So as I'm telling him, he says, "Whoa, whoa, whoa. Hold on, Aimee. The reason everybody liked you all those years ago was because you were this sweet, vulnerable, naive girl, and if you walk onstage today, and you are this polished young woman with too many accomplishments, I'm afraid they won't like you."
And the marvelous thing was that this six-year-old understood something that it took me twenty-something years to get, but that we both did discover—that when we can celebrate and truly own what it is that makes us different, we're able to find the source of our greatest creative power.
"Energy poverty"—the scarcity of modern fuels and electrical supplies in poor parts of the world—is a subject of great interest to development economists.