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Have you ever imagined what you might be when you grow up? When he was very young, Juan Felipe Herrera picked chamomile flowers in windy fields and let tadpoles swim across his hands in a creek. He slept outside and learned to say good-bye to his amiguitos each time his family moved to a new town. He went to school and taught himself to read and write English and filled paper pads with rivers of ink as he walked down the street after school.

And when he grew up, he became the United States Poet Laureate and read his poems aloud on the steps of the Library of Congress. If he could do all of that. With this illustrated poem of endless possibility, Juan Felipe Herrera and Lauren Castillo breathe magic into the hopes and dreams of readers searching for their place in life. But this poem is a masterly picture book text: Its precisely chosen words create a world you have to listen to, to think about.

Herrera writes of the joy of creation and discovery, and says little about the hardships he must have undergone. Together this makes for a charming read-aloud for groups or a child snuggled in a lap. A lyrical coming-of-age story in picture-book form that begs to be shared. Poet Laureate as an adult.

Readers will finish the story envisioning all the possibilities that may await them. A beautifully illustrated poem that will be cherished by children. The result is an inviting literary extended hand, beckoning young people, especially those who might find their current situation unprepossessing, to connect the dots with their own future possibilities. This quiet tale may motivate readers to reflect on their abilities, and allow their imaginations to envision the opportunities that await them.

Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera traces the surprising trajectory of his own life, his breathtakingly beautiful poem invites us all to dream and to imagine that even the most unlikeliest of dreams might come true…The gorgeous illustrations "in pen and foam monoprint" by Lauren Castillo, winner of Caldecott Honors for "Nana in the City," beautifully capture the emotion and the dreamy quality of the story. Also by Juan Felipe Herrera. See all books by Juan Felipe Herrera.

imagination takes you everywhere

Inspired by Your Browsing History. The Secrets of the Wild Wood. Up Close With Bugs. Up Close With Spiders. What is believed can be real or not, but we cannot truly know because we have a limited perception as humans. So, if anything can be a delusion, anything which is thought to be imaginary can also be reality. The quote is often seen as an inspirational one as it inspires one to imagine new things and concepts because if one can imagine a concept one can work towards bringing it to reality as well and thus inventing new things to improve the world.

If we see the scenario when he worked…. Pablo Picasso was way ahead of his time in understanding the true nature of reality. With the emergence of Computer Generated Images CGI , it is only a matter of time before this technology will move to such a reality that no one will be able to determine what is imagined and what is actually real.

Once CGI reaches the point that it can simulate all the five human senses, it will be impossible to tell the difference.

The only sense that CGI will not be able to synthesize is the 6th. And that is the sense that provides us with imagination and possibly even the soul. Imagination is processed in the mind.

We perceive the entire universe in our minds, and the mind is intangible to prove its existence empirically. We all perceive this universe analyzing it as per our intellectual limitations and form convictions to our whims. Reality is different for each one of us as per our age, experience and realizations. When we're dreaming we're not aware that we're dreaming and run for our lives when in danger. Thus reality is a customized perception of the mind which is not different from imagination.

Can you imagine?

Ask New Question Sign In. What did Pablo Picasso mean when he said "Everything you can imagine is real"? Elasticsearch Service - Start a day free trial. The only solution built by the makers of Elasticsearch. Free Trial at elastic. You dismissed this ad. The feedback you provide will help us show you more relevant content in the future.

grammar - “Could you imagine” or “Can you imagine”? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

It does not mean that everything which humans believe is real exists. Learn More at try. What did Pablo Picasso mean when he said "sex and art are the same thing"? What did Picasso mean when he said "If I don't have red, I use blue? What was Pablo Picasso like as a person? Is it true that Picasso was a jerk?

Answered Nov 26, Its a very poetic statement, making it open to infinite interpretations, hence only he could provide the answer to this question.

Imagine What I Could Do to You

All we can do is speculate by giving our own interpretations of the statement. I do agree with the statement, it's very abstract, so understanding why I agree with it, or should i say, my interpretation of it, would require some imagination. One can say that reality is only apparent to us, as individuals, because we are conscious of it, and since consciousness can be considered a product of thought, we can say that reality, in a sense, is a product of thought.

So one could say that our thoughts create our reality, and reality encompasses what is real, hence our thoughts create what is real.

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Imagination is a form of thought, and if reality can be considered a form of thought then we can equate imagination with reality, and so we can say that everything you can imagine is real, because by imagining it we are bringing it into reality. It's difficult to get my point across because it's such an abstract statement and I feel like I'm losing myself here, it's a really beautiful statement.

I could spend hours just thinking about it, even if we look at it from the the whole matrix point of view and start by trying to define what is real - electrical impulses transmitted to and interpreted, by the brain - that is exactly what imagining is, a thought process made up of electrical impulses forming circuits in the brain. Can that not be equated to reality? Of course I'm probably way of from what he originally meant but it's an interpretation non the less, so it carries some validation. He could have also just meant that by drawing or painting something you are making something you imagined real.

All we can really do is appreciate the beauty of the statement, and wonder Thank you for your feedback! Quora has great answers. Have a great solution? Businesses find great customers by targeting related topics. Create a free account in minutes. Sign Up at quora. I think he meant a few things by it: Those are my guesses.

When he said this he was probably high and was halucinating on a trip and was imagining everything he proabably could and didnt know that is it weed or its just his thoughts or reality..