Reset fast and grow: The underrated skill that changes everything

In today’s fast-paced world, we often celebrate persistence, resilience, and discipline. But there’s one skill that quietly sits beneath all of them—rarely discussed, yet incredibly powerful: the ability to reset fast.

Resetting fast is not about ignoring failure or pretending challenges don’t exist. It’s about shortening the emotional and mental recovery time between setbacks and your next action. The faster you reset, the faster you grow.

I’ve experienced difficult situations—professionally and personally. Moments where things didn’t go as planned, where effort didn’t translate into results, or where circumstances felt outside of my control. But what made the difference was not avoiding those situations—it was learning how quickly I could move forward from them.

A bad day? Go for a walk. Clear your head. Start fresh tomorrow.
Missed a workout? Show up the next day. No excuses.
Made a poor decision? Own it, learn from it, and adjust immediately.

This mindset is not just motivational—it is backed by research. Studies from Harvard Business School highlight that high performers are not those who avoid failure, but those who reflect effectively and re-engage quickly.

In one well-known study on learning from experience, researchers found that individuals who took time to reflect—even briefly—improved their performance significantly compared to those who kept pushing without pause.

The key takeaway: reflection + action beats hesitation.

Resetting fast combines both. You reflect just enough to learn, but not so much that you get stuck.

The problem many professionals face is not failure—it’s the time they spend dwelling on it. Overthinking drains energy. Doubt slows momentum. And hesitation creates a gap between potential and execution.

Think of it this way: success is not a straight line. It’s a series of micro-recoveries.

The faster you can shift from “What went wrong?” to “What’s next?”, the more you build forward momentum. Over time, this compounds into confidence, consistency, and growth.

I developed three practical ways to build the “reset fast” muscle:

  • Control your recovery time
    You can’t always control outcomes, but you can control how long you stay stuck. Set a personal rule: give yourself a limited window to process setbacks, then move forward with intention.
  • Turn reflection into action quickly
    Reflection is powerful—but only if it leads somewhere. Ask yourself one simple question: What is the one thing I’ll do differently next time? Then act on it immediately.
  • Normalize imperfection
    Missed targets, mistakes, and bad days are part of any growth journey. The goal is not perfection—it’s consistency. Progress comes from showing up again, not from getting it right every time.

At a leadership level, this mindset becomes even more critical. Teams mirror the behaviour of their leaders.

If you dwell on problems, they will too. If you reset quickly and move forward with clarity, you create a culture of resilience and execution. Remember that for the next time something doesn’t go your way, don’t ask: “Why did this happen to me?” Ask, “How fast can I move forward from this?”

Growth doesn’t come from avoiding setbacks. It comes from how quickly you rise after them.

 

Emile Fakhoury

Corporate Expert Writer, Business Professional in Energy/Water/Oil/Gas, Specialist in Coaching/Training, Association of Project Management UK Fellow Member. The professional who believes that adaptation to various social or corporate environments is the only way to survive and strive. Master the rules of the game in order to reach the top and change the rules.
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Coinage of Deceit: Not-so-novel novels that rule the world

The title for this crazy article came from a fever dream where I was in […]
by Emile Fakhoury on 27/05/2026

When meetings replace work: The hidden cost of organisational business

Modern organisations often suffer from a dangerous illusion: the belief that activity equals progress. Calendars […]
- by Ahsan Ali on 25/05/2026

President Erdogan reshapes Turkish politics, weakening the opposition

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğanhas systematically weakened […]

The post-Assad Levant and Israel’s minority anxiety

The post-Assad Levant is often described as another chapter in Syria’s long crisis, transition, or […]

America’s Century of Humiliation?

There was a time when America saw itself as the final destination of history. The […]

Kahlil Gibran’s The Prophet turns 103

In a world that seems to be spinning faster every day, the words of Kahlil […]