Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
Hello all, this is my first time posting, so please bear with me.
I have been experiencing issues with MD since I can remember (i am now almost 21 years old) and some of my earliest memories are of very vivid, involved and immersive daydreams that were always debilitating in some form. Recently however I have started to research MD more and look through different online support platforms. I am happy to have found this one.
I believe that my own apt to daydream is related to not being able to "shut off" my brain, coupled with the fact that i am someone who tends to think in highly visual ways. Does anyone else feel as if their own MD is related to having a very "active" or "relentless" mind as well as having highly visual thoughts?
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Yes, definetly! I feel exactly the same way. My brain doesn't stop a single moment. And not only for daydreaming. I have plenty of ideas, projects, things I'd like to do and I start doing and not always finish...
Thanks for replying, I know what you mean! I often have lots of ideas, get to the brainstorming process and then move on without actually getting anything done.
I am 21 myself and I can definitely relate, because my daydreaming is less an activity and just the setting my brain defaults to nowadays when I am not concentrating on anything. The moment something doesn't command my attention, I am gone. But I was just diagnosed with inattentive-type ADHD a year or two ago and finally after many misdiagnoses I think they got it right. Not saying that's your problem just sharing what mine is. I was previously misdiagnosed with bipolar so they would write off my brain not shutting off as mania and insomnia.
I also associate this with gifted intelligence. Because I was always really smart but had trouble with procrastination and homework, I never had the grades for advanced courses but I would have done a lot better in them. I was and still am in college way ahead of the other students so I'm always incredibly bored. It's easy for a daydream problem to start and continue when I found I could daydream the entire class period and still pass the tests.
When I have the overactive brain problem too badly, I do one of the activities I've found that at least slow down/focus my brain. Things like showering, exercise, meditation, etc. It doesn't shut my brain off but it helps me to only think about one thing at a time instead of waterfalls of things. That or I self-medicate which I obviously can't recommend.
It' s like watching a movie with yourself in it on a continuous loop. I've done this ever since I can remember, and I'm 50! I think the key to not letting it get debilitating is the ability to daydream while doing other things. I have found that zoloft helps some, it makes it easier to control the daydream and put it on pause when need be, without completely making it go away. I'm weird- I'd miss my "other life" if it went away completely.
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