In the end, everything becomes alright. It's not that the travelling salesman forgets that he wanted to become a writer. The government clerk still remembers that he wanted to open a business on his own. The software engineer doesn't stop dreaming about playing professional football. The HR executive uses his spare time to measure his chances to open a start up. The bus conductor doesn't just stop dreaming to fly as a pilot. Our dreams don't necessarily change. Our wishes don't necessarily fade. It's just that we learn to live without them. Some of us take hours, some of us take years to get used to this feeling. When someone genuinely believes that in the end, everything will be alright, he is actually realising this from his experience. He isn't exactly a fool to believe that he will get what he is looking for. He knows that, with time, the definition of the state of being alright changes. The salesman doesn't suddenly stop caring for writing, he just understands that salesmanship is also cool. In truth, in the end, everything becomes alright.
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