If you're not a daydreamer, you haven't got any imagination.
A daydreamer is prepared for most things.
I'm a daydreamer - a purposeful one when I'm writing fiction.
I was a daydreamer. Teachers kept telling me to pay attention.
I went to high school in the 1970s and was a real daydreamer and not the best student.
My brain is just so busy. I'm inattentive; I'm a daydreamer: the space cadet kind.
I was a real daydreamer at school, gazing out of the window and losing myself in imaginary worlds.
I was a daydreamer, and there is a lot of history and geography and science I missed out on because I was in my head. And I regret that.
It's the relationship I have with the world: always trying to escape from reality. I'm a daydreamer; I don't feel in harmony with my epoch or the societies I live in.
My school was OK, but I just wanted to do music. I was a bit of a daydreamer. I wish I'd gone back and paid more attention.
I have more ideas than I know what to do with. I guess I'm a bit of a fantasist and a daydreamer - all sorts of things come to me during the day.
I'm not an extraordinary worker, I'm an extraordinary daydreamer. I exceed all my fantasies-even that of writing.
I was a daydreamer as a kid. I want to act because of whatever artistic bone is in my body. I want to explore what it is to be alive. I just want to make good sh-t.