F4: School Trip: Joined a Group I'm Not Close To

Hioki, un estudiante de segundo de preparatoria, se separa de sus amigos cercanos de clase y se encu

Loossers

To be a "loser," in the pejorative sense, is actually a mindset. It is the state of giving up on oneself. The true loser is not the person who fails, but the person who stops trying, blames the world for their circumstances, and refuses to take responsibility for their own improvement. It is the person who watches life from the sidelines, bitter and cynical, rather than participating in it.

There was Devon, the shooter who could drain a three-pointer from anywhere—except when it mattered. The moment a crowd clapped, his hands turned to stone. He was already planning to enlist next fall. “At least the army doesn’t have a scoreboard,” he’d joked in the locker room. No one laughed. loossers

He walked to the far end of the field, where the goalpost rusted and the track was cracked. He sat on the grass and watched the lights of the gymnasium flicker off, one by one. The janitor, an old man named Sal who’d worked at the school since before Leo was born, came out with a bucket of soapy water and a mop. To be a "loser," in the pejorative sense,

Leo almost laughed. “Yeah. Bad.”

In these contexts, the "loss" is a mathematical reality. However, when we transition to social labels, being a "loosser" can be a badge of honor for the unconventional. It represents a refusal to be crushed by the "self-reinforcing cycles" of traditional failure. 3. The Power of "Letting Loose" It is the person who watches life from

“You lost?” Sal asked, leaning on his mop handle.

True strength is not found in never losing, but in how one responds to a loss. Those who are labeled "losers" by others often have the most to gain by refusing to let their failures bury them. Instead, these setbacks should inspire new strategies and a stronger work ethic. Life is a mixture of joys and sufferings, and neither is permanent. Conclusion