0 present participle of fantasize
1 to think about something very pleasant that is unlikely to happen:
[ + that ] As a child, Emma fantasized that she would do something heroic.
In this model, which postulates an independent fantasizing activity taking place in the dream, the dream loses its autobiographical connection.
The fictionalizing, imaginary, and even fantasizing elements of such stories are pivotal in the process of knowing and intimating the other.
It is of course possible to possess beliefs as a result of fantasizing and wishful thinking, or to come to possess them as the result of brainwashing.
It is worth emphasizing that children are not always behaving but also spend a great deal of time fantasizing, planning, and elaborating the events of the day.
He also stopped fantasizing and started to see himself as just an ordinary human being.
Fantasy proneness involves fantasizing for a duration of time, reporting hallucinatory intensities as real, reporting vivid childhood memories, having intense religious and paranormal experiences.
Mazie becomes dreamy and detached, fantasizing about the farm as an escape from the horrors of the city.
This can also take the form of fantasizing, or creating an opposing positive to counteract a negative affect.