Britain’s Got Talent is a very cynical TV show. On the face of it, for Susan Boyle to even audition for it was audacious. Susan Boyle was not young, she was not sexy, and she certainly didn’t have any killer instinct. Born with an oxygen deficiency, she’d grown up with a supposed mental illness, and had dealt with being called retarded for the majority of her childhood.
As a result of her overprotective family, she grew up in the little town of Blackburn, Scotland; to be rotund and frightfully shy. One day however, the 47-year-old Susan sneaked out of the house and made her way to Glasgow and get in front of Simon Cowell.
As she sashayed on to the stage, no one took her seriously. A middle aged woman in a hideous outfit and exceedingly bushy eyebrows trotting about in heels isn’t exactly riveting stuff. Susan Boyle wasn’t exactly riveting stuff. People in the audience were scoffing. Simon Cowell rolled his eyes, and the other judge, Piers Morgan looked like he was going to send her home before she even spoke. Oh yes, they were going to have fun with this one.
The audience catcalled at her as she wiggled her hips, and laughed as she said she wanted to be a star. She said she was going to sing from Les Miserables, but no one was listening.
Then, she opened her mouth. And magic happened. After the first line, judge Amanda Holden’s jaw dropped. After the second line, Simon Cowell’s eyes were the size of golf balls. At the end of the first stanza, every single person in the audience was on their feet. By the end of the song, they had tears in their eyes.
Because they’d written her off before they even gave her a chance. Because their own bigoted society had kept this diamond hidden for 47 years. Because the half-century long struggle of a precocious talent was blossoming before their very eyes.
Susan Boyle went on to sell 9 million copies that year. She topped the charts on both sides of the Atlantic. She outsold Lady Gaga, Elton John, and Paul McCartney. A woman who had spent her whole life fighting the dogma of being diagnosed with a ‘mental illness’ had come up trumps when it mattered.
At Quantum Courage, our products are inspired by Susan Boyle’s spirit. We take courage from the victory of persistence. And we always remind ourselves – never ever write something off from your first impression. It might just inspire 90 million Youtube viewers.
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