Entry No. 058 · The Build

Fail Faster

A Backyard Brew Story

By Ryan Khalil (R.Solace) · May 15, 2026 · 4 min read

Fail Faster — The Build, a Backyard Brew story by R.Solace (Ryan Khalil)

My boys,

There's something I wish more people understood—

Failure is expensive…

But delayed failure is often far more expensive.

Read that again.

Because most people are not actually afraid of failure…

They are afraid of discovering they were wrong.

So instead of correcting quickly… They delay.

They hesitate. They justify. They rationalize. They keep repeating what clearly is not working…

Not because it works—

But because admitting the flaw feels uncomfortable.

I've come to realize—

The longer you wait to confront what is broken… The more deeply it roots itself.

In your habits. In your systems. In your thinking. In your identity.

And once something becomes identity… Correction feels personal.

That is why failing fast matters so much.

Failing fast is not recklessness.

It is accelerated awareness.

It is the willingness to say:

"This is not working." "Good." "Now I know sooner." "Adjust."

My boys…

Some of the smartest builders I know are not those who fail the least—

They are those who identify failure the fastest.

Because speed of awareness often determines speed of growth.

Think about it—

If you build a system wrong… Would you rather notice in week one…

Or year ten?

If your mindset is flawed… Would you rather catch it early…

Or let it silently shape your future?

If a habit is destructive… Would you rather interrupt it now…

Or after it becomes part of your character?

This is why humility matters.

Because ego often says:

"Keep going so I don't look wrong."

Wisdom says:

"Stop now so I do not stay wrong."

There is power in quick correction.

I've learned that life often rewards honest recalibration more than stubborn persistence.

Because persistence in the wrong direction… Is not strength.

It is drift.

You do not get extra points for going the wrong way longer.

And yet…

So many people do exactly that.

They stay in broken patterns… Broken systems… Broken beliefs…

Simply because changing feels inconvenient.

No.

The sooner you see clearly— The sooner you can rebuild correctly.

This is true in business.

Launch. Test. Fail. Adjust.

This is true in fatherhood.

Try. Reflect. Improve.

This is true in relationships.

Communicate. Misstep. Learn. Refine.

This is true in self-mastery.

Observe. Interrupt. Replace.

I've learned that habit is like wet cement.

The earlier you reshape it… The easier it forms.

But once it hardens…

Breaking it takes far more force.

That is why procrastinating correction can become so dangerous.

Every extra day of poor repetition… Strengthens the wrong pattern.

So when you notice something off—

Do not romanticize delay.

Do not say: "I'll fix it later."

Later is where many problems become prisons.

Later is where avoidance compounds.

Later is where discomfort grows roots.

I need you to become someone who respects early awareness.

Catch yourself sooner.

Correct yourself sooner.

Reframe sooner.

Because faster lessons often mean less damage.

And let me be clear—

Failing fast does not mean abandoning effort.

It means abandoning ineffective patterns faster.

There is a difference.

Do not quit the mission…

Quit the broken method.

Read that again.

Too many people confuse adjusting strategy… With abandoning purpose.

No.

Keep the purpose.

Refine the path.

If one shot misses… Adjust your form.

If one plan fails… Adjust your system.

If one approach breaks… Adjust your framework.

The goal is not perfection first.

The goal is precision through repetition.

I've come to realize—

Experience is often life's fastest teacher… But only when paired with honest reflection.

Otherwise…

Failure simply repeats itself.

So ask:

What happened? Why did it happen? What can I change now? What must I stop reinforcing?

Then move.

Do not emotionally collapse over correction.

Builders expect recalibration.

Pilots course-correct. Athletes review tape. Architects revise blueprints.

So why do humans act ashamed to adjust?

Adjustment is intelligence.

My boys…

Fail fast. Learn faster. Rebuild smarter.

Because the sooner you identify what is not serving you…

The sooner you free yourself to become what will.

Do not fear being wrong.

Fear staying wrong too long.

Because life can often be reshaped quickly…

But hardened habits cost far more to undo.

See clearly. Adjust quickly. Build wisely.

I love you.

— Baba


Question: What in your life are you currently delaying correcting simply because admitting it sooner feels uncomfortable?

Moral: Failing fast is not weakness—it is wisdom. Early awareness and quick recalibration reduce long-term damage and accelerate growth.

Disclaimer: This story reflects real experiences and philosophies behind Backyard Brew. It is shared to inspire perspective and intention.

Author: R. Solace

This story is a real lesson learned by Ryan Khalil. AI was used to help organize and structure the stories you're reading. The intent of these stories is to help, not to hurt.

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