In 1853, America hosted its first world’s fair in New
York City. The organizers built a beautiful exhibition hall called the Crystal
Palace. This is where the latest and greatest inventions were showcased. This
is also where a man named Elisha Otis pulled off one of the most remarkable
stunts in the history of the world’s fair. Otis was the inventor of the safety
elevator brake, but he was having a hard time selling his idea to safety-first
skeptics. It was time to go big or go home. He stood on an elevator platform
hoisted high enough for everybody in the exhibition hall to see him. Then Otis,
who had positioned an axman above the elevator, cued him to cut the rope!
The elevator fell—a few feet. The crowd let out a
collective gasp. And Elisha Otis pronounced, “All safe, ladies and gentlemen.
All safe.”
I know—cutting the rope doesn’t seem safe. Can I tell you
what’s not safe? Playing it safe! In fact, the greatest risk is taking no
risks. Cutting the rope is about taking calculated risks. When I say “calculated,”
I’m talking about a risk-reward ratio. I’m not advocating blind leaps. Keep
both eyes wide open, but you’d better not focus on the wind and waves. The only
way to walk on water is to keep your eyes fixed on Jesus! Well, you have to get
out of the boat too!
When Elisha Otis pulled off this unforgettable sales
pitch, there were only a few buildings in New York City taller than five
floors. Why? No one wanted to climb the stairs! It was next to impossible to
rent top-floor real estate. Then in 1854, Otis installed an elevator in a
building on Broadway, and the rest is history.
By 1890, there were ten buildings taller than ten
stories. By 1900, there were sixty-five buildings taller than twenty stories.
And by 1908, there were 538 buildings in New York City that qualified as
skyscrapers, including the famous Flatiron Building between Broadway and Fifth
Avenue. More and more buildings got taller and taller, and something else
happened. Higher floors started producing higher revenues! As long as you didn’t
have to climb the stairs, everyone wanted a room with a view.
Elisha Otis had turned the world upside down. He didn’t
just invent the safety elevator brake; he made the modern skyscraper possible!
At last count, New York City has fifty-eight thousand
elevators. Those elevators make eleven billion trips every year. And that’s
just New York City! According to the Otis Elevator Company, the equivalent of
the world’s population rides on their products every three days. All because
Elisha Otis had the courage to cut the rope!
If you want to imagine unborn tomorrows, you’ve got
to cut the rope. It’s scary, especially if you’re afraid of
heights. But anything less is maintaining the status quo. You will experience
a few falls, a few fails. That’s for certain. But cutting the rope is the way
we cut the ribbon on the dreams God has given us.
Excerpted from Win the Day: 7 Daily Habits to Help You Stress Less & Accomplish More. Copyright © 2020 by Mark Batterson.
Used by
permission of Multnomah, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC.
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