Why our Dreams should never be driven by Money

Why our Dreams should never be driven by Money

There is a difference between working for money and doing what you love, so how can we protect our dreams from corruption by society?

Dreams are a difficult concept to comprehend, and it’s meaning is often left up to one’s own interpretation. Some believe dreams stem from a divine intervention from something beyond our understanding, while others believe they are something of a material nature, deriving from our biological desire to seek greater wealth for ourselves in the form of money, food, or jewelry.

My interpretation is somewhat of a combination of these two definitions. The dreams we have at night, for example, can vary between the two, sometimes being a result of our brain’s survival mechanisms that yearn to fulfill the physical body’s needs and desires. Other times, however, we feel things in dreams we never thought we could feel in reality, and the feeling stems from something far deeper within the super-conscious mind.

While dreams have a literal meaning, such as the ones we see in our sleep, the term we use to refer to our major goals in life also takes on this word, but why? The difference between a dream and a goal is that the former is essentially something so grand that you work towards for your entire lifetime, and is often something never to be fully attained, but to enjoy the journey thereof. A goal is a smaller step towards that bigger picture and is more attainable by nature.

Once you embark on a life of honest hard work, you begin to contemplate the greater picture of it all. It takes hard work to survive in this world, but there is something deeper to be gained in this life than just survival, especially when it’s all going towards inevitable death. That’s when your unique dream comes into play, the grand goal that you have decided to pursue to realize your life’s purpose and to serve that vision before you pass on.

Dreams come from a place of purity that transcends the realm of reality. When you leave the job you love for a job you hate but gives more money, you’ve essentially compromised your dream, or part of it, for something material. If excess money comes as a result of your hard work towards the dream, then it is a blessing. However, if excess money comes as a result of you chasing after it, and leaving your true dreams in the back-burner, then it is a curse.

The bottom line of this article is, do not ever compromise your one and only unique dream for something like money, which is essentially a resource for survival, the excess of which can only be destructive. Your dreams are your driving force in life because once you have surpassed the goal of maintaining survival in this world, you will naturally yearn for something more purposeful, something to give meaning to WHY you are trying to survive in the first place.

To learn more about manifesting your dreams, visit Destiny Miracle @https://destinymiracle.com/r/ssjyaseen/home/.

Yaseen Hijazi is the founder of Have Ya Seen Japan and a contributing writer for Millennial Homeowner, Coffee Courage, Learning the Kitchen, and Women's Tennis Blog.

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