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The Possibilists

we are strongest when we pull together.

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"I'm neither an optimist nor a pessimist, but a possibilist."    --Max Lerner

Anything is possible if you believe it to be. The only thing you need is an idea, the courage to start, and the determination to stick with it until the idea's seed breaks through the dirt surface of "what is not possible." Then it will need water and care until your idea bears fruit.. Throughout the whole process, you live for that day of harvest. You live for the possibility because you are a possibilist. My name is Jimmy, and I'm a possibilist. As I look at my school, my community, my world, I try to see opportunity rather than challenge. This site is dedicated to the possibility for change. If you think you may be a possibilist too, I hope you'll look around and join me.

"If you want to change the world..."

I love the main photo on this site's main page. It reminds me of the "Make Your Bed" speech delivered by Admiral William McRaven at the commencement address for the University of Texas at Austin in May 2014. An excerpt follows:
During SEAL training the students are broken down into boat crews. Each crew is seven students — three on each side of a small rubber boat and one coxswain to help guide the dingy. Every day your boat crew forms up on the beach and is instructed to get through the surfzone and paddle several miles down the coast. In the winter, the surf off San Diego can get to be 8 to 10 feet high, and it is exceedingly difficult to paddle through the plunging surf unless everyone digs in. Every paddle must be synchronized to the stroke count of the coxswain. Everyone must exert equal effort or the boat will turn against the wave and be unceremoniously tossed back onto the beach.
For the boat to make it to its destination, everyone must paddle. You can't change the world alone — you will need some help — and to truly get from your starting point to your destination takes friends, colleagues, the good will of strangers, and a strong coxswain to guide them.

If you want to change the world, find someone to help you paddle.

Over a few weeks of difficult training my SEAL class, which started with 150 men, was down to just 35. There were now six boat crews of seven men each. I was in the boat with the tall guys, but the best boat crew we had was made up of the the little guys — the munchkin crew we called them — no one was over about five-foot-five.
The munchkin boat crew had one American Indian, one African American, one Polish American, one Greek American, one Italian American, and two tough kids from the midwest. They out-paddled, out-ran and out-swam all the other boat crews. The big men in the other boat crews would always make good-natured fun of the tiny little flippers the munchkins put on their tiny little feet prior to every swim. But somehow these little guys, from every corner of the nation and the world, always had the last laugh — swimming faster than everyone and reaching the shore long before the rest of us.
SEAL training was a great equalizer. Nothing mattered but your will to succeed. Not your color, not your ethnic background, not your education and not your social status.

​If you want to change the world, measure a person by the size of their heart, not the size of their flippers.
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