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Daily Inspiration Quote by Dan Rather

"If all difficulties were known at the outset of a long journey, most of us would never start out at all"

About this Quote

The line works because it flatters and indicts us at the same time. Dan Rather, a journalist who made a career out of walking toward trouble with a notebook, frames ignorance not as a flaw but as a practical mercy. The trick is in the conditional: if we could see every obstacle in advance, we would rationally opt out. Rather smuggles in a defense of imperfect foresight as the engine of ambition, activism, and yes, reporting.

Its subtext is an argument about courage that doesn’t romanticize bravery. You don’t start because you’re fearless; you start because the full cost hasn’t been itemized yet. That’s not cynicism so much as an acknowledgment of human budgeting. People can consent to the first mile. They can’t consent to an infinite spreadsheet of pain, boredom, setbacks, and embarrassment. The quote turns that limitation into a feature: progress depends on partial knowledge.

Context matters with Rather because his public identity is bound up with high-stakes uncertainty: war coverage, political scandal, institutional pressure, and the very modern problem of trusting your information before it’s complete. Coming from him, “journey” reads less like self-help and more like civic labor. It’s a quiet rebuke to armchair certainty and a nod to anyone who’s ever pursued a story, a reform, or a life change without guarantees.

There’s also a subtle ethical warning. Not knowing the difficulties can get you moving, but journalism teaches that eventually you must face them, name them, and keep going anyway.

Quote Details

TopicMotivational
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If all difficulties were known at outset many would not start
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Dan Rather

Dan Rather (born October 31, 1931) is a Journalist from USA.

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