DAYDREAM BELIEVER
DAYDREAM BELIEVER
Frank, Kristine (2004) “Why does daydreaming get such a bad rap” HEALTH. MSN.COM,
11/15
We daydream about one-third to one-half of our waking hours that we call the “day.”
Daydreaming has a bad rap because it is associated with people who have big thoughts and don’t deliver or they had wonderful ideals that won’t work. All of us daydream and some of us hide it quite successfully.
Daydreams help fill a life with ideas and things that we don’t have and probably won’t have during our life time.
Now nearly 60% of America believes that having sexual daydreams is not a sin. Transgender individuals indicate that when moving from a male to a female their amount of sexual daydreams drop. Males in their healthy years of their life have constant sexual daydreams while healthy females have periodic dreams that emerge during peak times of the month.
Daydreams help you to relax, manage conflict, and maintain relationships.
