In his biweekly column, Langley Shazor speaks to issues important to men within the territory.
Thereโs a line from DJ Khaled that the world knows well: All I do is win. Itโs the kind of phrase that gets repeated in locker rooms, boardrooms, and anywhere people need a shot of motivation. But winning isnโt just about trophies, accolades, or public recognition. Winning is about mindset. Winning is a mindset. Winning is about growth and learning. It is where you can take lessons and apply them, wisdom. And if you look at life the right way, youโll realize that all you do is winโno matter what.
Some people measure winning by material success, the job promotion, the business deal, the perfect relationship. Of course, those things are markers of a certain type of success. But if youโve ever experienced a setback (and letโs be real, who hasnโt?), you know that life isnโt always a straight climb to the top. Sometimes you take detours. Sometimes you fall. Sometimes you lose. However, if you extract the lesson, if you take the experience and turn it into fuel, did you really lose? Or did you just gain something more valuable than a temporary victory?
Thereโs a reason that seasoned fighters, successful business owners, investors, coaches, and entrepreneurs say their losses teach them more than their wins. A win confirms that your strategy worked, but a loss exposes the flaws that need to be fixed. It shines a light on areas you might have overlooked, giving you the chance to come back stronger. In other words, failure is just another way to win because it gives you what you need to get better.
Letโs talk about the power of experience. Every challenge you face, every mistake you make, every misstep you take, it all adds to your playbook. We often speak of the toolkit and how to improve what is in that kit. Experience teaches you things that books and classrooms canโt. It sharpens your instincts, refines your approach, and builds resilience. The more you go through, the more equipped you are to navigate whatever comes next, the more tools you have at your disposal. The most successful people in any industry have failed more times than they can count. Theyโve launched businesses that didnโt make it, taken jobs that werenโt the right fit, trusted people who let them down. But instead of being defined by those moments, they used them as stepping stones. They adjusted. They evolved. They pivoted. They learned. And learning is a win.
So, when you look back at the things that didnโt go your way, donโt see them as losses. See them as investments. Every lesson you gain adds to your wealth of wisdom, making you more valuable, more prepared, and more capable than you were before because winning isnโt reserved for a lucky few. Itโs a mindset, a practice, and a habit. The people who win at life arenโt the ones who never fail, theyโre the ones who refuse to let failure define them. Theyโre the ones who get up, adjust their strategy, and keep going.
Ask yourself: How do you respond to setbacks? Do you let them knock you out of the game? Or do you take the hit, absorb the lesson, and move forward? The truth is, every setback has a choice embedded in it. You can either see it as proof that youโre not good enough, or you can see it as an opportunity to improve. The ones who keep winning are the ones who choose the latter. The greats, regardless of industry, sector, or arena, arenโt necessarily the most talented. Theyโre the most relentless. They see losses as learning, rejection as redirection, and struggle as training. They understand that every stumble is part of the journey, not the end of it. They understand that in the game of life, lessons are the currency of champions. That is a currency that can be invested to create exponential dividends and compound interest toward the goals that you have set for yourself.
The idea that โall you do is winโ isnโt about ignoring difficulties or pretending that everything always goes your way. Itโs about recognizing that winning comes in different forms. Sometimes it looks like a breakthrough. Sometimes it looks like a lesson learned the hard way. But if you take everything that happens to you and use it to become better, then you are, in fact, always winning.
Think about your own life. How many times have you thought you lost, only to realize later that you actually gained something far more valuable than what you were initially chasing? Maybe you didnโt get the job, but you gained a new perspective on what you really want. Maybe a relationship ended, but you walked away with clarity and self-respect. Maybe a project failed, but it exposed weaknesses that you can now strengthen. Thatโs winning. My mother always says, โYou canโt attract more with a closed fistโ. I also think about the fact that if your cup is already full, you donโt have room for whatโs next. Letting some things go or pouring out some stuff creates the very room you need to allow what is meant for your greater to arrive. The sooner you accept that every experience holds value, the sooner you can start playing the long game. Life isnโt about isolated victories. Itโs about sustained growth. And the people who truly succeed arenโt the ones who never face challenges, theyโre the ones who understand how to turn those challenges into wins.
The next time you face a setback, ask yourself: What am I learning? What is this teaching me? How can I use this experience to grow? Because if you can do that, then congratulationsโyouโre already winning. Youโre evolving, youโre getting better, and youโre becoming the kind of person who turns every situation into an opportunity.
All you do is win. Not because life is easy, not because you always get what you want, but because no matter what happens, you keep moving forward. And thatโs what real winning looks like.
Langley โCasual-Wordโ Shazor is a poet, author, publisher, entrepreneur, public speaking coach, podcast host, and pastor who is an advocate for youth and men. His goal is to enlighten, empower, and liberate those who are silenced, marginalized, and enslaved to self-destructive thoughts and behaviors.
Visit thecasualword.com.
Editor’s Note: Opinion articles do not represent the views of the Virgin Islands Source newsroom and are the sole expressed opinion of the writer. Submissions can be made toย visource@gmail.com.ย



