Reboot
The phrase “Why can’t a man pull himself up by his bootstraps” originated in a late 19th Century physics schoolbook. It was meant sarcastically because obviously that is an impossible feat, but over time, it took on the opposite sense - making a success of yourself with just the talents the universe provided. Reboot is far more recent - 1980s - meaning to shut off a computer and turn it back on, ie, starting over. Etymologists don’t really understand how re got so common in English (recover, recommend, religion, restate, relent, etc), but common it is. Herbert Hoover famously believed people could pull themselves up by there bootstraps, as he had. FDR, with all the privilege a wealthy family could offer, knew better.