Dirk Beveridge

The FAM Newsletter

Dream the Dream Again

November 9, 2025

Good morning Reader—

And welcome to the 23rd issue of The FAM.

here are countless beautiful things about being a child. The pure emotions, the simplicity, the resounding joy at the sight of a butterfly or a sweet little treat. But one of the most amazing things you see in children: Their unabashed ability to dream.

Wishes, big and small, all packaged in blown-out birthday candles and dandelion seeds floating in the breeze. You were that child. I was that child. We all were.

But somewhere along the way, most of us stop dreaming. Not because we’ve outgrown our dreams, but because life—in all its weight and responsibility—had quietly conspired to make us practical.

Our dreams get worn down by what I call the forces of erosion.

A job loss. A marriage ending. The phone call that changes everything. The loved one we couldn’t save. The numbers that don’t add up. All of these moments have immense gravity. And they stack and compound until they pull us down to earth.

Nietzsche named this the “Spirit of Gravity”—not just the literal heaviness of hard times, but the weight of everything the world tries to place on our shoulders. The traditions, the expectations, the quiet demands to conform and settle. It’s a force that drags us away from the sky of possibility and down into the soil of survival. Left unchecked, it doesn’t just ground us—it shrinks us. It presses on the soul until we forget we were made to rise.

And this leads us to what’s even more dangerous than the big life events: invisible forces—the long commutes, the late-night emails, the grocery lists, the endless cycles of helping others while neglecting ourselves. Bit by bit, the sparkle in that small child’s eyes dims and the dream dissolves in the noise while we step through life.

And then there’s the exhaustion we don’t talk about — the kind that comes from living at half capacity for too long. We numb ourselves with convenience and consumption. Two hours of scrolling, a few more of Netflix, one more drink to take the edge off. We tell ourselves we’re resting, but really, we’re retreating. And who actually wants to retreat from their dreams? The habits that once soothed us now drain us. And slowly, the light that once fueled us dims.

I’ve lived that retreat. Two years ago, I applied to the University of Pennsylvania’s Master of Applied Positive Psychology program. I saw it as the next step in my mission to empower one million people to rise from just getting by to living fully alive.

When I got the rejection letter, I almost brushed it off. Sure, it stung—but I didn’t let the sting show. I did what I’ve always done: accepted it, stayed composed, moved on.

But that quiet acceptance? It was like a subtle clearing of the deck. Not just a “no” to one opportunity—but a sharp dismissal of the entire dream. Without even realizing it, I stopped talking about our vision to empower one million people. I stopped dreaming. I didn’t drift—hell, I got really busy being busy. Meetings, projects, tasks, all under the noble banner of productivity. But the truth is, I was working for today instead of reaching toward tomorrow. I become solely and utterly practical.

To me, that letter didn’t just say “not now”—for a while, it took the dream right out of me. Thank God I realized it. Because when we forget the dream, we don’t just lose direction—we lose ourselves.

And that’s how it happens, isn’t it? Not in one dramatic moment, but in a slow forgetting.

We trade wonder for productivity. Vision for comfort. Imagination for routine.

And before we know it, we wake up one morning and realize we’ve stopped dreaming the dream.

Wonder as the Soil of Dreaming

If the forces of erosion wear down our dreams, wonder is what restores them. That same wonder that sparkles in children constructing a castle of pillows and blankets, telling stories of tree-climbing adventures, and sharing dreams of going to space, training tigers, and saving the day.

Aristotle once said, “All men by nature desire to know.” That desire begins not with answers, but with wonder—with what the ancient Greeks called thauma—the astonishment that draws us into curiosity, meaning, and eventually, wisdom. In that sense, wonder isn’t just a feeling. It’s the first way we ever related to the world. It’s how we began.

Wonder is not a fleeting feeling—it is the original posture of the human spirit. It is where the soul begins to breathe again. It’s not distraction or escape—it’s a return to aliveness.

The ancient philosophers understood this. Aristotle said that philosophy begins in thaumazein—in awe, in astonishment. Because before we can know, we must first be moved.

Athens John—a dear friend, mentor, and fellow seeker who shares my love of ancient wisdom— and I often talk about this idea: that wonder is not childish; it’s sacred. It’s the starting point of all wisdom because it reawakens our relationship with life itself.

Without wonder, we become efficient but small. We know how to manage, but not how to marvel. We become experts at doing, but amateurs at being. And in that state, our imagination collapses—not because we lack ambition, but because we’ve lost touch with the mystery that makes ambition meaningful. We trade mystery for mastery—and when everything can be explained, nothing feels sacred.

That’s why, every morning when I journal, I remind myself to be wonder-filled. It’s my way of remembering that the world is still unfolding, that possibility is still alive, and that my dream—the one I thought I’d lost—still lives inside me.

Wonder Right Before Your Eyes

Some scenes you think you’ve seen a hundred times—until one day, you see them differently. That happened in Monroe Township, New Jersey. I was walking through a distribution center while filming an episode of We Supply America.

On the surface, it was a scene I’d seen hundreds of times—racks of inventory, the hum of machinery, the steady rhythm of work. But that day, something shifted. I stopped and really saw it: robots picking products, conveyors carrying them to packers, boxes being sealed and shipped across the country—all so someone, somewhere, could find what they needed, exactly when they needed it, on a store shelf.

I was awestruck. Crazy, I know! I’ve walked hundreds of warehouse and distribution floors. But this day. This moment. My eyes… and my heart and soul saw something that touched me deeply.

It was a miracle hiding in plain sight. And in that moment, I felt it again—wonder. Not for the technology, but for the human ingenuity behind it. The ordinary became extraordinary simply because I chose to see it.

When we stop being curious, when we stop being amazed, the dream withers. But when we choose wonder, the world opens up again.

Wonder isn’t an escape from reality; it’s an invitation back into it. It’s the courage to see ordinary life as extraordinary again—to walk outside and feel awe at the way the light hits the trees, to listen deeply to someone’s story and realize how rare connection really is, to look at your own reflection and whisper, “There’s still more of me to discover.”

The truth is, you can’t dream the dream again until you rediscover your capacity for wonder. Because wonder is the soil from which every new vision grows. It softens what’s hardened, loosens what’s stuck, and makes the imagination fertile again. When we recover our sense of wonder, we recover our capacity to dream the dream again.

What dream have you quietly buried under life’s weight?

The Shift: Dreaming the Dream Again

When wonder returns, imagination stirs right behind it.

It begins as a flicker—a sense that maybe, just maybe, there’s more ahead than what’s behind.

That flicker is the dream trying to be reborn.

To dream the dream again is not to chase some new ambition; it’s to recover the part of yourself that once believed anything was possible. It’s to look at the ashes of what’s been lost and say, there’s still a spark in here somewhere. When wonder softens the hard edges of practicality, imagination has room to breathe again. And once imagination breathes, creation follows.

I’ve come to see that dreaming again plays out in four simple but demanding acts: Ambition, Engagement, Youthfulness, and Devotion to the Journey.

Ambition is often misunderstood. It gets painted as ego, striving, or the hunger for recognition. But true ambition—the kind I’m talking about—is something deeper. It’s not about accolades. It’s about energy. The kind that stirs your Vital Force and calls you back to life.

When rooted in wonder, ambition becomes a sacred restlessness. It’s the whisper inside that says, “There’s more to you than this.” It’s not the need to control—it’s the courage to imagine. To believe that something better, fuller, more aligned is possible… and to move toward it.

If you haven’t already, take a moment with The Vital Force Awakener—a simple tool to help you reconnect with that restless energy. Because when you do, you don’t need a five-year plan. You need a fire in your gut that says, keep going.

Ambition, when held with wonder, becomes the spark of impact. It doesn’t just build projects—it builds people. It’s the part of you that knows you were made to create, to shape, to leave something better than you found it—including yourself.

Engagement comes next. Dreams are not resurrected in theory; they’re revived in motion. Engagement means touching life again—walking, talking, risking, creating. It’s reading Emerson instead of scrolling; calling a friend instead of retreating; starting the project instead of perfecting the plan. The dream gains strength each time you choose participation over passivity.

Youthfulness is not an age; it’s an attitude. It’s a way of being that resists the slow settling of the soul. Because let’s be honest—many of us grow old long before we age. We trade wonder for routine, curiosity for competence, joy for “just getting through the day.”

Dreaming the dream again asks us to reclaim a different kind of youth—not naivety, but vitality. Youthfulness of body, mind, and spirit. It’s the choice to stay open. To let curiosity replace cynicism. To allow yourself to be surprised again. Youthfulness doesn’t deny the pain life brings—it just refuses to let pain have the final word. It says, yes, life is hard… and still, I’m here for it. I live young!

And finally, Devotion to the Journey. Because once you re-ignite the dream, the temptation is to measure it. To rush toward outcomes. But the awakened soul knows the dream is not a destination; it’s a companion. Devotion means staying faithful to the process—to keep showing up, refining, learning, and letting the dream evolve as you do.

Dreaming the dream again is not a return to naïveté.

It’s an act of defiance—a refusal to let erosion win. It’s standing in the same world that once made you practical and daring to imagine it new. When you reclaim wonder and let it pull you forward, the dream that once slipped away doesn’t just come back to life—it comes back stronger, wiser, and more aligned with who you’ve become.

Pick Up the Dream Again

At some point, every dreamer must decide: do I let the old dream stay buried, or do I pick it up again?

If you’ve read this far, I believe you already know the answer.

The very fact that something inside you stirred as you read about wonder and awakening means your dream isn’t gone—it’s waiting. Maybe it’s changed shape. Maybe it’s quieter than before. But it’s still alive, still calling your name in the language only you can hear.

The work now is not to rebuild the dream overnight; it’s to begin a relationship with it again.

Walk toward it with conviction.
Ask it questions.
Let it surprise you.

Because the dream that comes back after loss or fatigue is never the same one that left—it’s wiser, tempered, and more aligned with who you’re destined to become. It’s entirely yours.

You don’t need permission to start. You don’t need proof that it will work. You only need to listen for that flicker of curiosity, that pulse of possibility, and say, I’m willing to try again.

The dream that once felt impossible is waiting for you to look its way again.

Pick it up.
Dust it off.
Breathe new life into it.

And as you do, you’ll feel something unmistakable—something truly beautiful—a quiet surge of rising from just getting by to living fully alive.

This week’s guide was created to help you reconnect with the part of yourself that still believes in possibility.

reaming the Dream Again invites you to pause, breathe, and rediscover the wonder that gives birth to new imagination. Through five simple reflections, you’ll remember what once moved you, name what’s dulled your spark, and take one small step toward the dream that still belongs to you.

Because the dream never really disappears.

It just waits for you to look its way again.

While reading Why Does the World Exist? by Jim Holt, I came across a passage that felt like a mirror.

It was about physicist Steven Weinberg, who wrote that “with the discovery of a final theory we may regret that nature has become more ordinary, less full of wonder and mystery.”

As I read, something inside me stirred. It reminded me that maybe the point of life isn’t to finally understand everything—but to stay amazed by being here—alive, at all.

I wrote:

“Weinberg said, ‘With the discovery of a final theory, we may regret that nature has become more ordinary, less full of wonder and mystery”

So…Dirk, when all is known, wonder, awe, and mystery fade until it is gone. Beauty is thus lost, for there is beauty in wonder, awe, and mystery.

When I know the outcome of a story or movie, I lose interest. When there is nothing more to learn from another, I lose interest. When a husband and wife have no more mystery of what’s to come, interest and attention fade. If I fully understood the cosmos and knew every sunrise would be exactly the same, even sunrises would lose their majesty.

If I ‘know’ something, my reason for knowing it becomes unimportant—unless it leads to something else unknown. For in this unknown is where the beauty, awe, wonder and mystery reside.

Once I ‘know’ there is no real purpose… purpose is found, felt, discovered, lived, and experienced in the unknown.”

Reading that back, I realize this is what dreaming the dream again is really about. It’s not about chasing certainty. It’s about choosing to live inside the questions again—to stand in awe of what’s unfolding rather than demand the outcome. When we give up our need to “know,” we rediscover the thrill of becoming.

So this week, I invite you to resist the urge to figure everything out. Instead, stay open to what’s still forming. Let mystery do its work. Because wonder isn’t the absence of knowledge—it’s the presence of possibility. And possibility is where life becomes beautiful again.

Wow! Right! I’d really love to know whats coursing through your thoughts right now. Hit reply and let me know.

And if someone in your life has quietly set their own dream aside, forward this their way. This is how we empower one million people to live fully alive!

We’re on a mission to empower one million people to live Fully Alive, and you’re one of them!

+ show Comments

- Hide Comments

add a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I'm Kate, your new get-a-grip friend.

Poke fixie kickstarter fashion axe mixtape brunch. Small batch bushwick master cleanse waistcoat, everyday carry chillwave la croix. Jianbing next level narwhal, messenger bag.

more about me

hey there!

© Dirk Beveridge & The fam  

SEND ME A NOTE >

GET ON THE LIST >

@Dirkbeveridge >

Dirk Beveridge

events
speaking
planners
About
Home
contact
movement

Dirk Beveridge is America’s leading voice on self-empowerment, helping individuals reclaim clarity, confidence, and joy — igniting personal growth that transforms cultures and fuels thriving organizations.

Newsletter