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Fri Aug 05, 2011 11:07 pm
DukeofWonderland says...



‘So, you’ll be graduating this year. What are your plans for college?’ A common question - one I’ve been asked so many times, in so many ways I don’t know if I can answer it anymore. The question of a child’s future aim or goal is more complex than it sounds. To the one asking, it’s simple. To the one answering, it’s always difficult. Certainly fate has it’s role to play, who we are and who we may become is a lot more than our own plans and hopes; yet most of us still have at least the silhouette of our futures created in our minds.
Every child has a dream, a dream career. From early age, we were always encouraged to think about and answer this question. Most of us didn’t always understand the purpose, but we still answered, we still dreamt – in our own way. As we grew up, most of us moved on to more practical goals; goals that require a lot more sensible thought and a lot less dreaming.
‘Imagination is more valuable than knowledge.’ – Albert Einstein.
If this quote from our legendary scientist were true, then certainly most of us have lost a valuable thing, a simple but valuable object: our imagination.
Since I could speak, I’ve always answered that menacing question with a short answer:
‘I’ll be a doctor.’
Whether I understood what I spoke of, I don’t know. But as encouraged I have grown up playing with the doctor’s set toys; While most children played tea parties with their dollies, I played ‘Doctor, doctor.’ with mine. This might give an impression that I may have never had imagination, but I did and I’ve tried to use it everywhere I could. I have always found learning much simpler if your mind was kept open to new ideas, to see what others haven’t seen yet, to wonder about the things we forget to notice in our everyday lives. To me, science isn’t possible without imagination. How the human body’s immune system works at the molecular level I have never seen, but visually imagining the process certainly helps. Most people may have only studied like this as a child but I still like this method.
‘If success is ‘x’, then ‘x=a+b+c’. Where ‘a’ is work, ‘b’ is play and ‘c’ is keeping your mouth shut’ - Albert Einstein
An open mind, hard work and passion – I have believed this is the basis of getting to a better life. And these three things I have integrated into my personal life and I will hold onto forever. I may still not know exactly what career I would like to pursue, but I know that I will not give up my imagination, my passion for knowledge and determination. And with these I will become a successful person, with God’s assistance all the way.
"The duke had a mind that ticked like a clock and, like a clock, it
regularly went cuckoo."
-- Terry Pratchett, "Wyrd Sisters"
  





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Sat Aug 06, 2011 12:19 am
TheModernist says...



You got it.

I left high school early because I felt like I was losing my right to imagine. I didn't know this then of course, it just felt like angst then. I've learned this though: real living is impossible without imagination. And as far as science goes: its the most rigorous application of imagination, that's why I'm studying physics.

I'd recommend checking out some interviews of Richard Feynman on youtube, our own home grown Einstein (assuming you're american).
There's no rain there's no me, I'm tellin' ya man sure as shit. - From Poem by Jack Kerouac
  





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Sat Aug 06, 2011 5:36 am
paintingtherain97 says...



This essay is relatable and well-put. I'm hoping to end up an author, but I've wondered for hours and hours about these things before. Whether or not you want to be an author is up to you, but you seemto be pretty decent at writing, by the looks of this.
"It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to, than I have ever known..." A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens.
  





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Sun Aug 07, 2011 2:59 pm
parasdahal says...



Wow this article is exactly how I feel man! Imagination and creativity are the pillar of ones success in life, and if you pursue it with determination and passion, there's no way anyone can stop you. Well-put, well structured and a emotionally connecting read! Well done, and keep it up.
  








Maybe I should say something quote-worthy, like, I dunno... "You can only be happy if you decide to be happy?"
— Necromancer14