Robert Kiyosaki is pointing out a deep contradiction in how we are taught to succeed versus how success actually happens in real life. Happiness and wealth are built through experimentation, risk, and repeated failure, yet traditional schooling conditions people to fear mistakes by attaching punishment, judgment, and labels to them. From childhood, we naturally learn through falling, adjusting, and trying again, but schools often interrupt this process by rewarding compliance and discouraging error. This creates adults who hesitate, play safe, and avoid uncertainty rather than learning from it. Kiyosaki also highlights how collaboration, which is essential in business and life, is framed as wrongdoing in schools, reinforcing isolation instead of teamwork. His message is not that learning is bad, but that real growth comes from environments where mistakes are allowed, curiosity is encouraged, and cooperation is valued—because that is how humans are wired to learn and evolve.