trophies and it was uphill in the snow BOTH WAYS…
May 24, 2016 — 8:54 AM
terribleminds says:
I FOUGHT FIRE BEARS TO WIN THIS TROPHY
FIRE
BEARS
THIS GENERATION DOES NOT FIGHT FIRE BEARS
SO FUCK THIS GENERATION
May 24, 2016 — 8:56 AM
UrsulaV says:
LUXURY
WE WOULD HAVE BEEN THRILLED WITH FIRE BEARS
WE HAD TO FIGHT CAPTAIN EO
AND ALL WE HAD WERE OUR ENORMOUS SHOULDERPADS BECAUSE IT WAS LATE EIGHTIES
KIDS TODAY ARE SOFT
May 24, 2016 — 11:23 AM
JoRhett says:
This is so completely and absolutely true. I would say there’s another important part about participation.
I’m a competitive SoB. I race motorcycles. I play hockey. My friends won’t play chess with me. I have more than a hundred trophies from actually winning. I have 3 published books, and dozens of papers.
In every one of these areas people come up to me and say “well it must have been easy with your talent.” No, it never was easy. I appear to be the most talentless hack who ever walked the face of the earth. Ask anyone who has ever tried to teach me anything, and they’ll tell you I’m useless.
I showed up. I practiced. I kept doing that until I won. Then I kept doing that more.
The kids who are “naturals”, who win on their first try, tend to fail in the long term. When the competition steps up their game by practicing harder, they get frustrated and flame out.
Smart people who don’t know how to learn burn out fast at companies. They’re stuck in one hole. The best people show up every day, learn something new every day, and bring it every day. These are the people we want to hire.
Participation is not a thing, it is EVERYTHING. Even if your goal is to win, you start by participating. It’s the most valuable skill to learn, and hell yes we should reward everyone for participation.
May 24, 2016 — 2:21 AM
Dark Matter Zine says:
Thank you. Ever since I got kicked out of a science fiction writing group for writing disability issues, I’ve found it really hard to work on my novel. She said ‘other people’ don’t think disability issues is near-future SF, disability issues can only be written in far-future SF. She said to either discard 90% of my story and write a feel-good quest instead, forgetting the message and purpose underlying my story, or write a memoir and find a different writing group.
When I explained the tropes that I used that ARE SF and explained that I do NOT want to write a memoir and why, she repeated herself. I requested the group’s constitution as a paying member so the committee issued a refund of my membership fee. And they gave my partner a refund for being married to a person with a disability, no questions asked and no response to my email pointing out they’d expelled him for being married to me. It’s hard enough to get up and do anything after all the crap I’ve been through in the past 11 years without this new crap in 2016, making it all so much harder again. I need to hear what you’re saying. Over and over.
Today I was transcribing an interview I did with (non-SFF) author Will Kostakis; he nearly made me cry with some of what he said too. He had people in his corner, people supporting and encouraging him so he kept on submitting stories to publishers… in grades 7 to 12 until he (finally) got a book contract IN GRADE 12. BEFORE HE LEFT SCHOOL. We all need more encouragement to participate, to strive, to achieve.
Another person I interviewed, Tom Dickson (a musician not an author) talked about different definitions of success. I love that, too. It’s a matter of framing a goal that’s achievable, that gives motivation.
I’m great at encouraging other people. I’m not so great at encouraging myself.
I <3 your message. Thank you.
May 24, 2016 — 2:44 AM
Kate Pavelle says:
Hi, Dark! It sure didn’t feel like it at the time, but those mean people at your former group did you a favor by ousting you. Bunch of close-minded idiots, that. Disability issues will always matter – and, FYI, memoirs sell like crap. Mine is just a statistic, sitting in my backlist like a squat, tired little frog and doing nothing. Please share your imaginary worlds with us, and have fun doing so! Showing up matters (and thus I’ll shut down my browser and show up and write some new words 😉 )
May 24, 2016 — 7:59 AM
Mariah Avix says:
Well I agree on the find another writing group because that is fucking gross. 🙁
And I’m all for near sf including disability I can’t understand how it wouldn’t. What? Ugh. Gross. Sorry you had to deal with that. Write your story, the world needs more of it.
May 24, 2016 — 8:33 AM
Susie Rodarme says:
Oh helllllll no @ that writing group lady. Please write your novel the way you wanted to write it. I would read the heck out of disability issues in near-future SF (I have autism so disability issues are near and dear)–plus, doing what “other people” think you should write is shooting your own creativity in the foot and she should know that.
I agree with Kate–getting kicked out sounds like you were dodging a bullet.
May 24, 2016 — 8:49 AM
tcinla says:
I call bullshit on this Generation Y-bother BALONEY (btw that’s *your* generation). If you didn’t figure out how to WIN, how the hell do you think you became the successful writer you are? You don’t think you didn’t fucking WIN when 98% of those who want to be writers are flipping burgers at Mickey D’s and you are living your nice little rural life supported by FUCKING WRITING????
Nobody ever learned a goddamned thing from fucking “participation,” You learn from FAILURE. That’s the tough hard-knocks place called LIFE, and you don’t score points for fucking showing up. You score points for being able to DO WHAT YOU CAME THERE TO DO, whatever the fuck it is.
We are this close > < to the Dark Ages and it's bullshit like this that has us there.
May 24, 2016 — 2:50 AM
terribleminds says:
No, Gen Y isn’t *my* generation. Not that it matters much, but it ain’t, sorry.
In writing, I didn’t figure out how to win.
I figured out how to *play.*
There is no winning in writing.
And participating means failing, and failing means learning. It’s noble to do that. It’s necessary to do that. It deserves respect.
— c.
May 24, 2016 — 7:43 AM
Inkling says:
Amen!
May 24, 2016 — 8:15 AM
Susie Rodarme says:
‘Nobody ever learned a goddamned thing from fucking “participation,” You learn from FAILURE.’
but … how do you fail if you don’t participate? and…. what if you win but you still make mistakes and you learn from those anyway? and.. why not score points for showing up when so many people choose NOT to show up? Doesn’t that already put you ahead of others who didn’t bother?
May 24, 2016 — 8:51 AM
shiftercat says:
“We live in a decaying age. Young people no longer respect their parents. They are rude and impatient. They frequently inhabit taverns and have no self control.”
That’s an inscription from a 6000-year-old Egyptian tomb. People have been wailing about how the world is entering a new dark age and those darned kids are to blame since time immemorial. There’s even a term for it: The Myth of Decline.
Unlearn the Myth of Decline. It’s a pernicious belief which does nothing but harm.
June 6, 2016 — 5:16 PM
skylar says:
Self esteem comes from within. I didn’t need a participation “trophy” when I was a kid. Participating — being a part of something and learning something new, even if initially I sucked at it — WAS the “trophy.” Showing up is its own prize, but then I did want there to be other prizes too, that I would maybe earn if I strove and became better. Or maybe I wouldn’t win, because maybe someone else was a fucking GOD talent-wise at whatever the thing was, and they would win first prize, and that was okay because it was okay to admire those who were GREAT at something. It was okay to not “win” everything, and to sometimes just be impressed by other people, who (hopefully) were also impressed by the things that I could do measureably better than most people. I certainly don’t believe in a dickish “winning’s not everything, it’s the only thing” mentality, but I don’t see why we need to demonize winning, either. We all need to know how to be gracious winners, gracious non-winners, and eager participators.
May 24, 2016 — 3:25 AM
terribleminds says:
Nobody’s saying it isn’t okay to win, and nobody’s demonizing winning. I think it’s interesting people are seeing that in this post.
Eager participants will be made more eager if their participation is acknowledged as a good thing, not a road to failure, not a binary zero.
May 24, 2016 — 7:49 AM
warjna says:
Chuck Wendig, you should get a prize for the absolute best inspirational t-shirt words!
“I LOST THE FIGHT THAT DAY, BUT I HAVE THIS COOL-ASS SCAR TO SHOW FOR IT. AND I LIVE TO FIGHT AGAIN.”
Words to live by for every hero ever, and by hero I mean every person who’s ever been beaten down and degraded and denied and by god GOT UP AGAIN!
Love you, Chuck. You fuckin ROCK!
May 24, 2016 — 3:28 AM
warjna says:
@tcinla – You utterly have missed the point. Just as an FYI, that’s what participation IS. It’s showing up and doing the thing and failing, and keep on showing up and doing the thing and failing but failing better. And you keep on failing better until you WIN. THAT’S what participation is. And THAT’S how you learn.
May 24, 2016 — 3:39 AM
Katherine Hetzel says:
Absolutely behind this – participation, learning from knock-backs, picking yourself up and carrying on doing what you feel your heart is leading you to (and sometimes doing the things we don’t want to do, even though they hurt or suck or are scary) – is living life.
‘Winning’ comes in different shapes and sizes and there’s not always a trophy for the battles and challenges we face in life…whatever our age.
Thanks for this, Chuck…will be sharing with my own millenials.
May 24, 2016 — 3:59 AM
Ed says:
You have once again made me smile “I’m sure I fucked up the first sentence I ever tried to write”. Everyone has to start somewhere its just that some peoples entry is somewhat more presentable into an arena than others. I tenpin bowl at a local level, we are never going to be pro’s but we are at a level were we aren’t going to be sneezed at for trying.
May 24, 2016 — 4:02 AM
humphreyswill says:
What a moving and brilliant post. Thank you.
May 24, 2016 — 4:24 AM
lizziewiggle says:
As an adult who frequently ‘does things’ and is doing the thing of competing in my first pageant on Saturday, I needed to hear this. If I win, great, but if I don’t (statistically more likely) then at least I can be proud of myself for getting up on stage and trying.
May 24, 2016 — 6:09 AM
Eugenie Black says:
Thank you so much for writing this. I would like, if I may, to quote you in a blog I write for people who suffer from depression. For some of us, just making it out of bed, getting showered and dressed is a major achievement. For some of us just staying alive another day, another week, another year is a stunning victory – and every day, every week, every year, some of us don’t make it. We need to be OK with failure in the little things, to keep on keeping on. This is one of the best things I’ve read all year. Thank you.
May 24, 2016 — 6:17 AM
Inkling says:
Chuck, you’ve just officially broken my heart. All this time I’ve held you up as a paragon of deep wisdom and now you come out with this. *sigh…disappointment*
May 24, 2016 — 8:18 AM
terribleminds says:
If you find this out of line with everything else I’ve been saying, then I don’t think you’ve been paying much attention.
Also: I broke your heart because I said something you don’t agree with? That’s not a little… dramatic?
May 24, 2016 — 8:26 AM
Jenni says:
Funny, I have pooh-poohed the participation trophy process myself. But I did a triathlon last summer, came in dead last, and my little wooden participation “medal” sits in my nightstand to remind me of my challenge accepted. This year I will tri again, I will not make it anywhere near first, and I will cherish my new trophy. Happy to start my day with a new perspective, thanks for sharing.
May 24, 2016 — 8:41 AM
ZonieMama says:
“challenge accepted” – a great way to put it. “Participation trophies” are tangible acknowledgement of effort, risk, being willing to fail – of accepting the challenge, even though we may not be among the best.
I have a hard time not quitting whenever trying something new that I basically suck at. Would almost rather do nothing! – than feel frustrated because I just can’t manage the new thing. A “token” of appreciation goes a long way in helping me hang in there.
May 24, 2016 — 11:29 PM
Mariah Avix says:
I ski. Badly. Very badly. Some ski races and not even races give beer paricipation prizes. And even if I go out by myself I get a beer participation prize at the end. HIGHLY recommended.
May 24, 2016 — 8:41 AM
Erkhyan says:
Gotta love the people who complain about how childish it is to think of issues as being all black and white, but then you mention participation and suddenly they’re all “either you’re Duncan McLeod standing on top of a pile of decapitated foes, or you’re one of the decapitated foes”.
Delightful, they are.
May 24, 2016 — 8:42 AM
Glynis Jolly says:
Is it really a question of participating or is it the question of participating your way as opposed to the way someone else what’s you to do it? As a kid, I always came in last or second to last at the events on field day. It wasn’t that I couldn’t have tried a little harder and at least got in the middle pack. It was a case of me not being interested in physical sports. Yet I liked field day just fine. I loved being out in the sunshine and chatting with classmates in between events. I participated in field day my way.
May 24, 2016 — 8:44 AM
Ashly (@newageamazon) says:
YES. Thank you.
My understanding of the whole thing, and correct me if I’m wrong, was that the award was a non-ironic “You Tried.” Trying is the hardest thing. Trying is big and scary.
Failure is SCARIER. Because we’re currently in a scenario where it is being made clear to kids, actual KIDS, that failure is not an option. Everything is life and death. You failed one class in college, the hardest class with the most challenging teacher that has this long legacy of being incredibly difficult? Well, then you’d better talk to that professor and tell them you need that changed to a passing grade. And if they won’t do that, I’ll (re: a parent) will do it FOR YOU.
I’m being hyperbolic. I witness this in my day to day work constantly. Young adults who literally say “But I can’t fail.”
Yeah, you can. You did. You will again. It sucks. It sucks so much. But it is a part of life. And you need to learn to deal with it.
I get parents wanting to protect kids from that. Because failure is even scarier now than when I was in school. There’s a much higher chance of failure because of an economy that was tanked and a job market that doesn’t exist and a disdain for the arts that’s just…just awful. But you don’t overcome this by insisting on victory no matter what the cost and how many lower level clerical people you need to annoy. Teach people to fail and get back up again, teach them that they won’t always get the hero’s ending, teach them it’s okay because there’s more to life than that. It’s great when you do succeed and you should try for it, but it’s not always going to turn out that way.
Failure is okay, learning is important, please stop calling me.
May 24, 2016 — 8:45 AM
tabbycat says:
Our lousy UK government has done one thing recently that impressed me, and also rewarded participation – they’ve produced a medal for everyone who volunteered to work in the labs and hospitals in Africa during the Ebola outbreak. Three of my colleagues from the lab went out there and it’s nice that their bravery is being acknowledged.
May 24, 2016 — 8:56 AM
cuttydarke says:
I hadn’t heard about this. It should be more widely known because this is exactly the sort of bravery we should be awarding medals for.
May 24, 2016 — 9:38 AM
Betsy Dornbusch (@betsydornbusch) says:
All this stuff you said here. Competition and winning are overrated.
Also… kids are parents’ participation trophies. Really awesome ones.
May 24, 2016 — 8:57 AM
Rebecca Foster says:
Although…as the parent of a track kid and a ski team kid, I really really deserved a medal for watching…
May 24, 2016 — 8:58 AM
José Rogério Bezerra Filho says:
Although I love We Bear Bears (and particularly the Ice Bear) I didn’t correlate the picture with the text. Anyway, awesome post as always. Cheers from Brazil =D
May 24, 2016 — 9:13 AM
terribleminds says:
Mostly, I wanted to excuse to use WE BARE BEARS. 🙂
But it’s also that ICE BEAR is here to protect you and cheer you on.
May 24, 2016 — 9:18 AM
Jjaks says:
Thank you, so very much!
May 24, 2016 — 9:25 AM
Wendy Christopher says:
Thank you so much for this post, Chuck! The perfect antidote to this article from The Guardian in the UK –
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/may/20/what-makes-bad-writing-bad-toby-litt
– which I read the other day and felt pretty emotionally squished afterwards.
And I totally agree – kids need to feel like taking part is an achievement too. I find it hard enough getting my own son to do it, because he seems to have the mentality that ‘if I can’t be brilliant at it from the first go, there’s no point in doing it at all.’ I always try to cheer him on and praise him for simply having a go – but at the same time I understand the fears he’s feeling, because I can remember being the same way when I was a kid. I wish there was some magic fairy dust I could sprinkle to make the insecurities go away.
May 24, 2016 — 9:26 AM
UrsulaV says:
Oh, please don’t feel too flattened by that article! It started fine but it ended in faux-profound drivel. “Good writers say “this is being written.”? What does that even mean in plain English? (Apparently that the passive voice is back in style…)
May 24, 2016 — 5:40 PM
Emily says:
You’re absolutely right. We need to reward people for getting out there and doing the thing (whatever the thing is). But something about this kept niggling at me and I had to figure out what it was. At first I thought it was that there is a hell of a lot of space between “participation trophies for everyone! Even the kid who did do anything but was on the team! Yay!” and “unless you win, you suck.” But that isn’t it. Here’s what I have a problem with (because I know you totally care!):
I teach college. I know in my class in the Fall, full of bright-eyed freshmen, there will be a fair number who have never failed. At anything. Ever. Have they participated? Sure. They were in soccer and gymnastics, and quiz bowl, and that school play, and, and, and…. Plus, they got decent-to-good grades (read minimum 2.5 likely a 3.0 or better). And that’s the problem. These kids who got decent-to-good grades cannot put together coherent sentences. They cannot follow directions. They can’t read something and tell me what it says, let alone whether or not it’s right (by whatever definition you want).
Like you said, teens have good bullshit detectors, and the ones that are honest? They know they weren’t educated. Now they’re scared to death (or angry, or in some cases millineally indifferent) that they are going to fail. Because they know they don’t know stuff. And they’ve never failed. So now failure is this big huge monster. Oh, and by fail, I do, in many cases, mean “get a C on their first ever college English paper.”
So, at least from what I’m seeing (and most of my students are from NC, or from the South–so make of that what you will), they aren’t really participating. They think they are. But they’re not. They’re not risking failure, especially in school. They know (or figure out real quick) that they can’t fail. No one will let them. And if you’re not risking failure (even if it is failure that only you will see), then you’re not participating.
So, yeah, you’re right. Participation deserves a hell of a lot of respect. My issue is that, with our kids, we need to make sure that participation is possible. (With adults, whatever. You all are on your own.)
May 24, 2016 — 9:28 AM
terribleminds says:
Sure, absolutely — kids and adults need to fail, and they need to be taught the power of failure and not be told that failure is somehow the end. We can’t gloss over failure with EVERYBODY WINS mentality, either — participation and failure go hand in hand.
May 24, 2016 — 9:33 AM
Rosemary Blodgett says:
Loved this piece. I think you are spot on. While I wasn’t critical about the participation trophies I now feel I have more ammunition for those who are.
May 24, 2016 — 9:53 AM
The Daily Assassin (@TDA_Rook) says:
I especially agree that they don’t coach kids to improve as much as they could because of the focus on winning or end goal. When I was a kid, I hated Field Day with a passion. I was never a fast runner (had leg braces until I was 4) and yet they made us enter events and I lost every time and never had a single ribbon. No adults worked with me to help me improve my form, they just let me fail and cheered on the winning kids.
In middle and high school, the President’s Fitness Challenge was even worse. You were asked to do things you were not prepared to do, and the PE coach would embarrass you in front of the class for failing. No correction of form or suggestions on how to improve so you could do better next year.
Once I was an adult and working with a trainer I learned what I had been doing wrong and was able to make vast improvements. Wouldn’t it have been nice if I had people working with me to improve when I was a kid instead of it being a binary you’re a winner or you’re a loser mentality? Might have saved a lot of self doubts and feeling of inferiority.
May 24, 2016 — 10:29 AM
Tricia Ballad says:
Thanks, Chuck. I needed to hear this today. Got a really crappy, mean-spirited, “you suck and should have never even tried” review yesterday. Thanks.
May 24, 2016 — 11:00 AM
Eric DiCarlo says:
I recently realized that almost every author I love keeps a blog on some form. Some talk about what they’re doing, some speak to the general writerdom as a whole, and then some others talk about life as a whole. Degrees of blog usage vary, but they’re all doing it. So I’m thinking, like, maybe there’s something to it.
Yesterday I finally made one of my own. I’ll be using it to chronicle my growth as an author and to also dump the occasional mental distraction that would otherwise prevent me from writing. Today, I’ll write my first post as a warm up before working on my first book.
Thank you, Chuck, for reminding me that I’m not being an arrogant dick, but am instead participating in the world that I want most of all to live in.
May 24, 2016 — 12:05 PM
murgatroid98 says:
Yes, to everything. At age sixty-three I trained for, and participated in, a Disney half marathon. Everyone who finished received a medal. Mine hangs off a door knob in my bedroom. Did I deserve it? Darn tootin’. I am proud of the Olympic medalists and everyone else who rises to the top of their field. But…the people who show up and do the work are the foundation. They, we, make it possible for the champions. I think we all forget that sometimes. Your little guy is a winner and so are you.
May 24, 2016 — 12:11 PM