Hello everyone! Thank you for your responses! I have felt your desires and goals myself. It took me time to realize the differences between aphantasia, fantasy, and the final stage of the culmination of these two thought processes — imagination. During the time I was writing my message, I identified several unique patterns: Aphantasia is the exceptional ability to think within one's mind, excluding external factors and visual influences. It can be considered as the awareness of thought. The experience we have gone through is interestingly applicable in various situations and professions. In my case, the amount of experience equates to the number of possible interactions applying my abilities in different professions. Fantasy is the embodiment of thoughts before the "mental gaze." While practicing the development of fantasy, I noticed one interesting detail that we might be able to solve together or create a new thesis for further substantiation. I hypothesized that since childhood, I have been training the left hemisphere, while the right hemisphere is responsible for fantasy, and the left, presumably, for aphantasia. This might be unscientific. Hence, the first thesis arises: the overtraining of one hemisphere of the brain has exacerbated the fantasizing abilities of another part or the entire hemisphere? Then I remembered another moment from my life. At the age of 14, I tried the sleep method — shavasana, relaxing the muscles of the entire body from the tips of the toes to the head and shifting the relaxation impulse to the hippocampus area. That evening, I distinctly remember the appearance of images before the mental gaze. Hence, the second thesis arises: how does the stimulation of a specific part of the brain depend on the process of gaze? To verify the first and second theses, an fMRI is required. In the next stage, I tried to cross the mental gaze and the visual gaze: I imagined a thought in my head and tried to pull it into the mental gaze. Initially, there were no successes, but after about the fifth repetition, I started to succeed. The third thesis arises: the possibility of training fantasy becomes more real than it was a month ago? Considering all three theses, it is suggested that fantasy is not lost for us! My main desire in this life is to master imagination. To combine fantasy and aphantasia while understanding the essence and difference of these states. If this is not a cure, then perhaps it is an interesting twist in development. I will try to share everything that I encounter on my path.