I find that when i daydream, and i daydream a lot, it helps my imagination an awful lot.
Does anyone else daydream to improve their imagination?
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I find that when i daydream, and i daydream a lot, it helps my imagination an awful lot.
Does anyone else daydream to improve their imagination?
that's basically what daydreaming is. imagining things. so yeah, you would think doing something alot would improve it.
It's how most ideas come about.
No daydreaming would mean no inventions, i suppose.
I daydream alot to help my immigination. The more I daydream, the deeper into myslef i get and the more symbolic are my daydreams. Just siting and watchign a candel is a fun way to day dream.(and meditate.)
[b]ummmm.... im a new person to this website, so do u think that you could help me find the instrumental for im ok by christina aguilera.Quote:
Originally posted by Damascus
It's how most ideas come about.
No daydreaming would mean no inventions, i suppose.
PLEASE :([/b] :oops:
I love daydreaming, esp the sort of daydreaming you can do when your relaxed and let your problems fade away.
Thats when your imagination really takes you on a ride :wink:
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Weclome to the group latinagirl8707 :D
Well, to reiterate: you see, something I have realized is that "the mind is a telescope, not a kaleidoscope": anything you can 'imagine' really exists somewhere, maybe not in this world, but another, either farther away or just close by. There is no reality. Even the cartoons you see on TV are real somewhere. Nobody thought them up, the so-called 'creator' use his telescopic mind and SAW them, and brought their portrayal into this world.
It is like sitting in front of a tree and drawing it, or searching on Google. You didn't 'create' the tree or the results you got, you simply recreated the tree and found the results based on the keywords you used. It is the same with the mind. That is the sacrosant algorithm of the brain. Not one of 'creation', but of search.
"Daydreaming" sharpens the search engine in your head. It enables you to see and find things faster and more accurately. If you want to call that imagination and say it helps improve it, then so be it. Yes.
I think Sting once said that all the songs that we hear are already in existence and out there floating around. Musicians just have this "antennae" that allows them to tune into the song. It may sound like jibberish, but what freaked me out about this comment was that I actually thought of this concept myself once before! I write music as a hobby and I couldn't understand why sometimes it would only take me minutes to come up with a song - it felt as if it was already written and something in me was deciphering it.Quote:
Originally posted by Rakkantekimusouka
Well, to reiterate: you see, something I have realized is that \"the mind is a telescope, not a kaleidoscope\": anything you can 'imagine' really exists somewhere, maybe not in this world, but another, either farther away or just close by.
on daydreaming...
I've found myself doing the daydreaming thing more often lately. In a way I'm a bit embarrased about it (it just seems childish to me, I guess - I don't know). But, I somehow believe it is a healthy thing for the mind no matter how you look at it - whether it helps creatively or just therapy for the mind. There is a technique called Creative Visualization in which a person visualizes or daydreams a particular event or action (like maybe going to a job interview) so that when the event comes up, it's as if you had already been there or done it.
If daydreaming is just imagning things, then I do it alot. but my day dreams are just so not vivid, they are so blurry.