Welcome to The Daily Quote – a podcast designed to kickstart your day in a positive way. I'm your host, Andrew McGivern, for August 23rd.
Today is National Ride the Wind Day, a celebration that perfectly captures the spirit of freedom, adventure, and that primal human desire to soar. This special day has a fascinating origin story that combines human ingenuity with our eternal dream of flight.
National Ride the Wind Day commemorates August 23rd, 1977, when the Gossamer Condor became the first human-powered aircraft to win the prestigious Kremer Prize. On that historic day at Minter Field in California, pilot Bryan Allen pedaled this remarkable aircraft through a figure-eight course, proving that humans could indeed power their own flight. The Gossamer Condor was designed by Dr. Paul MacCready and represented the culmination of centuries of human dreams about flying under our own power.
But Ride the Wind Day isn't just about aviation history. It's about that universal feeling of freedom that comes from moving with the wind – whether you're flying a kite, sailing, cycling on a breezy day, or simply standing with your arms outstretched feeling the air flow around you.
Which brings us to today's quote from the aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart, who once said:
"The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity."
Earhart understood something profound about human achievement: the biggest obstacle is rarely the actual doing, it's the decision to begin. Once we commit to action, once we decide to "ride the wind" in whatever form that takes for us, everything else becomes a matter of persistence and determination.
The beauty of Ride the Wind Day is that it reminds us that this decision to act doesn't have to involve historic aircraft or death-defying stunts. It can be as simple as deciding to go outside on a windy day and feel truly alive, or choosing to pursue that dream you've been putting off, or finally taking that trip you've been planning for years.
Every day, we have opportunities to "ride the wind" – to make decisions that move us toward freedom, adventure, and the life we actually want to live. But like Earhart said, the hardest part is always that initial decision to act.
The tenacity comes naturally once we're committed. It's that first step off the ground that requires courage.
PERSONAL TOUCHI remember the first time I went parasailing. I'd watched other people do it from the beach, looking so peaceful and free floating above the water. But when it came time to actually strap on the harness and let the boat pull me into the sky, I was terrified.
The boat captain looked at me and said something I'll never forget: "The wind is going to lift you whether you're scared or not. You might as well enjoy it." In that moment, I realized that the decision to act – to step off that platform and trust the wind – was really the only choice I had to make. Once I was airborne, everything else was just about relaxing and enjoying the ride.
That's what Amelia Earhart meant about tenacity being the easy part. Once you're committed, once you've made the leap, you discover resources and resilience you didn't know you had.
CLOSINGSo today, in honor of National Ride the Wind Day and the brave souls who first pedaled their way into the sky, ask yourself what decision you've been avoiding. What "wind" have you been afraid to ride?
Remember Amelia Earhart's wisdom – the most difficult thing is the decision to act. Once you make that choice, you might discover that the wind has been waiting to carry you all along.
That's going to do it for today. May you have the courage to make the decisions that set you free, and may you always be ready to ride whatever wind carries you toward your dreams.
I'm Andrew McGivern, signing off for now, but I'll be back tomorrow – same pod time, same pod station – with another Daily Quote.