From the mind of critic: “If we couldn’t reach the pedals on our first tricycle when we were a toddler, do we give up on ever riding a bike? Or do we believe that bikes were designed for other people to ride so they could enjoy successfully overcoming a challenge? Do we believe they weren’t designed for us, relegating us to permanent serfdom, where the only challeneges we overcome are the ones the bike deigners allow us to overcome? Or do we believe that although these bikes were designed for others it’s not going to stop us from riding, we’ll just adjust it and tweak it to fit our needs, because nobody is gonna tell us what we can and cannot do? We all get discouraged when something doesn’t work out like it’s suppossed to, or is made for somebody else entirely. Like how the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence. Once we realize that our neighbors grass might be greener, we’ll see that we can make ours green too, but with a little more effort. We must ask ourselves if we care more about the amount of effort we have to put in, or the results. If we care more about the effort we have to put in, why does it even matter what the results are if we’re so locked into jealousy and trying to one up our neighbor? Our tricycle might not be designed for us, but the only way we aren’t gonna ride, is if we refuse to tape blocks of wood to the pedals so we can reach them. We can ride, when we allow ourselves to move forward”