πΈ Pink Aura Diaries Presents: TRUST YOUR CRAZY IDEA Part 1 — My Idea Ain’t Crazy—You Just Don’t Have The Range To Get It
π₯ When They Don’t Have The Range, They Call You Crazy
Let’s be honest: most people don’t actually think small because they want to.
They think small because it’s all they’ve ever seen.
So when you pull up talking about quitting that dead end job, starting a business, moving states, launching a podcast, opening a salon, building a brand, or finally charging your worth… they glitch.
Not because your idea is wild.
Because their imagination has a ceiling.
That’s what “range” really is:
The distance between what someone is used to and what they’re brave enough to believe is possible.
So no, your idea isn’t crazy.
They just don’t think far enough to stand next to it.
π₯ Your Vision Wasn’t Downloaded To Their Mind On Purpose
Read that again.
Your idea didn’t show up in their mind.
It landed in yours.
Your late-night brainstorms.
Your notes app paragraphs.
Your Pinterest boards nobody knows about.
Your daydreams in the middle of boring meetings.
That’s not an accident. That’s an assignment.
If the vision was meant for everybody, everybody would’ve got it.
But they didn’t. You did.
So stop handing out front-row passes to people who only came to whisper doubts.
You can’t expect someone who never left their comfort zone to coach you through your breakthrough.
π₯ Signs Your Idea Isn’t Crazy—It’s Just Ahead Of Your Environment
Let’s break it down in real-life terms. Your idea probably isn’t “too much” if:
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You can’t stop thinking about it, even when you try to distract yourself
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You feel excited and nervous at the same time (that’s growth, not fear)
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You keep seeing signs, confirmations, and opportunities aligned with it
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The people who do get it light up when you talk about it
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Staying the same hurts more than the thought of risking it
That mix of butterflies + annoyance you feel in your spirit?
That’s your higher self saying, “Girl… if we don’t start this soon, I’m flipping the whole table.”
π₯ Stop Explaining Yourself To People Who Only Know Survival
Here’s the harsh tea: some people are so used to surviving that they’ll treat your desire to thrive like an insult.
They’ll project their fears as “advice.”
They’ll call your timing unrealistic.
They’ll question your qualifications.
But what they’re really saying is:
“If I don’t think I could do that, how dare you believe you can?”
You don’t owe anybody a PowerPoint presentation on why your dream makes sense.
You don’t need a group vote on whether your next chapter is “a good idea.”
At some point you have to say:
“I love y’all, but I’m betting on me.”
Because the truth is, the people who “don’t get it” will still be in the same place five years from now…
and you will be somewhere completely different if you move now.
π₯ How To Move When They Don’t Have The Range
Instead of arguing, begging, or shrinking, do this:
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Protect the vision.
Stop explaining every detail. Let your results talk later. -
Start small, think big.
Launch the first version. Test it. Learn. Don’t wait on perfection. -
Collect evidence.
Screenshot your milestones, saves, shares, sales, compliments, and growth. That’s proof. -
Build a new room.
Find online communities, mentors, and content that match where you’re headed—not where you’ve been. -
Detach from their reaction.
Their confusion doesn’t cancel your calling. It just confirms they’re not your target audience.
The moment you start moving like your idea is already valid, the universe starts responding like it’s already real.
π Journal Prompt: “Who Am I Letting Sit In Rooms They Can’t Mentally Afford?”
Open your journal and spill:
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Whose opinion have I been secretly giving too much power?
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What would I start this month if nobody could question it?
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Where have I been dimming my idea to make other people comfortable?
Then write this in big letters:
“My idea isn’t crazy. I just outgrew their imagination.”
✨ Call To Action: For The Girls With “Too Big” Dreams
If this dragged you just a little, good. That means it hit where it needed to.
π¬ Comment:
What’s one idea you’re done watering down for people who don’t have the range?
π² Share:
Send this to the friend who’s low-key a genius but keeps asking small minds for big approval.
π Next Up – Part 2:
“I Don’t Compete—I Build Lanes You Can’t Drive In.”
We’re talking ownership, originality, and why your glow-up doesn’t need to be compared to anybody else’s.
Pink Aura Diaries, XOXO π










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