Can anyone reading this post truthfully say they have never left the real world and day-dreamed in their own lil' world of nothing but what they imagined it to be??
I falsely say I have never day-dreamed in class. Most of my day dreams happen between 9:37am and 11:13am. Technically that is my whole geometry class. Also on boring days, But I imagine fantasies that have a probability of never comin' true.
A world of nothing but what you want it to be is amazing. Anybody who "day-dreams" knows what it is like to want that part of the story or that world you're imagining to actually happen.
For example:
A lot of girls want to be the princess in the tall inescapable tower trapped by a dragon, and then the handsome knight in shining armor appears and saves the princess.
I must say, that is the most common day-dream I hear about in happily ever afters.
Now some can imagine being in a jungle and Tarzan saving them from the cheetahs and/or angry people, but that is adding way too much disney.
I imagine being famous or something similar to being famous and being met by the boy I had a crush on a long time ago and we meet again....BUT that is still JUST a fantasy. Or course mine would have a higher chance of happening than being saved by Tarzan, but they both can be put in the category of IMPOSSIBLE FANTASIES.
How many times has 1 parent said: "You will be the president of the U.S. when you grow up?"
Plenty?
Enough?
Some?
NONE?!
Well, if (a) parent(s) say that to their children or a random child who looks at them like they are aliens trying to tell them logically impossible things to do at his/her age, they end up (If they believe it) fantasizing about what they would do as Mr./Mrs. President of the United States. It is logically impossible unless they are one of the lucky 4-8 year president scholars who have trained for it since they were told they would be that. A lot also get their hearts broken when told this horrible truth. This is why this "blog" isn't a baby sitting blog or a story telling blog that you sit down with your children and read. Duh. Pure destruction comin' with the flood of tears.
But
I never said fantasizing was bad at all. Obviously I love fantasizing about a lot.
There is only 1 rule you have to follow if you want to be a day-dreamer:
1. Have an imagination
There.
Follow that rule, and you're set.
A lot of teens also dream about when they get older and what they want to do with their life. That is a hard thing to ignore believe it or not.
Who can ignore the most obvious things in front us, but who can also ignore the dreams that lie within your heart.
It doesn't take much to day-dream, even when you don't think you can. Just lay back, think of something that you want to happen. If you compare it with praying...well, even though they CAN be similar they aren't similar. When you pray, you're thanking God for what you have and asking for hope on your needs. Dreaming is when something you want to happen becomes real without asking in your imagination.
When I day-dream I don't just think stuff like: I really want that guy to talk to me.. x35 times.
I dream of a whole story line. From when it begins to where I get bored or where it ends. It keeps me quite entertained.
Well, everyone should have had heard of the saying "You got your head in the clouds."
I could make up a million quotes about... not really, but a lot... day-dreaming.
My mom would like this:
Day-dreaming while staring at the clouds is like dreamin' of having a hot fudge brownie sunday on a Sunday by an ice cream shop. haha.
My advice would be to:
1. Day-dream - no doubts!
2. Follow your dreams - I'm following mine, no reason you shouldn't.
3. Believe you in yourself and what you can do
And
4. NEVER lose your imagination - it will be there for you even when you think you have lost it.
To end this post, here is a song I hope will inspire those who actually read this post.



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