Am I or the others crazy?

Logic is a proven consensus. White is white. Black is black. 1 + 1 = 2. Water is liquid. Oxygen is gas. We all need oxygen.

Yet, some think different.

I want to fly to the moon. I want create the world's first light bulb. I discovered electricity. I am the Son of God, your Messiah. I want to make life possible on Mars. I want democratize Space Travel.

You've thought different before, maybe.

It's a big thought.

Nobody you know has thought of it before. Even if they had, they're not going to do it the way you want to do it.

Maybe it's not a dream. It's your way of doing things. Different, they say. Unique. A possible trailblazer idea.

And you know what else you feel asides the excitement of having that idea? The feeling that you are wasting time—a lot of it.

So, who is crazy?

You or the mad man?

You think the mad man is crazy because he doesn't act like you—normal. The mad man probably doesn't care who is crazy, but he doesn't he is crazy either.

What happens then?

I have come to find that over 90% of the world's perceived logic was once defined as crazy.

What is logic again? A proven consensus.

So, maybe you're crazy. Or maybe they're crazy for not seeing what you think is normal, obvious and beautiful.

You have two choices.

One. Make your crazy open-source. Prove its logic and share it with people, and they'd move from oil to electricity.

Two. Stay comfortable in crazy because everything won't be logical.

The trailblazer isn't the best person.

The trailblazer is the one person who is comfortable with the discomfort of not thinking like the remaining 99%.

No, you don't have to be a trailblazer.

My letter to you today is if you're one, we're not crazy. They're not crazy either. But we are valid, and they'll catch up—eventually.

How's your week looking?

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