Thomas Edison — "It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do …"
It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do not dare that they are difficult.
It is not because things are difficult that we do not dare; it is because we do not dare that they are difficult.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"I never did a day's work in my life. It was all fun."
"You will have many opportunities in life to keep your mouth shut: You should take advantage of every one of them."
"I owe my success to the fact that I never had a clock in my workroom. Seventy-five of us worked twenty hours every day and slept only four hours — and thrived on it."
"I have never seen a man who was afraid of a woman. I have seen men who were afraid of women's tongues."
"My main purpose in life is to make money so that I can afford to carry on more experiments."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Difficulty is often a product of hesitation, not an inherent property of the task itself. When people refuse to attempt something, it balloons in their minds into something impossible. The act of starting, pushing forward, and committing shrinks the challenge to manageable size. Fear and avoidance are what make problems feel insurmountable, not the problems themselves. Courage dissolves the imagined wall between a person and the work.
Edison embodied this principle through roughly 1,000 failed filament experiments before achieving a workable light bulb, plus his relentless iteration on the phonograph, motion picture camera, and electric grid. He famously reframed failure as data, holding 1,093 US patents by his death. While contemporaries deemed direct-current distribution and recorded sound impractical, Edison dared first and solved the engineering afterward, proving difficulty bends to persistence.
Edison worked during America's Second Industrial Revolution (1870s-1920s), when electricity, telegraphy, and mass production were reshaping daily life. Menlo Park became the world's first industrial research lab in 1876, institutionalizing invention itself. The era rewarded bold tinkerers: competitors like Tesla, Westinghouse, and the Wright Brothers raced to claim untested technologies. Cultural optimism about progress was enormous, yet most dismissed radical ideas as fantasy until someone dared build them and proved skeptics wrong.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty