My son fell off a scooter this week and broke his arm.
And yeah—I felt it immediately.
That punch of guilt.
I’m his Dad.
I should’ve said no. I should’ve set better rules. I should’ve protected him.
That’s where your mind goes.
Backwards.
Replaying it. Rewriting it. Trying to fix something that’s already done.
But here’s the truth:
He’s ridden those scooters hundreds of times. The risk was always there. I accepted it.
Because you can’t bubble wrap life.
Kids are going to run. Climb. Fall. Get hurt. That’s part of growing up. That’s part of living.
And if you try to eliminate all risk…you don’t raise a strong kid.
You raise a fragile one.
So yeah—it happened.
It sucks.
But we handled it. We got him taken care of. He’s healing. He’ll make a full recovery.
That’s what really matters.
And it gave me something I didn’t expect:
Perspective.
It reminded me how much I love him. How much I take for granted.
His health. His energy. His presence.
The normal, everyday moments that feel so routine…until something shakes you awake.
I’m not taking that for granted anymore.
Here’s the bigger picture:
You can play it smart and minimize risk…but bad things are still going to happen.
To you. To your family. To the people you care about.
You don’t get to control that.
What you do control is your response.
Are you going to sit in guilt? Beat yourself up? Shut down?
Or are you going to step up?
Accept it. Handle it. Make it right.
Then move forward.
That’s the job. That’s the standard.
Because life doesn’t stop.
And neither should you.
Builder Principle
It’s less about what happens, and more about how you respond.
Something to Ponder
When things go wrong, how have you handled it in the past? How could you have handled it better? How are you going to handle things in the future?
See You In the Arena
This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.
Brick by brick.