Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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I first realized that I might be different than the rest of my friends was around 5th grade. I spent far too much time in my daydreams. By then I had already filled a notebook with all my drawings (I'm the creative type). I haven't really told anyone about my habits, when they ask what I am drawing, I simply say "stuff" and close my notebook. I use my Daydreams to funnel into a creative power I use. It makes me daydream far less and I have thousands of pictures and paintings to show for it. (Just check my blog).
Are you a writer or an artist? If so, this is the perfect place to share! :D
Elliminating this "disorder" never seemed like a good idea to me, I also wanted a balance. I wanted to live with it, not kill it.
I've had it my entire life. I realised it while I was watching a detective-show on tv. I noticed that the protagonist went to work, solved cases, went home, did some activities with her husband, went to sleep, and the cycle repeated itself. I thought to myself: "She has no life! All the time she is doing stuff, or socialising. She never does nothing, she never stops to think or dream like a normal person does!" Then it suddenly struck me. I suddenly realised that everyone did this. It would explain everything! I came up with the Idea that for normal people there was only one world: reality. I lived in hundreds of worlds, and that wasn't ordinary. I looked it up on the internet and after searching a long time I found this. I was very happy and relieved whene I found it. it answered a lot of questions that I had had my entire life :)
I want to be a writer, but I>'m still trying to make that dream come true ;)
Hi, I'm also new here. I'm trying to deal with my MDD the same way as you - I allow myself to daydream before falling asleep and try to cut it off completely during the day (however, I don't always succeed).
It was not very long ago when I realised that it's a real problem. I mean I've had it since I was a child and I've always found it quite strange, but never realised how much it interferes with my social life. Now I understand that I should reduce it somehow.
And I'm very happy to find these website and see how people here help each other. I didn't know that this condition actually has a name and there are other people dealing with it. I was also surprised to learn that these repetitive movements like pacing, etc. are common for MDD, too, because that was what I considered the strangest thing about my DD.
As for the creative side, I also want to become a writer, but as Roel Van Rossen wrote, I'm still trying to make it come true. :)
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