The desire to MD will never leave - but that's okay

Hi, so lately I've been doing a lot of self-improvement and working on myself, and I realised that finally, I am happy with my life. I feel at ease, and I always thought that would stop my want to MD. It hasn't though. And when I did indulge, I realise that my daydreams wanted a different life than the one normal-me wanted. A life filled with adventure and danger, but I don't want that, not right now and not as I spend the rest of my life. 

I still want to MD now, but I do it much less frequently. Instead I focus on other things, replacing it with exercising to work towards my goals, or going out for a walk to get some fresh air. Even calling a friend will help. Just reminding myself what I want in my life (through mood boards, scrolling through my camera roll, etc), it helps remind me why I don't want to have MD apart of it. 

Just some motivation, at least for me. And I wanted to share it, since I'm rarely posting on here anymore. I'd love to hear what you guys think! Have a great day :)

  • Yukia

    Just out of curiosity, does anybody in your circle know about your MD?

  • Mils

    No, I haven't told anyone. Some of my immediate family knows about it though, since they were they when it started or they have it too.

  • SA

    Hey!!! I’m a maladaptive daydreamer too.
    I have realised that it’s a coping mechanism and have begun to awaken a bit. But ever since I’ve let go, there’s this awful numbness that I experience during my daily life. It feels as if I’m a robot and don’t have any self. At the same time, loads of repressed emotions are coming to the fore. What I want to ask is that how could I deal with small relapses in between a day? It’s very discouraging as I feel split between two worlds. I don’t know if I’m here or there.
  • Yukia

    What do you mean by small relapses?

  • SA

    By small relapses I mean the times when you daydream a little bit because a very strong emotion has just hit after being repressed for way too long. However, after getting into it a little bit, you realise you’ve been triggered and then you stop and sit still somewhere to gain a bit of connection with the present moment.
  • Yukia

    Everything depends on your time consumption. Are you able to finish all important work between those small relapses?

  • SA

    Yes it doesn’t hamper any of that. I have established this much control over my daydreams.
  • Yukia

    So what's the concern? You don't want to daydream at all?

  • SA

    I think my main issue is that those short bursts entail me acting out my daydreams. I’m talking in the sense of saying something or acting things out. That’s the issue.
  • Jessica Ballantyne

    I used to want to daydream, but now I re-think this. It was a coping mechanism when I longed for things I could not attain easily and when I didn't socially belong anywhere, and when I was so lost and in the cold. If I wanted my life to be a better place to live in—I really shouldn't have been an MD'er to begin with. The wise thing to do was tell my parents how I felt in advance and seek professional assistance, not delve into dreamland. I made a huge mistake and it coloured 25 years of my life. My adulthood isn't what I should't appeared, and I wound up in unexpected trouble with people. This is the real world—you don't muck around with that stuff, while crossing paths with people who don't know. I was too naive and inexperienced to predict that, and I still have so much to learn. So I had to suppress MD to an extent it now pops randomly in the day, but doesn't overrun my waking mind. I'm so glad that I did this! It makes you feel happy at first, but overtime, your life is a mess.

    Yes, I woke up having no idea who I am. I have this clean sleight of a future. I'm not even sure what I'm going to do for a career. I practically have to start over and find new friends. It's the best I can do. 

  • Yukia

    I think my main issue is that those short bursts entail me acting out my daydreams. I’m talking in the sense of saying something or acting things out. That’s the issue.

    I still can't put my finger on how to reply because I don't understand why it's problematic? If daydreams no longer hamper your productivity, they are not maladaptive anymore. It's also common for most people to act out their daydreams and talk to themselves when nobody's around. Are you sure it's not that?

  • SA

    I believe they aren’t maladaptive anymore. But there are still a part of my life. They aren’t common daydreams where a person gets lost thinking over a situation or person. They’re what forms the essence of MD i.e interactions with my characters or saying things which I wanna communicate. In simple words, when I say I do it in short bursts, I mean to get triggered into the fantasy land which I have created.
  • Jessica Ballantyne

    After I let go of MD, honestly, I feel too embarrassed. Even though it assured me things will be fine—they weren't OK. Now I have to start over from scratch. I find when I was a daydreamer, everything was starting to look dire for me, or very rutty. I wasn't taking care of where my life was going, when I lived in my head. This put me at risk, and I hope I can overcome this lesson, and still have a life. I put myself into a maladaptive state for 25 years. 

  • Yukia

    They’re what forms the essence of MD i.e interactions with my characters or saying things which I wanna communicate.

    If you want to communicate, you're the only one who knows how and what. You should probably think about acting out your fantasy self in the real world to connect the two realities. That's kind of the boss level in letting go of MD.

    Also, you're a former MD-er after all. If I were you, I'd expect to daydream more vividly and intentionally than most people. I'd consider it a badge of honor for overcoming a life-long obsession.

  • SA

    I understand what you’re saying. But what about those communications which I wanted to make in the past but kept silent for some reason? Those are the things which haunt and trigger me the most. For instance, if someone yelled at me, I can imagine the scenario and see myself responding in my fantasy. Or maybe someone was overly frank with me and I wanted to draw a boundary. But I kept silent. In my fantasy, I’m drawing the boundary. In reality, those are past events. How am I deal with issues from the past?
  • Yukia

     With a time machine?