ooh. This is one of those things that is definitely NOT cut and dry.
I think it depends on your own perceptions and beliefs about mourning the loss of something important, what constitutes as mourning, and what your emotional needs are as well as your individual psychology. Some people cling to the belief that 'important' means that you need to feel sad about something for an x amount of time otherwise, it wasn't as important as you thought it was and therefore, threatens the part of the ego that identified with the goal. Hence, they tend to hold on for things longer than most, because suddenly, it's not a goal that they need to move on from, it's their whole entire identity and that's a whole other can of crazy worms.
The other interesting thing to consider is that sometimes (not always) failure is actually the result of self-sabotage and the person might be reaping the psychological benefits from that loss that they were secretly after all along.
Everyone deals with loss and failure differently. Some people use it as fuel for new projects. Some use it as an excuse to shut out the world. Some people see failure as a new chapter in their lives and get excited. Some let it destroy them. Others (like myself) pretend like nothing is wrong and think they've moved on, but realize, years later, that they haven't deal with their emotional needs.
So sadly, the song I can write about this subject is depends, depends, depends.
Oh, truly, TDHT, what more can I say? <3 <3ooh. This is one of those things that is definitely NOT cut and dry.
I think it depends on your own perceptions and beliefs about mourning the loss of something important, what constitutes as mourning, and what your emotional needs are as well as your individual psychology. Some people cling to the belief that 'important' means that you need to feel sad about something for an x amount of time otherwise, it wasn't as important as you thought it was and therefore, threatens the part of the ego that identified with the goal. Hence, they tend to hold on for things longer than most, because suddenly, it's not a goal that they need to move on from, it's their whole entire identity and that's a whole other can of crazy worms.
The other interesting thing to consider is that sometimes (not always) failure is actually the result of self-sabotage and the person might be reaping the psychological benefits from that loss that they were secretly after all along.
Everyone deals with loss and failure differently. Some people use it as fuel for new projects. Some use it as an excuse to shut out the world. Some people see failure as a new chapter in their lives and get excited. Some let it destroy them. Others (like myself) pretend like nothing is wrong and think they've moved on, but realize, years later, that they haven't deal with their emotional needs.
So sadly, the song I can write about this subject is depends, depends, depends.
Can take 1 second or a lifetime.