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2006-08-12 21:01:51 · 28 answers · asked by abstemious_entity 4 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

28 answers

I hope you are referring to just taking a break from pursuing your dreams and not TOTALLY GIVING UP.
Without a plan or set of directions what will you do?
What will you become?
Some dreams are hard to achieve.
you have to be realistic.
It is better to try and not succeed then to not try and complain.

2006-08-12 21:09:34 · answer #1 · answered by nubianbx 2 · 0 2

I realize that it's only a dream, and but a dream- nothing really more than that, in itself. Realizing that I am, indeed, dreaming, I can't help but force myself to wake up and acknowledge my "real" settings, despite the fact that the dreamy settings I usually enter are so much more comforting.

Who knows? Maybe I'll be the next serial killer psychopath one day. Meanwhile, I'll enjoy my dreams...

But I stop chasing them because I know they're not real, and I won't actually end up seeing that exact picture manifest itself in front of my eyes. Then again, to get over this depressing fact, I always go and dream some more, always searching for that "season finale episode" which will end that particular series of dreams. It's a little too detailed and complex, but yeah. That's the general gyst of it, lol.

I don't chase my dreams because I might get hurt in the process. I'm a far-away observer, I suppose... not the type of courageous bastard that lunges forward and asserts himself. :-/

Life, I suppose...

2006-08-12 21:10:40 · answer #2 · answered by masterdeath01 4 · 0 0

I wanted to be in media arts, in all probability an animator working for Disney or Pixar. yet then I sort of lost my rigidity for drawing. Seeing others so proficient located a damper on my arrogance for my very own expertise. in line with possibility sometime i will choose up a pencil and start up drawing as quickly as greater. For now, i'm leaning greater advantageous in direction of journalism, writing, which human beings tell me i'm extremely nicely at. the two one in all those careers must be categorized as "starving artist," even nevertheless I somewhat do no longer decide on the commerce or technological be conscious of-how worldwide.

2016-09-29 05:22:15 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Lack of support. The only person that encouraged me and stood by my side at all time died, so I'm very laid back now about everything. I guess I don't deserve to make my dream come true if I need someone to be there for me all the time cheering me up, right?

2006-08-12 22:32:34 · answer #4 · answered by Babadoo 4 · 0 0

Those that I stopped chasing is either because I'm living in them right now or because it longer seemed viable or desirable. The rest of it I am still chasing up till today.

2006-08-12 21:26:49 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Awareness is a sign of maturity, sometimes pursuing goals seems nice and enterprising when one is young, as one experiences life one finds how truly revolting our human condition is (not that that it should be, but it just is), becoming cognizant of all the schemes, our almost inherent hypocricy and incapacities to formulate methods to conduct honest lives, that would be enough to cease chasing dreams.

2006-08-12 22:11:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Ever since i could remember i wanted to be in the USMC special forces. I worked my *** off, went threw 3 months of boot camp, 3 months infantry school, 3 months in the school of hand to hand combat, 2 years of special forces training. 1 year of on the job training 2 deployments and im finally were i have always dreamed of being.

I never gave up hooraa!

2006-08-12 21:16:18 · answer #7 · answered by John V 2 · 1 1

They get too fast for me to catch.

Funny thing though, as soon as I stop chasing, they seem to slow down for me a bit.

Once I get the hang of this, I'll give you another answer.

2006-08-12 21:46:41 · answer #8 · answered by Tuna-San 5 · 1 1

The dark side of growing up is letting go of your dreams, most people try to find themselves in the eyes of the other. So when your dreams sounds "childish' or " no mature" to everyone else, you start disliking them and let go of them at a certain point.

2006-08-12 22:24:22 · answer #9 · answered by Hunter 2 · 1 1

How many times would you try and fail before you gave up? 100's? Thousands? By a certain age people tend to give up fantasy and make the best of reality.

2006-08-12 21:07:29 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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