Thursday, September 1, 2011

Big Blog Question

"There is no

Life I know

To compare with

Pure imagination

Living there

You'll be free

If you truly wish to be"


-"Pure Imagination" from Willy Wonka and

the Chocolate Factory



Everyone always told me that when I "grow up" I'm going to lose my imagination. They said that little kids always grow out of "make believe". Children will stop living in a world of "Pure Imagination".


At first I believed them. I lost interest in creating new places in my head and making up characters. I also watched my little sister "grow up' and noticed when she stopped asking me to play with her. I just sort of accepted this idea. After all that's what all the adults said. But the more I look around at the world and the people in it, this "fact" makes me want to laugh.


Teenagers and adults have not lost their imaginations. They just don't recognize how they are using it.


Sometimes we just can't handle the truth. We would rather put on a mask to hide our own personalities just to be included with the crowd. This leads me to wonder how far someone will go to skew reality and to create an illusion. Is it in human nature to do this as a way of protecting ourselves or is it something we create to satisfy our own personal desires?



Briony, a character from Atonement, took her illusions so far that she changed the lives of her sister and her sister's boyfriend forever. She let her imagination create a story and then used it to try to fix her mistakes. That also makes me question whether or not our illusions have consequences.


In Shakespeare's Othello, the villain Iago says "I am not what I am". I think we are all hiding something. We may show certain people certain parts of our lives but I don't think we ever reveal all our cards to anyone. We seem to take pieces of our own realities and then use our imaginations to fill in the rest. Do we even know the difference between the two anymore?






1 comment:

  1. Hi Courtney--

    You create two fascinating questions to pursue in this first post, and I love them both! Having always been a day-dreamer and right-brained thinker, I can really identify with your desire to understand imagination more thoroughly. At some point you will need to narrow your focus to one question, but you are off to a strong start, especially since you include some apt quotations! In fact, I see some good college material in this response. Good luck!

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