RECENTLY I
WAS relaxing at the water’s edge of a local beach when a young boy ran
full speed right by me and into the shallow surf. He continuously hopped
up and down as he was running forward, kicking his little legs in the
air and across the surface of the water before inevitably falling
face-first into the waves. He got back up and repeated this act several
times, each time with more determination than the previous attempt. It
became obvious that he was trying to run across the surface of the
water. I couldn’t help but laugh. His combined levels of determination
and exertion were priceless.
After several
attempts, he noticed my laughter and walked over to me. “What’s so
funny?” he asked.
“You remind
me of me, and it makes me smile,” I said.
“Do you know
how to walk on water?” he asked. “Like a superhero?” “Well, I think I
can help you out,” I said. “Let me give you a few pointers.”
Curious, the
boy sat down on the sand next to me. His mother scurried over, worried
... but I reassured her that her son wasn’t bothering me. Relieved,
perhaps, to have her son sitting safely on the sand instead of flying
face-first through the air, she went back to her beach chair twenty feet
away and continued a conversation with another lady.
“So, you want
to walk on water, eh?” I asked. He nodded his head anxiously.
A Rough
Summary of What I Told Him
1. Make sure
you were born to walk on water.
You must
follow your heart, and be who you were born to be. Some of us were born
to be musicians ... to communicate intricate thoughts and rousing
feelings with the strings of a guitar. Some of us were born to be
poets... to touch people’s hearts with exquisite words. Some of us were
born to be entrepreneurs ... to create growth and opportunity where
others saw rubbish. And still some of us were born to walk on water ...
to invent the capability of doing so. If you’re going to walk on water,
you’d better feel it in every fibre of your being. You’d better be born
to do it!
2. Decide
that nothing can stop you.
Being born to
walk on water isn’t enough by itself. We must each decide to accept our
calling. Unfortunately, most of us make excuses instead. “But I might
drown trying,” we say. Or, “But I have a family to think about first.”
Walking on water, or doing anything that hasn’t been done before,
requires absolute, unconditional dedication. The only person who can
control your level of dedication is you. If you’re serious about walking
on water, you must decide that nothing—not gravity, not a group of
naysayers, nothing—can stop you!
3. Work on it
for real.
While many of
us decide at some point during the course of our lives that we want to
answer our calling—to accomplish our own version of walking on
water—only an astute few of us actually work on it. By “working on it” I
mean truly devoting oneself to the end result. The rest of us never act
on our decision. Or at best, we pretend to act on it by putting forth an
uninspired, half-ass effort. But to truly walk on water, you’ll have to
study physics, rheology, hydrophobic substances, and soon . . . and then
you’ll have to define and redefine next-generation theories and complex
hypotheses, which must be tested relentlessly. When the tests fail, you
must be ready to edit your theories and test them again. This kind of
work, the real kind, is precisely what enables us to make the impossible
possible.
4. Let the
whole world know what you’re up to.
When you’re
trying to walk on water, or do anything that nobody else has done
before, life can get lonely pretty quickly. To keep your motivation
thriving, it’s important to let others know that you’re attempting to
defeat the formerly impossible. Don’t be shy! Let the whole world know
that you’re trying to walk on water. No doubt, it’ll place a bit of
extra pressure on your back, and you’ll almost certainly hear some
laughter in the crowd. But this kind of pressure fuels motivation, which
is exactly what you’ll need to accomplish such a colossal undertaking.
And when you finally do succeed, the last bit of laughter heard will be
your own.
5. Value the
people who value your ambitions.
When most
people hear about your “mission impossible” aspirations, their natural
reaction may be to roll their eyes, call you crazy, and tell you to quit
being foolish. But fortunately, the world is also inhabited by pioneers
and believers who see the value in your dreams. These people understand
that achieving the formerly impossible is one of the greatest gifts
human beings possess. They’ll likely give you tips, bits of assistance,
and the extra push you need to succeed. These are extraordinary people,
and you’ll want to surround yourself with them because they will
ultimately assist you over the hurdles and across the surface of the
water. Think of them as an influential personal-support team. Without
them, walking on water will be a far more difficult feat, if not
completely impossible.
6. Ignore the
naysayers.
No matter how
much progress you make, there will always be the people who insist that
walking on water is impossible, simply because it hasn’t been done
before. Or they may incessantly suggest that the idea as a whole is
utterly ridiculous because nobody really cares about walking on water
anyway. When you come across these people, don’t try to reason with
them. Instead, forget that they exist. They will only waste your time
and energy.
7. Prepare
yourself for the pain.
Even though
you’re no longer mindlessly running face-first into the oncoming ocean
surf, but instead forming complex theories based on the studies of
rheology and fluid viscosity, it doesn’t mean you won‟t experience your
fair share of pain. You’re in the business of walking on water, of doing
something that has never been done before. You’ll likely get a
waterlogged lung on a regular basis. But the pain will seem like a small
price to pay when you become the first person to jog across the rapids
of the Mississippi River.
8. Enjoy the
pain of your greatest challenge.
Superheroes
aren’t real. In real life nobody has ever walked on water. But lots of
people have achieved formerly impossible feats, and continue to enjoy
the possibilities of new challenges. These people will all tell you
there’s nothing more gratifying than the thrill of your greatest
challenge. The inherent pains along the way are simply mile markers on
your trip to the finish line. When you Anally do Anish, you may actually
And yourself missing the daily grind. Ultimately, you’ll realize that
pleasure and pain can be one and the same.
9. Never give
up. Never quit.
The reason no
one has walked on water isn't because people haven't tried. Remember,
you just tried several times in a row, and I'm sure many others have
too. The reason nobody has succeeded is, simply, that within the scope
of modern science and physics, it's currently impossible. But this
doesn't mean that with your help it won’t become possible in the future.
If you were born to do it and truly dedicate yourself to the end result,
anything, including walking on water, is entirely possible.
Just a Chance
When we were
done talking, the young boy got up and ran back over to his mother. He
pointed over to me and I smiled and waved back. Then he said to her,
“Mommy, Mommy! That guy just taught me how to walk on water!”
A few moments
later she walked over to scold me for supposedly giving out reckless
advice. She told me I was giving her son a false sense of hope. I told
her all I was giving him was a chance.