Have you ever read Lewis Carroll's: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland? Even if you haven't, I'm sure you've heard the classic; "What you're trying to do is impossible." In the shape of Alice, "one can't believe in something impossible." But I daresay, you haven't had much practice. The queen's retort was; "Sometimes, I think of at least six impossible things before breakfast."
We live in a lazy world. I'm not saying every human ever is lazy, but I am saying that the majority would rather work within quo than push any form of boundary. After all, boundaries are there to bind us. But that isn't the spirit that built the airplane. That isn't the spirit that carved the wheel. That isn't the spirit that embedded instructions into microprocessor silicon. The greatest feat of human achievement is our innate ability to push beyond the artificial boundaries laid forth by our peers.
Take, for example: The internet. At once, the thought of speaking to somebody through the waves of the air was a concept of mysticism. Unrealistic fictional magic that never would come to be. But now, we do it every single day. We communicate with the entire world from the concaves of our hands. We don't just transmit our voice over the air either. We transmit images, documents, music, and anything else that can be defined as some data type. So much for the concept of impossibility.
If that doesn't do it, how about travel? Humanity once felt the firm belief that a horse was the optimal form of transportation, and it could be no better. So much so that the automobile was measured by the strength of a count of horses. But then we saw advancements like the airplane, the railroad, the conventional bus, steam powered ships, and so much more. Things that made the horse opposingly look like the *least* viable form of transportation. Why scale the land with an animal that has the power of 3 people, when you could scale the air with a human-made machine with the power of 300 people. But the Wright Brothers didn't exactly get a warm hand or welcome appreciation for their intuitive idea. They were laughed at, joked about, and led terrible lives up until the finalization of the plane. It was only the belief that one could achieve the impossible that possiblified the idea.
Possiblified? That isn't a word. Or is it? Honestly, what other term do we have for the act of proving the possibility of an impossible concept? We don't, because nobody actually wants you to be able to do that. It's not like the first airplane made it into the sky and then a bunch of people just hopped on a passenger liner. It took decades to implement the airplane as a commodity. Even when people saw it, they didn't really believe what they were seeing because they didn't believe it was possible to begin with. Life is full of imperceivable realities. From a cosine perspective, life is full of people who can perceive an impossible reality.
Another great example of possiblifying the impossible is skateboarding. Plenty of legends are on record saying that a full 1080 spin in a standard vert ramp was impossible. But a few years ago: Gui Khury landed a full 1080 spin in a standard vert ramp. At 11 years old, when you're most likely to perceive the impossible, he managed to possiblify the adverse of a well-developed theory. In the same sport, Mitchie Brusco was capable of landing the first 1260 spin during a big air competition. He possiblified the impossible live in front of thousands of people.
People do impossible things every single day. Occam's Razor (the simplest solution to a problem is typically the correct solution) is just a sad propagandist way to prevent you from being something better. People aren't big on encouraging you to do things they themselves can't do. They would rather you stay behind them for the sake of their own ego. That's why you just have to send it. In the face of adversity, when you've been told your ideas are impossible; all you have to do is possiblify them. I have one final major example.
Sir Andrew Wiles, renowned mathematician. He spent most of his life working in secret to prove what was long considered to be an un-provable theorem. It drove his every moment as a scholar until the day it was solved, and then some beyond that. What Sir Wiles did wasn't just some possiblifying against a heckler's 10 year old idea. He took a principal that nobody could prove for 200 years and provided proof. He possiblified something that had long been thought to be completely impossible. He had absolutely no odds in his favor, and still managed to achieve what he set out to do. The moral of this example is that we as people have no absolute definition of what is or isn't possible. Even when something has been completely disproven, it is still possible that a perspective of proof arises to quell the existing status quo.
Even if you don't possiblify the impossible, you laid forth a great framework for the next iteration of you to come along and do it. You contributed to the possiblification of a subject. When you set out to do something impossible; Don't guarantee yourself a success. Just guarantee yourself the willingness to try.