Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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@Mils I’d naturally lost a lot of my interest in the story because a) I was aware for years of the impact MD had on my life, and b) the story got so complex that trying to keep track of all the plotlines was becoming a chore. I was daydreaming less and less each day, only doing it enough to stop the withdrawals. I developed an interest in music production and as I got obsessed with that, trying to learn the technology and music theory and how to express myself through music replaced daydreaming. However, the underlying problems that made me daydream didn’t go away, and when music stopped being enough to distract me from them, I went back to daydreaming and started some new unhealthy coping mechanisms. My period of barely daydreaming at all only lasted about a year and a half. It’s only in the past few years that I’ve finally been addressing the underlying causes of my bad habits.
How were you able to stop it completely??
The 1 andonlyAbber, I’m wondering what negative impact the daydreaming has that causes you to feel it’s nit a good coping mechanism. My understanding is that it’s MD when it disrupts or brings negative consequences. Just curious.
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