"Sometimes, if you aren't sure about something, you have to just jump off the bridge and grow wings on your way down"
About this Quote
Steel’s line is a romance novelist’s version of a dare: stop negotiating with your fear and let motion manufacture belief. The “bridge” is a deliberately blunt image of risk - not the glamorous kind, but the stomach-drop kind. It skips the reassuring middle step we’re trained to demand (research, certainty, permission) and insists that action isn’t the reward for confidence; it’s the engine that generates it.
The genius of “grow wings on your way down” is how it reframes desperation as a workshop. Wings aren’t found, inherited, or gifted by some wise mentor; they’re improvised under pressure. That’s Steel’s core cultural pitch across decades of popular fiction: life doesn’t wait for your self-actualization arc. Catastrophe and reinvention arrive on the same page, and the only way through is forward. It’s a comforting idea, but not a soft one. The sentence admits the fall - the panic, the freefall, the possibility of impact - while still betting on adaptation. That realism is why it lands for readers who’ve been told, by more polished philosophies, to “manifest” certainty.
There’s subtext here about agency in a world that’s often indifferent, especially to women’s choices: you may not get ideal conditions, but you can still choose velocity. Steel makes risk feel less like recklessness and more like self-rescue, turning fear into a kind of fuel.
The genius of “grow wings on your way down” is how it reframes desperation as a workshop. Wings aren’t found, inherited, or gifted by some wise mentor; they’re improvised under pressure. That’s Steel’s core cultural pitch across decades of popular fiction: life doesn’t wait for your self-actualization arc. Catastrophe and reinvention arrive on the same page, and the only way through is forward. It’s a comforting idea, but not a soft one. The sentence admits the fall - the panic, the freefall, the possibility of impact - while still betting on adaptation. That realism is why it lands for readers who’ve been told, by more polished philosophies, to “manifest” certainty.
There’s subtext here about agency in a world that’s often indifferent, especially to women’s choices: you may not get ideal conditions, but you can still choose velocity. Steel makes risk feel less like recklessness and more like self-rescue, turning fear into a kind of fuel.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
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