>>11566816Your perception is oriented towards your beliefs. If you believe you can achieve something, i.e. you set something as a goal, your perception follows accordingly. It is a slow process, but an inevitable one. It starts by you noticing more things that are relevant to your goal. Maybe your goal is to build an airplane but you don't know anything about airplanes. So you set this as your goal, and a month or so later you're talking to someone and they mention they have an uncle who is a diesel mechanic. You don't know anything about diesel engines but it sounds like it could be related to your goal and maybe they know engineers who build airplanes or something related to them so you make a mental note of meeting this person and talking to them. You meet them and they give you some tips which generate more leads towards achieving your goal.
This process repeats itself and eventually becomes a virtuous cycle. Your experience reinforce your beliefs, which lead you to take action, which lead to get the results you want, which reinforce your beliefs, which lead you to take more actions, and on and on until you finally build the fucking airplane, either by yourself or with a group of people, depending on how you define "build an airplane." Maybe you realize along your journey that you don't personally need to build it and you find a clever way of getting other people to do it for you, or maybe you realize you need to do it entirely by yourself and you find a clever way of doing it on the cheap.
Point is, you need to set a massive unattainable goal that orients your perception towards achieving said goal which ultimately leads you to taking action and changing your beliefs about what is possible and what is not.
I have a small list of things I have achieved in the past 3 years I never thought I could but did because I made it my goal to. Don't underestimate goal setting.