Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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YES, I think it is definitely an addiction. It gives you immediate pleasure and relief from the pain, or sometimes lack of stimulation, in your life.
It is a sweet escape...my daydreams fill me with a warm rush of love, instantly. My heart beats faster, and I'm suddenly full of energy wanting to prance around my room. If that is not a physical and emotional high, then what is? :P
I had an eating disorder (anorexia) for 5 years, which includes the years spent trying to recover, and binging (on actual food!). Eating disorders are also addictions. I take some pride in the fact that I have recovered from it. But my daydreaming is still out of control. If daydreaming makes you think and act like an addict, well...if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck...Lol! I think learning how to have some control of our wild minds is what we are all trying to do here.
YES, I think it is definitely an addiction. It gives you immediate pleasure and relief from the pain, or sometimes lack of stimulation, in your life.
It is a sweet escape...my daydreams fill me with a warm rush of love, instantly. My heart beats faster, and I'm suddenly full of energy wanting to prance around my room. If that is not a physical and emotional high, then what is? :P
I had an eating disorder (anorexia) for 5 years, which includes the years spent trying to recover, and binging (on actual food!). Eating disorders are also addictions. I take some pride in the fact that I have recovered from it. But my daydreaming is still out of control. If daydreaming makes you think and act like an addict, well...if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck...Lol! I think learning how to have some control of our wild minds is what we are all trying to do here.
Thanks for replying all of you! I've never started a discussion I was afraid nobody would say anything.
@Altruist, It's funny that you mentioned boredom being a "trigger" for you. I was just thinking about how boredom is probably my worst enemy just the other day. Boredom makes me want to eat, smoke, get high, think about living a better or more interesting life in a daydream, or, on really bad days, all 5 of those things all at once. I guess I should be grateful that I'm not a sex addict too--but even that can be an issue if the subject of my daydreams is romantic in nature lol. You know what's funny is I've done just about every drug under the sun and I've done them addictively... except for two. One was speed, I did it once and all it did was screw up the buzz that I'd spent a whole lot of money and effort to have and make reality super-real so THAT really sucked. Having MD in the first place attests to my dislike of reality. The other is pot. Pot took me in completely the other direction. AAALLLL I could do on pot was day dream. To the point that it scared me and people noticed and that was really embarrassing.
@ Drake, just because I'm an addict and can't usually control it doesn't mean that I think using drugs is bad for everyone. Of course, that depends on the drug too though. But, if I'm not prying, do you think use drugs in order to maybe try to manage your MD, or avoid certain ones because they make it worse? I ask because I just realized, by writing this reply, that mine did apparently have some influence in which drugs I preferred and/or which ones I avoided.
I think it can be addicting. I was watching some show about strange addictions, and the people on it were addicted to all sorts of things from eating toilet paper to sleeping with hair dryers. For most of them, it was all about self-soothing. They had randomly found something that soothed them and caused pleasure. Their mind then associated that thing, however weird it might have been, with the pleasurable feelings and the cravings began. It's almost like you can become addicted to anything. There are certainly stranger addictions than maladaptive daydreaming.
I don't daydream much anymore, but sometimes if I have time left at the end of the day, I'll sort of get excited about the possibility of allowing myself to go off and fall into a daydream. I know that pre-daydreaming excited feeling is just my mind associating daydreaming with something euphoric, and I wish it didn't make that association.
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