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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Danielle Steel

"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.

Quote Details

TopicMotivational
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Sometimes, if you arent sure about something, you have to just jump off the bridge and grow wings on your way down
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About the Author

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Danielle Steel (born August 14, 1947) is a Novelist from USA.

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