The Missed Opportunity in Failed Dreams

Kent Murawski

Failed dreams can become your greatest victories.

While dreams are essential for hope and growth, unfulfilled dreams can breed disillusionment. Yet what appears to be a “failed” dream often reveals itself as an opportunity. Barbara Corcoran, the renowned Shark Tank Investor, once said,

“All my best successes came on the heels of failure.”

This wisdom challenges us to look deeper at how dreams actually work.

The Truth About Dreams

It is an assumed misconception that imagination (or dreams) tend to fade with age. But the truth is that children are less developed than adults at imagining. Given the choice between a fictional story and a fantasy story, children prefer the factual one and tend to simulate real-world activities and replicate ordinary objects. In the words of Andrew Shtulman, Ph.D., “Children have the capacity to entertain novel possibilities but not the tools.”

Shtulman goes on to highlight the difference between an active imagination and an extraordinary one saying, “An extraordinary imagination requires knowledge: the examples, principles, and models learned from others. The more we know, the farther our imaginations can wander.” His conclusion?

“The key to expanding imagination, for people of all ages, is not forgetting what you know but learning something new.”

So what holds us back from realizing our dreams?

Understanding Dream Disappointment

Whether through career setbacks, burnout, or a unfulfilled aspirations that never panned out, dream disappointment is a universal experience. Here are three key factors that contribute to it.

#1 – A Lack of Curiosity

If the key to expanding imagination is learning something new, as Shtulman says, imagination is a skill we develop, not a trait we can lose.

Skills take practice. They aren’t developed by trying hard but by training hard.

How intentional are you about learning new things? Do you read books or listen to podcasts? Are you learning new things regularly? When was the last time you went deep into something?

It’s called combinatorial creativity , and it happens by combining existing ideas, knowledge, and experiences in new ways.

But even with curiosity, it’s still easy to misread dreams.

#2 – Dream Mis interpretation

Dreams can be vague and opaque, like seeing in a dimly lit mirror, even for futurists and visionaries. As Gandalf the wizard once said to Frodo Baggins, “Even the very wise cannot see all ends.”

Putting your own spin on a dream instead of walking it out and adapting as things change can lead to dream disappointment. Many dreams never came to pass…at least not in the way you envision them. This can lead to dream fatigue. When your version of the dream never happens, you become disillusioned and dreaming feels like a waste of time.

The journey from vision to reality often requires personal transformation.

#3 – The Path to Dream Fulfillment

Dream fatigue is when we become so disappointed by dreams that have not happened yet, that we no longer want to dream.

But what if the primary purpose of dreams is to shape us into the person we need to become to handle the dream and not just the dream itself?

Consider Joseph’s journey. The privileged youngest son in a prominent family, his father favored him—the only one of eleven brothers given a beautiful coat of many colors. Around thirteen years old, he had two prophetic dreams: first, eleven sheaves of grain (representing his brothers) bowed to his bundle. In the second dream, the sun, moon, and eleven stars (representing his parents and brothers) bowed before him. His already jealous brothers now hated him.

The path to fulfillment wasn’t a straight line. His brothers sold him into slavery. He rose to prominence in his master’s house but was falsely accused by his master’s wife. He spent two years in prison until his gift for interpreting dreams was discovered. When Pharaoh had dreams no one could interpret, Joseph was called. After successfully interpreting them, he was instantly released and made second-in-command of Egypt. The dreams finally came true when his family came seeking food during a famine, and they all bowed before him. (You can read the full story in Genesis chapter 37, and if you’ve never watched the Disney movie, Joseph King of Dreams it’s well worth the ninety minutes).

It took thirteen years before Joseph saw his dreams fulfilled—and certainly not in the way he had imagined. The lesson?

Joseph needed to become the right person before he could handle the dream.

Your Path Forward

You can’t control the outcome (or dream), but you can control how you respond to things and who you become in the process.

I believe in both destiny (a pre-ordained path) and agency (the capacity to act or exert power), but whether you believe in destiny or not, the person you are becoming is in your hands.

Like Barbara Corcoran discovered, maybe your ‘failed’ dreams aren’t really failures—they’re stepping stones to personal growth. The question isn’t whether your dreams will come true exactly as planned, but who you’re becoming as you pursue them.

What one step could you take today to grow into the person your dreams require you to become?

Choose one area where you feel stuck in your dreams and commit to learning something new about it this week – whether through reading, conversation, or direct experience.

Until next time,

Kent

PS – Great writing takes time. Buy Me a Coffee so I can keep creating.

Sources

Andrew Shtulman, Ph.D. , “Imagination Is a Skill We Develop, Not a Trait We Lose.”

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By Kent Murawski July 28, 2025
When was the last time you ended a summer feeling more energized than when it started? ​​Summer brings changes for many of us—minimizing our motivation to work, disrupting work routines, and altering schedules. With summertime often comes a desire to slow down, and yet, we're not always sure how to do that. This week is my last new post for a little while (though I may resend some popular posts from the 2024-2025 season). I’m pressing pause to create space and pour my energy into finishing my new book. But stay tuned—when I’m back in six weeks, the newsletter will be refreshed with some exciting updates you won’t want to miss! Read to the end to find out more. In this week's edition of Catalyst, I want to share 3 ideas to help you effectively navigate summer. 3 Ways to Master Summer Without Burning Out 1) Stop and Think (Reflect) Socrates famously said, "The unexamined life is not worth living." 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Here are a few questions you might want to ask: How am I feeling spiritually, mentally, emotionally, and physically? How are my closest relationships doing? Am I living out my core values? Is my life moving in a direction I feel good about? What do I need to change or adjust? Here are a few ideas for how to conduct a reflection day: Prayer, meditation, or silence Review your biggest wins and assess your goals from the previous quarter Work on high-impact projects that require focus Preview the upcoming quarter and set your Big 3 goals: personal, marriage/family, work/business 2) Cut the Non-Essentials (Reevaluate) Both my wife and I work, so when summer arrives, we need to re-evaluate our schedules to accommodate our twelve-year-old son. In the past, I've made the mistake of trying to keep the same workload despite being home with him two days a week. I ended up frustrated all summer long, living in the tension of wanting to spend more time with him while trying to carry the same workload. Summer requires me to pare down my work roles to the essentials: Writing (currently working on a new book) Executive coaching (6-8 coaching clients) Relationship building and outreach Necessary administration (keeping this to 30% or less of my responsibilities) Moving forward, I will probably keep things this way. It feels more sustainable than the unrealistic expectations I previously held myself to. Once you define your key roles and responsibilities, the question becomes how to achieve better work-life integration not work-life balance. I use the Big 3 System. Choose only three big things to focus on at one time—quarterly, weekly, and daily. That's right, just three. Those three things are usually a combination of personal, marriage/family, and work. 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They understand that rest isn't what you do after the work is done—it's what makes the work sustainable in the first place. You've got this.
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For Socrates, life was more than pursuing the things that most men occupy themselves with, things like wealth, household affairs, status and position, and political clubs and factions. He believed that life only has value and meaning when we question what we think and know, and by more deeply understanding ourselves and others. The beginning of summer is an ideal time for reflection, and we all tend to occupy ourselves with the things Socrates talked about more than we probably care to admit. Taking a reflection day at the end of each quarter (consider removing "or trimester" for conciseness) can be an effective way to navigate seasonal changes. Finding a place far enough removed from your normal day-to-day life will help you get into a different headspace. A friend of mine often says: Change of pace + change of place = change of perspective. I've used hotels, monasteries, or even a beautiful outdoor location if the weather permits. Here are a few questions you might want to ask: How am I feeling spiritually, mentally, emotionally, and physically? How are my closest relationships doing? Am I living out my core values? Is my life moving in a direction I feel good about? What do I need to change or adjust? Here are a few ideas for how to conduct a reflection day: Prayer, meditation, or silence Review your biggest wins and assess your goals from the previous quarter Work on high-impact projects that require focus Preview the upcoming quarter and set your Big 3 goals: personal, marriage/family, work/business 2) Cut the Non-Essentials (Reevaluate) Both my wife and I work, so when summer arrives, we need to re-evaluate our schedules to accommodate our twelve-year-old son. In the past, I've made the mistake of trying to keep the same workload despite being home with him two days a week. I ended up frustrated all summer long, living in the tension of wanting to spend more time with him while trying to carry the same workload. Summer requires me to pare down my work roles to the essentials: Writing (currently working on a new book) Executive coaching (6-8 coaching clients) Relationship building and outreach Necessary administration (keeping this to 30% or less of my responsibilities) Moving forward, I will probably keep things this way. It feels more sustainable than the unrealistic expectations I previously held myself to. Once you define your key roles and responsibilities, the question becomes how to achieve better work-life integration not work-life balance. I use the Big 3 System. Choose only three big things to focus on at one time—quarterly, weekly, and daily. That's right, just three. Those three things are usually a combination of personal, marriage/family, and work. 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We went to see a movie, ate out, went to Six Flags, had a beach day, and took days in between just to relax. We loved it so much, we're doing a staycation again this year! Write down your list of summer expectations and plans. Now, cross out everything that feels exhausting and unfun. Don't try to fit everything in this summer. Pick a couple of things that feel life-giving and focus on those. Your Move Reflect. Re-evaluate. Rest. Choose one of the three and work on it in the next 24 hours. Plan a day of reflection. Have a conversation with your spouse. Choose how you're going to rest this summer. I don't care which one it is, just take action. Here’s one question to consider: What would you stop doing this summer if no one was watching? Most people think summer is about maximizing experiences and fitting everything in, but the truth is that the most productive leaders use summer to strategically subtract, not add. They understand that rest isn't what you do after the work is done—it's what makes the work sustainable in the first place. You've got this.
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