Day Dreaming!
Autor: madeleinearigore • January 9, 2013 • Essay • 520 Words (3 Pages) • 1,174 Views
Hey, Daydreamers! :D
“You get ideas from daydreaming. You get ideas from being bored. You get ideas all the time. The only difference between writers and other people is we notice when we're doing it. ~Neil Gaiman”
Have you find yourself sitting at a bench, staring at the grassy land while your friends are busy chatting and you, you are physically present but then, your mind is up to something. You are going everywhere and you are up to something that others can’t see. Sometimes you will smile by yourself or frown without any reason or worst you scream or be terrified on something you have just imagined. If you think that you are crazy and acting dumb in front of your friends or other people, think again.
Everyone in the world has experienced that. I, myself, usually caught staring blankly at nowhere, my mind floating and as if I am mentally absent. I see things happening though it’s not really happening. Our minds are wandering and we see unusual things. We imagined things that aren’t real in the world. We may say that we are all DAYDREAMING. It’s a natural thing for a person to daydream. Daydreaming stimulates the brain and it engages creative thinking. You get ideas when you do day dreaming. You go out of the natural world you live in and you go beyond reality. Daydreaming has some historical background, too. Daydreaming is something that has been occurring for centuries. Some of our greatest scientists, activists, and mathematicians were once found daydreaming. For example, Albert Einstein was failing in math, and was almost kicked out of college for daydreaming. Einstein’s daydreaming may have been the secret of his incredible creativity. He maintained that he discovered the theory of relativity by gazing at sunbeams on a summer day, and fantasized about what it would be like to ride on them. Another example of daydreaming would be
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