Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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Hello Jessica.
Your story reminds me of a book I once saw by Teal Swan, "Healing..... Loneliness" or something of that sort. It is not a book I would recommend for people who have MD generally, especially because it lacks ALL kind of grounding in science or established therapies and wildly goes exploring into MD, without calling it that, to create scenarios that might provide solutions to other issues.
However, it might give you a hint on how to cope with the new sort of interaction with your MD characters. Her main point is that a character is created in a certain scenario to portray an aspect of your mind and make it more accessible to you. She tries to explain how to create such characters, and find their scenario, and access it more easily, but you've done that essentially already.
Next, she argues that you need to "talk" to the characters, and ask them about their issues and how you can help them. Sometimes, the characters could connect and solve the problems that way. In her self-help construct, Swan intends to unearth buried conflicts and feelings and give you a storytelling possibility to identify the issues and buried feelings and maybe solve them.
If I may post some unsolicited advice, try out just that: ask the MD characters what their wish is. Maybe you can solve it, and give them some respite in trying to reach you. In the end, all of this, all the characters that wish you well and that you want to succeed, drenched in guilt, are you. You wish yourself well. You want to solve your problems. You want to find a solution for yourself. You feel sad for yourself. You lend yourself a shoulder to cry on. I hope you'll succeed to find out what really bugs your characters, what really is the problems behind the facade that is their stories, and I believe they will eagerly tell you, without trying to constrict you even more into MD.
So of course, if you silence your characters, you feel like you silence a piece of yourself, as if you 'lose yourself'. That phrase you posted really reminds me of Eretaia's posts. Have a look, her words have a way of burrowing into your mind and making you understand like no other.
Habits? Nah, nail biting hurts like hell. I liked to take long walks, jog, browse picture websites, cook or paint.
PS. Don't read Swan's book, read Eretaia if you want to make heads and tails of your MD. Her insight is more powerful, on one hand, and on the other hand Swan's has a risk to make you enamored with MD, even if the first part actually helps.
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