Latest Updates
-
Viral Video: Pakistani Family Celebrates India’s T20 World Cup Victory With Cake, Sings Indian National Anthem -
Who Is Aditi Hundia? Viral Video Shows Ishan Kishan Celebrating India’s T20 World Cup Win With Girlfriend -
India Seal Historic T20 World Cup Win: Samson Tournament Star, Bumrah Match Hero, Dhoni Posts Special Message -
Horoscope for Today March 09, 2026 - Small Steps, Big Progress -
International Women’s Day 2026: 7 Powerful Ayurvedic Foods Every Woman Should Start Adding To Her Daily Diet -
What If WiFi, GPS Or Dishwashers Didn’t Exist? This Instagram Reel Credits Women Behind Everyday Inventions -
Women’s Day 2026: Why Creating Relaxation Spaces At Home Matters For Women Balancing Multiple Roles -
Women’s Day 2026 Binge Watch: 10 Movies That Celebrate Women Who Challenge Norms And Rewrite Their Stories -
Women’s Day 2026 Exclusive: Saumya Tandon On Dhurandhar Success, ‘Actors Must Break The Boxes’ -
Rang Panchami 2026: Why This Colourful Post-Holi Festival Is Considered Auspicious For Married Couples
Fear of Failure vs Fear of Judgment: What Truly Affects Student Mental Health
When a toddler learns to walk, we celebrate their first steps, but rush in anxiously when they fall. Yet walking becomes possible only because they fall - repeatedly. The same applies when a child learns to swim, ride a bicycle, or play football. Missing the ball, stumbling, and fumbling are essential to building skill.
And yet, from a very young age, many children begin receiving a subtle message: it is not okay to fall.
By the time they enter school, that message evolves. It becomes less about falling physically and more about not failing academically. We spoke to Sanjay Desai, Founder and CEO of ConsciousLeap, who explained the academic pressure on children's mental health.
When "Don't Fall" Becomes "Don't Fail"
Report cards, ranks, and labels start defining performance. Interestingly, the number of students who formally "fail" is usually small. A minority may even become repeat failures - sometimes due to disengagement, sometimes rebellion. Over time, some of them develop resilience. In certain peer groups, not fearing failure can even appear "cool."
But the larger group is not those who fail. It's those who pass.
"On paper, they are doing fine. Yet this majority often experiences the highest levels of stress, anxiety, and self-doubt. This raises an important question: Is academic failure really the main source of student distress?" asked Desai.
The Many Faces of Fear of Judgment
Fear of judgment doesn't come from one place. It builds quietly from multiple directions:
- Constant comparisons within families, classrooms, and increasingly, online spaces.
- Anxiety about meeting the expectations of parents, teachers, and peers.
- The belief that exam results will decide their entire life is deeply unfair and untrue.
- Anxiety about being labelled "average," "less intelligent," or "uncool."
- Fear that one setback will permanently damage self-esteem.
This fear often weighs more heavily than the possibility of failing itself.
Social Media: The Silent Amplifier
"All of this is further magnified by social media. Here, achievements are broadcast, but struggles are hidden. A child sitting with an average score is not comparing themselves to the real, messy journeys of others, but to polished snapshots and carefully curated success stories. The result is a grooming system, at home and in school, that is heavily comparison-based and FOMO-driven. Children don't simply learn; they perform under surveillance," highlighted Desai.
When Potential Is Measured Against a Template
In such an environment, we rarely look at a child as a being with immense but unique potential. Instead, we measure them against standardised benchmarks and mass-produced expectations. Their individual rhythm, creativity, and inner compass get sacrificed to the demands of ranking and the fear of insensitive judgment.
Bottomline
Desai concluded, "If we want to truly protect student mental health, we need to shift the lens. Falling must be reframed as a natural and necessary part of growth, not a source of shame. Failure must be seen as feedback, not a final verdict. And most importantly, our children need to feel that their worth does not rise and fall with marks, medals, or social approval. When they know it is safe to fall, they finally learn to stand in who they are."
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications













