“The most important thing in life is to stop saying ‘I wish’ and start saying ‘I will’.”
This part urges a shift from passive dreaming to active doing. Saying “I wish” keeps your goals in the realm of fantasy — it implies a lack of control, as though you’re waiting for circumstances or luck to make things happen. On the other hand, “I will” is a declaration of intent. It transforms desire into determination and aligns your actions toward making that desire a reality.
When you replace wishing with willing, you take ownership of your future. You stop being a spectator of your life and become its author.

“Consider nothing impossible then treat possibilities as probabilities.”
This section challenges your mindset about what’s achievable. Many people limit themselves not because something truly can’t be done, but because they assume it can’t. By considering nothing impossible, you open yourself to creativity, resilience, and innovation — traits that turn big goals into real achievements.
Treating possibilities as probabilities means having enough faith in your vision that you act as though success is not just possible, but likely — provided you work for it. This confidence fuels persistence and often becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy: belief drives effort, and effort creates results.
In Essence
This quote is about empowerment through mindset:
Replace hesitation with commitment.
Replace doubt with belief.
Replace wishful thinking with purposeful action.
When you think this way, obstacles become challenges to overcome, not reasons to stop. And that shift — from “maybe” to “definitely” — often makes all the difference between success and regret.
