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" ... As people discover the renewed joys of taking a long walk during this pandemic crisis, I doubt there is anyone who is not daydreaming about places they have been or may now never get to. I have been watching some of the travel shows on TV with a different cast of mind, including one of those old MGM “Traveltalks” shorts from the 1930s hosted by the “Voice of the Globe,” James A. Fitzpatrick, who always ended his ten-minute travelogues saying of every destination, “And so we reluctantly say goodbye to. . . .” The cinematography, though in Technicolor, was not of the highest quality, and no topic was dwelt on for more than a few seconds, but the series presented the charms of places most Americans would never have otherwise had a glimpse of, much less travel to. World War II put a big cramp in Fitzpatrick’s foreign travel, but he thereupon exuded as much enthusiasm over “Old New Orleans” and “Mighty Niagara” as he had over “Picturesque Udaipur” and “Serene Siam.”kAs I watched “Beautiful Budapest,” a city I adore for its beauty, its museums, its food and its lay-out on both sides of the Danube River, I realized that all great cities and many smaller ones are those where strolling for hours down grand boulevards like the Champs Élysées or the Washington, DC, Mall is key to finding what makes them endlessly fascinating, again and again, so that we always want to return to re-trace out old steps and set out on new ones. The small narrow streets of Florence will suddenly open onto a vast piazza like San Lorenzo, Signoria, Strozzi, del Duomo; a stroll along New York’s Museum Mile brings you past Central Park and its Children’s Zoo, flanked by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim, the Frick Collection, the Africa Center, El Museo del Barrio, Museum of the City of New York, the Jewish Museum, the Cooper Hewitt, the Neue Gallerie and the National Academy Museum. A stroll along the Chicago River will be an instant education in American architecture, from the Tribune Tower and Merchandise Mart to the Harry Weese River Cottages and Erie Park. Boston’s two-and-a-half Freedom Trail winds through the city showing the most important locations of the burgeoning Republic, from King’s Chapel and Park Street Church to the Boston Massacre Site and the Old North Church where the lamps were lighted to send Paul Revere on his famous ride\ . ... "
" ... Do you ever find yourself daydreaming, imagining how happy you will be when you get that house on the beach, when you write that last college tuition check, or when you tell your boss you’ve had it and are finally retiring? On that day, you think, I will be happy. That place, that thing, that experience, that will be the thing that brings this all into harmony. The birds will be singing, the sun will be shining, and all my woes will be a thing of the past! ... "
" ... Next year, I’ll be watching for more developments in healthcare data and AI applications. But I’ll also be daydreaming about a time when we can apply the power of quantum computing to challenges such as drug interactions and medical imaging. It is a truly thrilling prospect. ... "
" ... Remember the days of sitting in a boring class in high school with the teacher passionately going over a new mathematical concept, and you being barely unable to stay awake? Dice Kayek’s SS21 collection took us back to those school days with a digital presentation by filmmaker Marie Schuller, of their newest collection. But then something happened in the collection reveal that didn’t happen to any of us during a boring school lesson, fashion happened to the model unable to concentrate on her lesson. Or rather an illusion happened where her daydreaming turned into fashion. ... "
" ... “I’d love to do that” is a phrase you find yourself saying. But you’re not being polite, you really mean it. Given the chance, you’d swap roles with anyone. Your best mate, your sister, or that person you just met. You could list dozens of options you’d rather be taking than the one you’re committed to. You catch yourself daydreaming about heading out that door and never looking back. Of starting again or retraining from scratch. You’re looking back fondly at previous roles and wondering what might have been. You have a massive case of grass is always greener and you can only see the cons on your side of the fence. ... "