Make a "Done List" of things you once thought were difficult (learning to drive, a hard exam, a tough conversation). Use your past "impossibles" as fuel for your current one. Summary Checklist
Write down exactly what you are afraid to start.
Break the "impossible" task into units so small they feel trivial. If you’re writing a book, the goal isn't a 300-page novel; it’s 200 words this morning. "It Always Seems Impossible Until It's Done.": ...
We assume our current lack of skills or resources will never change.
When a method fails, it’s not proof the goal is impossible; it’s proof that that specific path is closed. 4. Integration: Living the Quote Make a "Done List" of things you once
"Impossible" is often a protective label we use to avoid the vulnerability of potential failure. 2. Strategy: The "Deconstruction" Phase
What can you do in the next 10 minutes?
Look for someone who has done something similar. Their success is evidence that the laws of physics aren’t stopping you—only your current strategy is. 3. The "Messy Middle"