Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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This is an eloquent and clear cut explanation for why we daydream. I found this site about 5 years ago, and was on here as "Creator". I wrote a paper about this affliction for a class I was in, but I mainly chose to write it as a way to catalogue my own thoughts about my constant daydreaming. The points I made in that paper were good at the time, but as the years went by and I watched my patterns and learned more about the ego and the psyche, I realized that there were so many other things to say about why we dream. Recently, I decided I wanted to come back and share what I've learned about daydreaming and what it does for those of us who dream almost addictively... But it seems you've beat me to the punch!
As you've said, approval is the biggest motivator, and arguably the only motivator for constant daydreaming. When you get into who and what we dream of, that's where it gets more personal as far as exactly why we do it. I, for example, latched on to a sort of cartoon universe when I was a child. Other people's daydreams are more versatile, and their characters may flux with the situations they create.
I love that you also mentioned the violence aspect of dreaming, and how it shows us as being strong to no one but ourselves. But that in itself brings up the question:
Are we craving approval from the outside world? Or are we craving approval from the inside world-- as in, our own egos...? I mean, you could say that one feeds the other... It's debatable. But my constant question in life has been "why do I have to do this?" And self-love has seemed to be the answer I get, time after time.
We are craving approval from the "outside world"- other human beings, by creating a "inside world" populated with people who will approve and love us. So, in a way, we create a need in our egos to be approved- but then we get into semantics.
I really would like to see more people respond to this post and post any therapy/drug sessions they think would work
Harper Rays said:
Are we craving approval from the outside world? Or are we craving approval from the inside world-- as in, our own egos...? I mean, you could say that one feeds the other... It's debatable. But my constant question in life has been "why do I have to do this?" And self-love has seemed to be the answer I get, time after time.
If anyone is Christian on the site, there's a few eye opening books:
Freedom from Fear, When People are Big and God is Small
And the big one: Approval Addiction by Joyce Meyer. Even if you aren't religious, everyone eon this site should read this book.
Sure.
If this maladaptive daydreaming is a thing, and we are it's adherents, this is our catechism:
http://www.somer.co.il/articles/2002Malaptdaydr.contemp.psych.pdf
This is, to my knowledge, the first instance of the phrase "maladaptive daydreaming".
Also, a handy Atlantic article detailing Sigmund Freud's work on the matter, and her stuggles with it.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/04/when-daydreaming-...
Girl who dreams said:
Hey,John
thanks for recommendations.
Can you send the link about that study that u read? (.. but it says stereotypy is a form of hypnotic induction.)
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