Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
I can't believe no one mentioned this before so I'll just throw this here. I wrote about Florence Nightingale being a potential fantasizer but here's a much more interesting figure: Fyodor Dostoyevsky.
The passage you'll read is an excerpt from a short story entitled White Nights: A Sentimental Story from the Diary of a Dreamer by Dostoyevsky himself. The protagonist of the story is a loner and a recluse who daydreamed his life away.
Some critics say that the role of a daydreamer in this particular work served to deride Russian Romanticism. Others say that this book symbolized emotional and intellectual maturing of Dostoyevsky as a writer, his personal dismissal of Romantic movement which eventually gave birth to existentialism in his further works. All these interpretations and metaphors aside, this novel is ultimately about the addiction to fantasy where Dostoevsky explores the psyche of the dreamer which was possibly based on a younger version of himself. I don't have a source for this but I remember reading somewhere Dostoyevsky's own words about how he was an insatiable daydreamer during his younger days and how White Nights was partially an autobiographical novel from this standpoint. When referring to White Night as figuratively autobiographical, many people think this book represented Dostoyevsky's dreamy and romantic nature but I'd like to get a bit more literal than that.
I have no doubts that this man was a fantasizer when he was younger. Avoiding social interaction and living like a recluse with a tendency towards nihilistic thinking, running away from reality, trading reality for fantasy are recurrent themes in his works. He knew how to delve into most intimate depths of human psyche but I find it hard to believe that someone who wasn't a daydreamer himself could write a story so spot on such as White Nights. There are so many different things about this book, so many subtle cues that are characteristic of indulging into daydreaming. Fantasy in literature is common and it's not a big deal but this type of fantasy that cloaks one's severe existential crisis is not something you find in books every day. Someone who wasn't a desperate fantasizer himself couldn't have written this.
This is just my opinion so I might be completely wrong. In any case, do read the book! It describes maladaptive daydreaming to a T.
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I suspected Dostoyevsky. He and Florence Nightingale are usually both typed as INFJ, and I noticed a lot of members on this site also type similarly. I think you're right about a more literal interpretation of White Nights. I liked your statement at the end: "this type of fantasy that cloaks one's severe existential crisis is not something you find in books every day." That resonated with me.
What's funny is that they both had in common the thirst for something big. She was sort of an adventurer who couldn't stand a dull life and who felt a strong need to change things bigger than herself - and when she succeeded in this - it's quite possible that her MD lessened, if not disappeared altogether. Dostoyevsky also sought to change things via his books, he covertly criticized society, and he was quite aggressive at that. I think both of them redirected successfully this energy that fueled their proneness to fantasy addiction.
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