When I was researching the
history of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge as a major illustration for the
ideas of success and motivation, I became engrossed with the story of how the
first bridge was built over Niagara Falls. You see, to build a bridge over a
giant gorge, first you have to get a line over the canyon, from one side to the
other. Easier said than done at Niagara Falls.
The engineers couldn't
cross the falls in a boat to take the line from one side to the other because
the boat would go over the falls. And the airplane hadn't been invented yet. The
distance was also way beyond the bow-and-arrow range, which had been a common
method at the time of getting the first line across to build a bridge.
The designing engineer,
Charles Ellet, pondered the question until he came up with a revolutionary idea.
He decided that, while solving the problem, he would also have some fun and
generate some publicity for the project. Ellet sponsored a kite flying contest
and offered five dollars to the first person who could fly a kite across the
gorge and let it go low enough to the ground for someone to be able to grab the
string. In 1849, five dollars was a prize similar to a small lottery today. The
boy who won the prize relished his accomplishment until his death, nearly 80
years later.
It all began with an
idea and one thin kite string. The kite string was used to pull a cord across,
then a line, then a rope. Next came an iron-wire cable and then steel cables,
until a structure strong enough to build a suspension bridge was in place.
I'm struck by how that
string is like a single thought. The more vivid and clear the thought, and the
more you come back to it, the stronger it becomes - like the string to the rope
to a cable. Each time you rethink it, dwell on it, or layer it with other
thoughts, you are strengthening the structure on which to build your idea, like
building a bridge over Niagara Falls.
But unlike a kite, there
is no string attached to how high and how far your goals may take you. They are
limited only by the power of your imagination and the strength of your desire.
-Denis
Waitley
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