Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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Self-negation. You are so far removed from yourself that you can't even daydream about anything involving you. Otherwise it breaks the illusion.
It's quite common.
I am the same way! I started at age 7ish and it was never about me. The characters don't live my life and while they share some qualities, they aren't some kind of manifestation of myself. I don't have low self-esteem (maybe when I was younger but not anymore) and I'm very intuitive and introverted. I am very in touch with myself so I don't think it's about that.
I did always hate suburbia where I was grew up and found it so... boring. The easiest way was to create a new world and new characters, kind of like a movie, just I control it. I prefer it that way. I think if I daydreamed about myself I'd always let myself down.
The name of my main daydream's main character is Jen, and she is definitely not me. I started daydreaming when I was seven, and I would say that when I started I daydreamed as an idealized version of myself. But around when my current main daydream started to form, things changed. Before my current daydream, I daydreamed about similar but different scenarios, but around 13 I managed to stick with one. Jen developed along with the daydream. About when I was fourteen she really became herself. I have other minor daydreams, and all except one have main characters who aren't me.
I DD about fictional characters, it has rarely been about me.
I notice that we have similar daydreams also. and a similar story!
I started when I was younger than six years old, I can't remember exactly when, but I used to imagine adventures about my favourite cartoon characters.
It started like that, and then it got worse during the years. Family has always been an important theme in my DDs, happy families with cool loving parents and happy kids, romantic love stories, dinasties...
We share similar DDs themes: they're not about ourselves and they revolve around family and love.
All my DD's are about fictional characters and never about me. Mine are usually with characters from movies, anime, books, and TV shows.
I have similar DD's as you, as well as similar stories!
I think it has a lot to do with dissociation and coping.
Why do you think it has something to do with dissociation?
Nevv said:
I think it has a lot to do with dissociation and coping.
We're basically saying the exact same thing, Alison. I just need to clarify it a bit. Feeling emotions through somebody else is not a problem in itself. It is how artists and writers function. You're extending yourself through your artistic works or through your written characters and it would be pretty wrong to say that it's not normal to feel empathy with or through these phenomena. But that's not self-negation. That's the exact opposite of self-negation.
MD never creates self-negation. On the contrary, MD is born out of self-negation as a mechanism against it, a tool to temporarily come in touch with yourself through your characters. So, MD is in a way an attempt of something good and therapeutic that ultimately goes wrong because of too much self-inhibition.
Daydreaming is not a problem. Feeling through others is not a problem. Wasting countless hours is not a problem. Addiction is. And addiction is always created when one cannot express feelings directly and instead has to transform that feeling to something else. When you're angry at your boyfriend and want to hit him for cheating on you, hitting a wall instead helps you express that anger. Because by hitting a wall, you yourself are expressing an emotion. You're letting it out. But when you daydream about hitting him, there's no letting out anymore. You're containing it inside you to hurt you and you alone and that's self-inhibition. If on the other side, you use your characters to process and feel pain that you can't feel on your own skin for the time being, that's somewhat positive - but eventually, you'll have to face it yourself. Otherwise, it remains forever negative.
Agreed. I know you didn't say daydreaming through others was a problem - I was actually expanding and referring to my own statement where I implied that self-negation is a problem - and I just added that daydreaming through others isn't since it doesn't necessarily involve self-negation. So, I was basically reaffirming what you said about that girl coming in touch with the pain through her characters. I just wouldn't call that type of daydreaming a form of self-negation since the fantasy is therapeutic here and, through her characters, she is slowly consolidating pain with the self. But this could also easily backfire.
Anyway, to sum up, while a guy having sexual fantasies about two girls says nothing about self negation (lol), I would argue, however, that level of self-negation/self-inhibition is proportional to the level of addiction. If you're addicted to that fantasy, then we know for sure (from psychodynamic psychology) that there's some sort of self-inhibition going on. If not, you're fine. :)
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