#THEGOODSTUFF: ARE WE DREAMING BIG ENOUGH?
OKC is the home of the defending World Champion OKC Thunder. They will be hosting Olympic events in 2028. None of this would be possible without their City leaders dreaming BIG dreams back in the 90’s when they suffered an economic development failure which lead to MAPS.
I know we aren’t OKC, but I often wonder if we dreaming big enough here in Chickasha?
When you look at the success of the Chickasha Leg Lamp, you can’t dispute that Tim Elliot’s Big Dream worked, but now what? What is our Vision for Chickasha for the next 5-7 years? How do we embrace growth and try to steer it where it benefits our Community the most?
Small dreams feel safe. They don’t rock the boat. They don’t risk embarrassment. They don’t invite anyone to say, “Who do you think you are?” But small dreams rarely change a town. They maintain it. They preserve it. Sometimes they slowly drain it. You can see the difference between “maintenance dreaming” and “transformational dreaming” everywhere. One of the quiet tragedies in a lot of small towns isn’t a lack of talent, money, or opportunity. It’s a lack of permission to dream big. We talk ourselves out of it before we even start.
What if we changed “We’re just Chickasha” into “We’re Chickasha and that’s our superpower”?
Because we have things the big cities can’t manufacture: A tight‑knit Community where neighbors matter, a historic downtown with real character, room to grow, create, and build without being crowded out and people who show up, volunteer and care. Those are ingredients big dreams are made of.
So What Could Big Dreams Look Like Here?
Not every big dream is about professional sports or the Olympics. But the scale of our thinking? That part matters. What if we asked questions like:
- What would it take for Chickasha to be one of the top small‑town arts and culture destinations in the region?
- What would it look like to make Chickasha the best place in Oklahoma to start and grow a small business?
- How could we become a hub for innovation at our Industrial Park?
- What would it take to enhance Chickasha’s brand as a must‑visit Christmas destination for the entire country, building on the Festival of Light and the Leg Lamp?
- How do we become a model community for walkable streets, great public spaces, and quality of life?
None of those questions are about pretending to be a city we’re not. They’re about becoming the best possible version of who we are.Look around and you’ll see proof that Chickasha’s capacity for big dreaming is already here. The way local volunteers, city staff, and sponsors pull together to put on events that punch above our weight. The businesses that took a risk on Main Street when it would’ve been easier to go somewhere “safer.” The Community projects and nonprofits quietly changing lives with limited budgets and unlimited heart.
That’s #TheGoodStuff right here at home…people who care enough to try. The question now isn’t whether we have dreamers. We do. The question is: Are we giving ourselves permission to dream even bigger?












