CHAPTER 27:
BEAM ME UP, SCOTTY
Nothing is impossible, the word itself says “I’m possible.”
—Audrey Hepburn; actress, icon, fabulist
My grandmother on my mother’s side lived to be one hundred years old. Nana
was as WASPy as they make ’em: prissy, reserved, able to avoid confrontation
with the skilled precision of an F-16 pilot. For as long as I can remember, she
always looked exactly the same. She was eternally adorned in a cardigan,
pinned together at the top by an antique broach, her pink lipstick and sparkly
brown eyes shining through a face-full of wrinkles that erupted in a series of
“oh dears” every time she laughed.
In her long lifetime, Nana witnessed the birthing of such pivotal human
achievements as the phone, the car, the TV, human flight, the computer, the
internet and rock and roll.
The two things that blew her mind the most, however, were putting a man
on the moon and the soda dispensers at McDonalds. She’d stand there
watching, gripped by disbelief, as an employee placed a cup, small, medium or
large, beneath a spout, pushed a button and walked away, leaving the machine
to fill it up the perfect, proper amount. “How does it know where to stop?”
Nana
would shake her head, mortified, “How does it
know?!”
After we figured out how to clone a sheep, she pretty much threw in the
towel on ever questioning anything again.
One day my family took her out for lunch to a restaurant on the top floor of
some giant hotel. When we got into the elevator, someone accidentally pushed
the button for the floor we were already on the moment the doors closed,
making them open right back up again. Thinking we’d just gone up forty-five-
flights in a split second, we watched my sweet little grandmother exit the
elevator, nervously patting her hair as she wandered down the hallway
muttering to herself, “Why not?”
I want to sign off here by encouraging you to pursue your dreams with the
same belief that anything is possible as a little old lady in knee-high stockings
and sensible heels who was born in 1903 and lived through the most
technologically flabbergasting century to date.
Whatever you desire to do with your precious life—write jokes or rock out
or start a business or learn to speak Greek or quit your job or raise a bunch of
kids or fall in love or lose your flab or open orphanages around the world or
direct movies or save dolphins or make millions or live in a canyon in a
loincloth—believe that it’s possible. And that it’s available to you. And that
you deserve to be/do/have it.
Why not?
Give yourself the permission and the means (yes, this includes the money),
to be who you are REGARDLESS OF WHAT ANYBODY ELSE THINKS
OR BELIEVES IS POSSIBLE. Do not deny yourself the life you want to live
because you’re worried you’re not good enough or that you’ll be judged or that
it’s too risky, because who does that benefit? No one, that’s who. When you
live your life doing the things that turn you on, that you’re good at, that bring
you joy, that make you shove stuff in people’s faces and scream, “check this
out!!!” you walk around so lit up that you shoot sunbeams out of yer eyeballs.
Which automatically lights up the world around you. Which is precisely why
you are here: to shine your big-ass ball of fire onto this world of ours. A world
that literally depends upon light to survive.
You are powerful. You are loved. You are surrounded by miracles.
Believe,
really believe that what you desire is here and available to you.
And you can have it all.
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