Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
Now that we've had some time to think about this & discuss it, let's start creating a plan to help. Let's try and make a list that we can refer to & refer others to. Here's my question:
What helps?
Not just what helps you stop daydreaming. This is a condition we need to learn to live with.
What helps in any way possible? Interpret that in every way possible, and be as specific as possible.
Some ways you can think of it:
What helps make your life better?
What helps you feel like you’re living a more fulfilling life?
What helps you feel like you’re in control?
What helps you daydream less & what helps you daydream more?
What makes your daydreams more productive?
What makes your daydreams feel less productive?
When do you leave your daydreams feeling better & more charged?
What makes them leave you feeling more sluggish?
What helps you feel stronger?
What helps you feel safer?
What helps you feel more confident?
Let’s act like we’re compiling a list of things to tell new people who’re just figuring out they’re going through this & are not sure what to do. What advice would you give them to help them feel more empowered?
Tags:
Hi,
I recently found that constantly writing wondering thoughts down, or keeping track of them, keeps you away of falling into intense daydreaming. Whenever you realize that you are wondering and not present or focused write it down on your phone or ipod or touch or something. I find that this keeps it from getting out of of control.
N
By the way, I just want to ask this while we have a conversation rolling even though it's not really related: Do you ever feel yourself repeating daydreams? You know, ones that were particularly fulfilling, emotional, exciting, dramatic, etc. Or do you ever go back to some daydreams to change the "storyline" or perfect it in some way? (For lack of a better word.)
What helps make your life better?
I feel best when I'm following a daily routine and taking care of myself properly. When I eat well, exercise, take pride in my appearance and do my best to complete what I can on my daily to-do list. Seeing friends and family regularly helps too. After seeing them, and observing how they live their lives in reality, it often inspires me to attend to practical matters as well. That's when I get my biggest productivity boost. It rarely lasts, however. As silly as it sounds, until now, I never realized that the daydreaming was to blame.
What helps you feel like you’re living a more fulfilling life?
When I'm doing my best at whatever it is that I'm attempting. When I overcome a challenge or learn something new, or when I have one of those rare 'in-the-moment' experiences that make me feel flesh and blood and happy to be human. Unfortunately, those 'in the moment' experiences do not come very often these days; especially if I happen to be stuck in one of these daydreaming loops.
What helps you feel like you’re in control?
When I remember to verbally remind myself that I am. After I've exercised or overcome some physical or mental obstacle. Ironically, I also feel most at peace and in control of my life after I pray or meditate (although I rarely do it, because it's difficult for me to maintain my attention without my mind drifting to less spiritual matters).
What helps you daydream less & what helps you daydream more?
I daydream less when I'm around people and/or actively involved in my friendship or family circle. The more time I spend with people, the more grounded I become. I also daydream less when I haven't turned on the television or logged onto youtube for a few days, or when I haven't heard or watched anything fantastical that would tempt me down the ye olde rabbit hole.
I daydream most when I'm alone and when I'm reading/watching/listening/playing anything related to what reminds me of what I enjoy the most about the fantasy or historical genres (swords, sorcery, swashbucklers and viva la revolution!) That's all it usually takes. I realize now I have to avoid these things. My recent imaginative binge was triggered by listening to the Quest for Glory soundtrack, which of course, led me to dig up my old diskettes and play the games as well as imagine alternative scenarios. That lasted for a while, and then I saw the Prince of Persia movie and the two worlds somehow merged in my imagination and I had an entirely new scenario to play with. Goodbye, productivity! See you in a few days (hopefully).
What makes your daydreams more productive?
They are never productive. I like to fool myself into thinking they are and that I'll use the ideas I come up with for a story... but that story never really comes because I freeze up in trying to get it 'just right' on paper.
What makes your daydreams feel less productive?
They are not productive at all, although I rarely realize this until I come out of that fantasy-induced coma and grasp the idea of just how much time I wasted on ideas that a) never went anywhere, b) can't be applied to real life. Not to mention, all the tasks that have been left undone while I was off chasing the end of the yellow brick road.
When do you leave your daydreams feeling better & more charged?
I haven't felt like they have done this in a very long time. I don't have control over them anymore, and they always come at an inappropriate or busy time. Instead of invigorated or super-charged, I often walk away feeling guilty.
What makes them leave you feeling more sluggish?
When the reality sets in and I realize how much time has been wasted doing essentially nothing.
What helps you feel stronger? What helps you feel more confident?
In the past, when I would daydream or write stories about warrior heroes (men and women) who trained hard and fought injustices. Kind of made me feel like I could do it too.
What helps you feel safer?
Having knowledge and knowing that I can cope with whatever life throws my way makes me feel safe and in control. I feel unsafe and vulnerable when I'm unprepared or when I am unable to appropriately react to my environment. Instead of making me feel safe, I feel as if my daydreaming has completely disarmed me and kept me co-dependent on it in order to feel a semblance of the safety that I have been unable to achieve in real life because of it. It's become a negative loop that I'm anxious to escape from!
Quick question for you, Cordellia, and anyone else who may feel obliged to respond. Are you ever a subject in your own daydreams? That is, do you project yourself onto a character or actually self-insert yourself into the situation you're daydreaming? Because I do not. All my daydreaming centers around fictional characters that I've created; I rarely, if ever, am an active participant in any of these fantasies, nor do I consciously project any of my traits on these characters (if I do, I suspect its almost entirely subconscious). I wonder what would happen if I did insert myself into one of these daydreams or dream up a scenario that I could participate in. Then again, I also wonder why, in all of the twenty odd years that I've been doing this, why I haven't consciously thought of doing this before. It's like I don't want to acknowledge I exist in my own fantasy worlds.
It's possibly why I had such a hard time answering the 'confident' and 'strength' questions above because the 'effects' of my daydreams are not personal so much as they are just a temporary means of escape.
It's helped me just to know that other people recognise this and are struggling with it just like i am. For the last few days i've been much more aware, have noticed just how much i'm doing it, and have sometimes been able to pull my mind away from it.
Things that help me not daydream -
1. Something absorbing eg a good book or audio tape. I will keep catching myself daydreaming, but will just have to go back and read it again or re-wind the tape.
2. New places and/or situations. This focusses the mind for me. I love walking, but if i go on the same routes the dreaming sets in. New things to look at and stunning scenery are good.
3. Contentment. I rarely experience this, but very occassionally am happy to be who i am, where i am - no need to daydream.
4. Control excercises. Sometimes i try not to daydream for just a few seconds. eg if out on a walk i'll see if i can keep focussed until that tree, then to that log - literally for a few seconds at a time. Perhaps this would also work with books - eg read word by word, highlighting each word as you read it without dreaming. I don't know if it's possible to re-wire our brains in this way?
5. Socialising
What makes my daydreaming worse -
1. Being angry or stressed
2. Being tired
3. Walking/cycling/mundane tasks
Surely we daydream because we are not content with reality? Things that help me feel more comfortable in reality include -
1. Thinking back over the day and highlighting the good bits in my mind. Anything from it being a sunny day to having a nice conversation to eating a nice meal.
2. Learning new things - gaining knowlege in a subject of interest
3. Cultivating friendships - these can be on-line as well as face to face
4. Physical excercise - improving fitness makes me happier with myself
5. Eating a good diet
6. Looking after my living space - i always feel better after tidying up.
These are classic self-esteme building things really, but I'm assuming that's what it's all about. Or am i wrong? Do some people have MD without low self esteme??
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