
I used to think I was just bad at everything.
Not in a dramatic way… just quietly. Like a thought that sits in your head every day until you start believing it.
Every time I tried something, it didn’t work out the way I wanted. Exams, online work, small decisions — even when I gave effort, results didn’t show up.
And slowly, I started expecting failure before even starting.
I had a small notebook. Nothing fancy. Just a cheap one I used to write random thoughts in.
Most of it was negative.
Pages 1 to 9 were almost embarrassing to read later.
“I failed again.”
“Not my level.”
“Everyone is doing better than me.”
“I don’t think I can do this.”
Same story, different days.
Then came Page 10.
I still remember that day clearly.
I had tried something online again. Spent days on it. Watched videos. Tried to understand. And still… nothing worked.
I was tired. Not physically — mentally tired.
I came home, sat on my bed, and opened that notebook without thinking too much.
I wrote one line first:
“I’m done with this…”
Then I stopped.
I just stared at the page.
Something felt wrong about it. Like I was repeating the same ending again and again.
I remember thinking:
“If I keep writing this same story… then when does my life change?”
So I crossed it out.
And I wrote something different.
“I failed… but I’m still here.”
It sounds simple now. But that day it felt heavy. Like I was admitting something I used to avoid.
I didn’t try to sound strong. I just tried to be honest.
Then I wrote what was actually wrong with me.
I wasn’t consistent.
I got excited fast, then disappeared.
I wanted results without sticking long enough.
No excuses. Just truth.
Page 10 filled up quickly.
But something inside me felt lighter. Not happy… just less confused.
That night I made a very small decision:
“I don’t need big success. I just need to not quit every time.”
Nothing changed overnight.
Next week was still hard.
Next month was still slow.
I still failed many times after that.
But I didn’t disappear anymore.
I kept showing up.
And slowly, small things started to change.
Over the last year, I managed to earn around $500 online.
It’s not a big number. I know that.
But for me, it’s not about the money.
It’s proof that I didn’t stay at zero.
Before, I used to think:
“I can’t do this.”
Now I think:
“I’m still figuring it out… but I’m not stopping.”
And honestly, that shift matters more than anything.
I’m still not successful in any big way.
But I’m no longer the same person who writes only failure in every page.
Now Page 10 means something else to me.
It means:
The day I stopped repeating my old story…
and started writing a slightly better one.

