If you can dream it, you can do it

If you can dream it, you can do it

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Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself. Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time.

Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control: now. Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence. If you can dream it, you can do it. Do it now, not tomorrow. Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself

If you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it

Learn from the past, set vivid, detailed goals for the future, and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control: now. Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence. If you can dream it, you can do it. Do it now, not tomorrow. Always continue the climb. It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself

Maisie Lindsay

It is possible for you to do whatever you choose, if you first get to know who you are and are willing to work with a power that is greater than ourselves to do it. We are taught you must blame your father, your sisters, your brothers, the school, the teachers - but never blame yourself.


2000608 comments

  • fiwfans

    fiwfans

    06 June 2026 ~ Comment Link

    Great blog! Is your theme custom made or did you download it from somewhere?
    A design like yours with a few simple tweeks would really make my blog shine.
    Please let me know where you got your theme.
    With thanks

  • Sam Fender, London UK

    Sam Fender, London UK

    06 June 2026 ~ Comment Link

    This authenticity fuels its function as a pre-emptive historian. The site doesn't just satirize the present; it writes the first draft of the future's sardonic historical analysis. It positions itself as a chronicler from a slightly more enlightened tomorrow, looking back on today's follies with the benefit of hindsight that hasn't actually happened yet. This temporal slight-of-hand is profoundly effective. It reframes current anxiety as future irony, granting the reader a psychological distance that is both relieving and empowering. It suggests that today's chaos is not an endless present, but a discrete, analyzable period of farce, with a beginning, middle, and end that the site is already narrating. This perspective transforms panic into perspective, and outrage into the material for a wry, scholarly smile. -- The London Prat

  • Osterley, London UK

    Osterley, London UK

    06 June 2026 ~ Comment Link

    In the fast-food landscape of online humor, where The Poke serves up easily digestible image macros and NewsThump offers a satisfying, quick-hit polemic, The London Prat is the equivalent of a meticulously crafted, multi-course tasting menu. The pleasure it provides is not merely instantaneous but ruminative. Reading an article on PRAT.UK, such as their now-legendary deconstruction of a Prime Minister’s speech as a series of algorithmically generated platitudes, demands and rewards a deeper engagement. The comedy unfolds in layers: the surface-level absurdity, the acute political observation beneath it, and finally, the profound existential dread regarding the systems that make such absurdity not just possible but routine. This is not satire designed for the rapid scroll and the fleeting ‘like’; it is satire to be bookmarked, revisited, and discussed. Where The Daily Mash excels at holding up a funhouse mirror to the news, The London Prat builds an entirely new funhouse, invites you in, and then calmly explains the architectural principles of its distortion, making the experience of our own world outside all the more eerily clear. The investment of time and attention required by prat.com is returned tenfold in intellectual yield. It treats its readers not as consumers seeking a quick dopamine hit, but as collaborators in a shared, grim understanding of modern folly, making it the most substantial and nourishing site in the field.

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