So say you have an imaginary number $i$.
$$i^0 = 1$$
$$i^1 = \sqrt -1$$
$$i^2 = i^1i^1 = \sqrt{-1} \sqrt{-1} = -1$$
$$i^3 = i^1i^2 = \sqrt{-1} (-1) = -\sqrt{-1}$$
$$i^4 = i^0 = 1$$
As you can see, when you raise an imaginary number to every fourth power, it value if quantity. This is because on the real number axis, if you have a number on it (example: $5$). If you raise $5^n$, it would tend to positive infinity the higher the value of $n$. If you have $-5$, as soon as you square it, the number rotates 180deg around the real axis and jumps all the way to positive $25$. Then when you cube $-5$, it does another 180deg turn and jumps all the way to negative $125$. And then to 625 and so on.
For the $\sqrt{-1}$, when we square it, it obviously becomes a negative number: $-1$. With all other negative numbers on the real axis, it does not happen that way. Beginning from $i^0$ being $1$, when we raise it to the power of $1$, it cannot belong on the real axis, but it cannot make a $180^{\circ}$ jump either. So it turns anti-clockwise $90^{\circ}$ and lands on another axis: the imaginary axis. Then when we square it, it rotates 90deg again and lands on $-1$. We cube it, it rotates another $90^{\circ}$ and lands on $-\sqrt{-1}$, and finally when we raise it to the power of four, it rotates another $90^{\circ}$ around the complex plane and finishes its lap, ready to start the cycle again on $1$.
Real numbers on the real axis jump $180^{\circ}$, however imaginary numbers on the imaginary axis jump $90^{\circ}$. You can think about it that way and then it is easier to understand how numbers can have forms and dimensions with certain properties to them. They can behave like moving objects outside of space and time. This is known as Platonian Number Theory, and how numbers are "abstract objects existing outside of space and time".
$\sqrt{-1}$ may not "behave" like a real number, especially algebraically at times, but it does behave quite well geometrically. Numbers used to be denoted on a one-dimensional line, and now imaginary numbers - they are two dimensional. Numbers are two dimensional. This is why we have a "second axis" in two dimensions for the imaginary numbers.