Last week we taught the core class that founded the entire Wizard Academy campus, Magical Worlds of Communications. We have a tradition in that class where we start the day with an audio recording Roy made years ago to narrate the true origin story of Wizard Academy and the Wizard’s Tower. It occurred to me that you may not have heard it! So here it is. You can watch the video and listen to Roy and Pennie tell the story in their own words. The full transcript is below.
Daniel Whittington – Chancellor
THE ORIGIN OF WIZARD ACADEMY
by Roy and Pennie Williams
Wizard Academy began with an itch and an image. I got the itch in Tulsa in 1978 when I was 20 years old. I saw the image online in 1994 when I was 36. The itch was to help small businesses succeed. The image was of a boy sitting beneath the stars with an open book in his lap. The crenels and merlons in the battlements beyond him suggested that he was sitting on the top of a castle tower.
Looking at that cartoon image on my computer screen I knew I was going to build that tower.
I know this makes me sound crazy, but there have been a handful of moments in my life when I quietly but suddenly knew what was going to happen. I’m not talking about premonitions, or visions, or dreams, or hopes, or wishes. I’m not talking about goals or goal setting. I am talking about knowing something as surely as if it had already happened.
Did I mention that I know this makes me sound crazy?
I was 13 when I saw a photograph of Pennie Compton and knew that I was going to marry her. The two of us had never met. A few months earlier I had been flipping through a 1963 Reader’s Digest Atlas of the world when I noticed a city Austin in the center of Texas. I remember raising an eyebrow when I suddenly knew I would move there someday. The sequence of events that would cause these things to happen remained an absolute mystery to me, but the outcome was never in question.
So I knew I was going to build that tower, but I had no idea why.
My 1978 itch to help small businesses grow led to a string of remarkable successes. By 1992, I was traveling 40 weeks a year teaching ever larger groups of business owners how to lift themselves to higher levels of success. I hated it. Dorothy was right. There’s no place like home. I have suffered from separation anxiety throughout my life.Travel for me is the Little Death,
“Honey,” said Pennie in 1993. “Let the people who want your help come to Austin, schedule a monthly class in our conference room, and if someone wants to come to it, they can come.”
When we outgrew that conference room, we began to rent the ball rooms of luxury hotels. By the time we paid for those rooms and rented the projection equipment and bought the coffee at $60 a pot and fed lunch to all our guests, we were spending about $20,000 per event to host those classes. Did I mention that we weren’t charging anyone to attend to the classes and that we had no capacity to serve additional clients?
So we built a new headquarters building for our marketing business with a large open room on the second floor that we could use as a classroom. That worked for about two years. Then we built a classroom building next to the main office building that bought us an extra four years. Then in 2004, Pennie said, “Honey, I found some land we should buy.“
Why do we want to buy some land?
“We’ll build some stuff for ourselves on one half of it, and then donate the other half to Wizard Academy and let the school become whatever it wants to become.”
When she showed me the land, I smiled. There on the top of that majestic plateau was the tower I had seen 10 years earlier. It wasn’t physically there, of course, but I knew that someday it would be.
If you have a crazy image in your mind of a possible future, an inexplicable guiding star that encourages you in the dark moments and lights your way one step at a time, never forget that you have a tribe and they built a fascinating place for you to come. When you need guidance or instruction or fellowship or encouragement.
Do you have an idea?
An itch?
A hunger?
Do you see something that no one else can see? Are you willing to leave a trail of sweat and tears and dollars behind you as you struggle to make it real?
Welcome to Wizard Academy. You, my friend, are exactly our brand of crazy.
Let the adventure begin.
Roy Williams – Founder and Chancellor Emeritus of Wizard Academy