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In 1960, a man in rural Bihar, India picked up a hammer and a chisel and began striking a mountain. His wife had died because there was no road to a doctor. He had no money, no machinery, no government support. Twenty-two years later, he broke through the other side.
Dashrath Manjhi's story is one of the most extraordinary examples of transformational change I've ever encountered — not because of what he achieved, but because of what made it possible. This episode is about target state: what it means to hold a vision so specific and so real that it stops being a wish and starts being a direction.
Range of Change is a show about what change actually requires, told through stories most people think they already understand.
By Sara RamelbIn 1960, a man in rural Bihar, India picked up a hammer and a chisel and began striking a mountain. His wife had died because there was no road to a doctor. He had no money, no machinery, no government support. Twenty-two years later, he broke through the other side.
Dashrath Manjhi's story is one of the most extraordinary examples of transformational change I've ever encountered — not because of what he achieved, but because of what made it possible. This episode is about target state: what it means to hold a vision so specific and so real that it stops being a wish and starts being a direction.
Range of Change is a show about what change actually requires, told through stories most people think they already understand.