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The Importance Of Dreams In The Great Gatsby

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Everyone grows up with a dream and that dream impacts the decisions they make in their life. Whether it is a decision for a future occupation or for choosing an ideal house or car, it all stems from a person's desire. A dream can be a powerful motivator, it has the ability to stir up a strong passion in a person's heart, but as the passion gets stronger the fantasy begins to take over reality. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, and in Garth Brooks The River, the protagonist is pursuing his ambitions without knowing when or how they will end. Although many people become lost in the dream that they are following; it is more beneficial to understand the extent of one's aspirations and step into reality when the dream becomes unattainable.
The first way Gatsby chases his unrealistic goal is by working hard to become wealthy in order to reunite with his first love, Daisy. Growing up in poverty, Gatsby fantasizes about becoming someone else. He was never satisfied with his life's circumstances and so he created his own persona. "Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself... he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen-year-old boy would be likely to invent, and to this competition he was faithful to the end"(Fitzgerald 98) He happens to meet a affluent girl while he was serving in the military and this further perpetuated his infatuation with becoming rich. This girl, Daisy, was rich and Gatsby became enamored by her and

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