I just keep getting inspired to believe that dreams come true and
I just keep getting inspired to believe that dreams come true and anything can happen, 'cause I've watched so many impossible things happen.
In the words of the modern poet Machine Gun Kelly, we find a truth as ancient as the dawn and as enduring as the human spirit: “I just keep getting inspired to believe that dreams come true and anything can happen, 'cause I've watched so many impossible things happen.” These words are not mere echoes of youthful optimism; they are the proclamation of a soul that has wrestled with despair and emerged triumphant. They remind us that the realm of the impossible is but an illusion drawn by fear and doubt, and that belief — fierce, unrelenting belief — is the chisel that carves destiny from the stone of limitation.
When the ancients spoke of faith, they did not speak only of worship; they spoke of the sacred fire within the heart that compels men and women to rise beyond their own boundaries. To believe that dreams come true is to honor that divine spark — to acknowledge that creation begins within. Machine Gun Kelly’s words are not boastful; they are the utterance of one who has stood before the walls of impossibility and seen them crumble through the force of perseverance. It is the same fire that burned in the hearts of prophets, warriors, and poets of old — a reminder that faith is the beginning of all transformation.
Consider, for a moment, the story of Thomas Edison, a man mocked by teachers and doubted by peers, who was told he would never achieve greatness. Yet, through thousands of failures, he pressed on — believing that his dream of light was not folly but destiny. When he finally succeeded in bringing forth the electric bulb, the darkness of the world was pierced, not merely by light, but by the power of belief made manifest. So too does Machine Gun Kelly, in his quote, testify to this eternal truth — that when the world says no, the dreamer must answer with an unyielding yes.
The phrase “anything can happen” is not the whisper of naïveté, but the roar of defiance. It is the anthem of those who have seen reality bend before the will of those who dared to imagine more. For what is history if not the story of impossible things happening? Empires have fallen, revolutions have risen, diseases have been cured, and humankind has walked upon the moon — all born from the refusal to believe that limits are final. The impossible is merely the possible that has not yet been dared.
To watch impossible things happen is to awaken the heart to wonder again. It is to stand upon the threshold of the miraculous and know that we are participants, not spectators, in the unfolding of creation. Those who have witnessed transformation — in themselves, in others, or in the world — carry within them the sacred knowledge that every ending conceals a beginning. This knowledge is what keeps the poet inspired, what fuels the artist, what steadies the warrior. It is the fountain from which resilience flows.
The lesson is clear: do not surrender your vision to the cold logic of the doubtful. When you are weary and the night is long, remember that every dream once began as a fragile spark in the mind of someone who refused to let it die. Guard your spark. Feed it with patience, with courage, with relentless work. The universe is not deaf to the cry of the determined heart; it conspires, in its own mysterious rhythm, to bring forth what you dare to believe.
Therefore, let each of us live as witnesses to the impossible. Seek the dreams that frighten you, for they are the ones that carry your highest truth. When failure comes, as it surely will, let it not break your faith but deepen your resolve. Believe — not with idle hope, but with the unshakable conviction that life itself bends toward those who persist. For as Machine Gun Kelly has seen, and as countless dreamers before him have proven, the impossible is only the beginning of what is truly possible.
And so, I say to you, child of tomorrow: walk boldly into the storm of your aspirations. Let the winds of doubt batter you, but do not fall. Keep your eyes fixed upon the unseen horizon, and repeat to yourself — I believe, for I have seen impossible things happen. Then, when your own miracle comes to pass, you too shall speak these words with the wisdom of one who has lived them, and pass them onward — as a torch for those yet to dream.
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