How I Made My Dreams Come True
by Captain Bob Webb
Public schools are supposed to remove barriers so people can succeed. For some, the system does remove barriers and provide a solid base for achievement. For others, the system replaces one set of barriers with another. For example, creativity is killed by pressuring students to accept the status quo, by establishing a fear to be different and a fear of failure. Independent thinking is replaced by dependency. In some cases, pressure to excel in academics kills the love to learn — a skill needed for success in the real world. People, who have a vision that motivates, will maintain a love to learn and overcome all barriers.My Story
My story begins in Summit, NJ, at the age of sixteen, where I am sitting in a
classroom starring out the window. Out of the first window I could see myself
exploring the jungles of South America searching for gold, I could see myself
drifting down the Amazon River on a raft, I could see monkeys swinging through
the trees, I could see myself as Tarzan swinging on a vine. Through the next
window, I could see the bow of my sailboat plowing through the towering waves,
heading toward the South Pacific. I could see myself on a white sand beach
chasing girls.
Then BANG! The teacher's yardstick hitting my desk brought me back to the
real world where subjects did not relate to my interest and dreamers are related
to dummies. In a loud voice the teacher said, "You are a failure! If you don't
pay attention you will continue to be a failure!"
When the bell rang, instead of going to the next class I walked out of school
never to return. I was tired of being called a failure. Right or wrong, I took
charge of my future. When I left school, I carried the single most important
element for success... A DREAM. During the next twenty years, every one of my
teenage dreams came true.
You may be asking, "How does one make their dreams come true?" There are
three elements:
- First - We must have a dream that motivates us. No one has ever achieved anything without a dream attached to a burning desire.
- Second - We must learn how-to-learn. In school, we learn how to memorize or be taught. Learning how to learn frees our dependency on others for knowledge.
- Third - We must learn from failure and learn how to bounce back from failure. No one ever succeed without failure. In the classroom, failure is a no-no.
In my early teens, I read the book Kon-Tiki. This is a story about six
Norwegians sailing a raft across the Pacific Ocean. Their adventure
inspired my dream of duplicating their raft voyage. As a teenager with normal
parents, a dream like this was considered ridiculous. Not only did friends and
family not support my dream, they told me to get serious. But the Kon-Tiki
dream turned me on. I wanted to know more about the ocean world and how it could
be challenged. I went to the public library looking for more books and found
plenty.
During the next few years, I joined the seas scouts, read boating magazines,
studied nautical books, and went to boat shows. To help understand seamanship
techniques, I made model charts, buoys, and boats. With models, comprehension
was easy. Unknowingly, I was learning the art of learning how-to-learn —
self-education — a technique that would follow me the rest of my life, a
technique that would bring me success and make my wildest dreams come true.
At the age of nineteen, during the Korean War, I was in the Marine Corps and
in Japan. On my first day of duty an officer told me, "You are a machinist and
will be in charge of the machine shop." As he gave me the shop keys, he pointed
to a trailer. In the Marine Corps, everything is on wheels. When I opened the
doors I had my first look ever at a machine shop. In the shop was one short
instruction manual titled "How to Run a Lathe." When a job came in, I followed
the manual's instructions. I was surprised at my ability to complete assigned
tasks. The Marine Corps experience launched my machinist career. It also made me
realize that learning how-to-learn is a powerful tool. For example, every
manmade object around us is the result of someone's dream and failures. Consider
the light bulb. Thomas Edison believed something could burn white-hot and not
burn up. A wild unrealistic dream? Everyone knows everything burns up in a short
time. A thousand failures later, Thomas Edison burned a steel wire white hot
that never burned up. Continuous white heat creates light.
Opportunity is attracted to people with a dream. They are the first to be
hired, first to be offered opportunity, and first to be promoted. Bigger the
dream the faster doors open. People without a dream are last to be hired, last
to be promoted and first to be laid-off in a force reduction. For non-dreamers,
doors remain closed. WHY? People with a dream act differently than non-dreamers.
Dreamers develop an attitude that radiates energy; they have a sense of purpose
and meaning to their lives. Radiant energy is an attitude that bosses like and
to which they offer opportunity. This is how the impossible becomes possible.
When I was discharged from the Marine Corps, I decided people were right, my
wild teenage dream was ridicules. Real people do not drift across oceans on
rafts. I am now an adult, I should think and act like one. The raft dream was
dead. For the next five years my life went nowhere, my ambition, hope, dreams
were gone. Something else was also gone — opportunity that came fast during my
earlier years also dried up.
One day I dusted off the Kon-Tiki book. My dream jumped off the pages
and came to life. I said to myself, "I must find a way!" Two years later, I was
in Hawaii and learned how the Polynesian people populated the Pacific Islands in
dugout canoes 1,000 years ago. My dream was changed from a raft to a dugout
canoe. At this time, opportunity came back and fast.
I helped crew a 36-foot sailboat from Hawaii to California. This provided my ocean sailing experience.
Next, I was hired by the Panama Canal Company, Panama.
Soon, my supervisor asked me to attend hard-hat diver school at company expense.
With this skill, money was no longer a problem.
A short time later, I was living on a beach in Tahiti building a 40-foot
Polynesian double-hull boat named Liki Tiki. The hulls were built by Choco
Indians in the Darien Providence of Panama and shipped to Tahiti. I built the
boat according to popular theory and information supplied by the Bishop Museum
in Honolulu. Three days at sea convinced me the double-hull theory was wrong.
The two hulls worked against each other and would soon breakup.
Back in Panama, I took the problem to the Indians in the Darien Jungle. They
said, "Outriggers is what works." I then succeed in sailing a 36-foot dugout
canoe with outriggers, named Liki Tiki Too, from Panama, 5,000 miles, to Hawaii.
Opportunity never stopped. For the Navy Undersea Center Hawaii I help develop a two-man Plexiglas submarine. Moving back to the Panama Canal Zone, I learned five computer languages and became supervisor of the computer department, I became Captain of the Canal Zone's training schooner Chief Aptakisic on which we took a group of teenagers to New York. My wife and I spent five years sailing the South Pacific Ocean in our own 50-foot sail boat, Hunky-Dory, which I designed and self-built. Opportunity came my way because I could educate myself, was motivated and did not let a wild teenage dream die.
............(C) 2012....LIMITLESS POSSIBILITIES INC. (LXP INC)

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