I am not going to sleep. Not for a few days. I am afraid that when I wake up, it will all have been a dream.That is from a Jan. 18, 2010, blog post on a site called Jets Nation, late at night, after the Jets had just beaten the San Diego Chargers to advance to the AFC Championship Game. They were one win away from the Super Bowl. Their victory, unexpected, sent the entire area into a furor. It was the first time the Jets had made it this far since 1998, and only the third time they’d done it since 1969 — the last time they made the Super Bowl.Rex Ryan rode the wave. He not-so-secretly pre-planned a Jets Super Bowl parade through the streets of New York City, convinced their momentum would not be halted. It was, of course, in a 30-17 loss to the Colts less than a week later. But for a few days, Jets fans were in heaven. This was the start of something. It had to be. And when they returned to the AFC title game a year later, it was. The start of something special.They fell one win short of the Super Bowl again, this time in a 24-19 loss to the Steelers. Nobody really knew then how fleeting this feeling would be, the high of unexpected success, a sense that this was the cusp of a transformation — not Ryan, and certainly not Jets fans. But that second AFC title game loss did mark the start of something, just not what anyone expected at the time. The Jets haven’t been back to the playoffs since.On Monday night, pandemonium overtook Manhattan, a worthy celebration after the city’s beloved New York Knicks finally made it back to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999. They, the long-suffering Knicks fans, deserve this moment after enduring more than two decades of losses and organizational dysfunction, bad ownership and questionable coaching, misguided roster decisions and often just plain bad basketball. The celebration befit the suffering that came before.All I’ve been able to think about since Monday night is what it will look like when (or if) the Jets finally experience their own breakthrough.On Tuesday, I asked a couple of notable Jets fans what it would be like to see the Jets get their moment.Gary Vaynerchuk is an entrepreneur, the CEO of Vayner Media and, famously, a diehard Jets and Knicks fan who has publicly stated his dream is to one day own the Jets.