Sometimes people may compare themselves to characters from a book or movie that they feel they are similar to. I strongly believe that I am similar to Alice from Lewis Carrol’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. To begin with, we both have a very strong sense of curiosity. Also, another trait that we share is an overactive imagination. Finally, like Alice, I tend to befriend peculiar people of the group. As can be seen, Alice and I share many different similarities. First of all, we both have a distinct sense of curiosity. I think that we can all agree that had Alice not been curious she would not have fallen down the rabbit hole to start with, and she certainly would not have traveled through the looking glass later on. With a stronger sense of curiosity everything seems to have an amplified magnetism, at the first glance someone can be drawn in until the very last second. My love of books and inability to cease reading them partially originates from my curiosity. Yes, sometimes the effects of this sense can be a good thing, but not always. Although we may not realize it, I believe that we all have been forced into a sticky situation by our curiosity at least once. However this does not mean good things cannot originate from this. After all, curiosity is not such a bad thing. As the saying goes, …show more content…
Throughout Alice’s adventures to various odd places she is constantly imagining what might happen next, every time she does this her speculations grow more bizarre yet seem to be exceeded anyway. At the beginning of her travels, before The White Rabbit and The Cheshire Cat, she thinks about what a world of her own might be like, cats and rabbits having their own houses among other odd things. I often find myself doing a bit of the same thing, would the cats and dogs talk? Would they walk on two legs like humans or remain quadrupeds? All in all, having an overactive imagination is not half