Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Dreams.

Nobody knows for sure what they are. There are scientific postulations about what dreams are but at the end of the day there is no conclusive evidence for what they may be. Figments of our imagination? Possibly. Repressed thoughts? Possibly. Desires or aspirations? Possibly. Chemical firings within the brain? Possibly.

The fact stands that I am not yet a psychologist, a neurologist, or any kind of doctor at all. But what I am is a Dreamer. I can tell you that a dream is something that ought to be chased. I have no idea as to what a dream is or what they mean but I can suspect that they contain some element of truth or insight that is worth pursuing.

In my humble and unprofessional opinion, a dream is a motive in which our interior self (the self that is fearless) is positively influencing the culturally-influenced conscious self that carries the “That’s impossible” mentality. A modest British Army soldier of WWI, T. E. Lawrence, said,

    “Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.”

It was “impossible” for Lawrence to have led a successful revolt against the great Ottoman Empire. It was “impossible” for man to walk on water. It was “impossible” for that cancer patient who was given six months, to live 16 more years. It was “impossible” for man to get to the moon. It was “impossible” for any human being to consume 68 hot dogs and buns in ten minutes. But behind every conquered “impossible” feat lies a dream.

As Lawrence said, we become “dangerous men” when our dreams take form in the physical world. Our “impossible” desires become completely realistic if we can ever find the interior strength, commonly known as “guts” to pursue that which has been regarded as not possible. I am willing to make a bold statement in saying that the minute we are able to trust in our fearless self and do the undareable, go far out on a limb, and just try then we can better know ourselves and perhaps achieve the “impossible”.

Don’t be afraid to dream. Test the unknown waters. Dream with eyes wide open.

I'll leave you with this, Rodgers and Hammerstein said, "Impossible things are happening everyday." Believe it.

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