Maladaptive Daydreaming: where wild minds come to rest
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Hi Felicity. I have read your post, but I am replying to a quote from your comment to Jessica. Sorry to cut in like that.
> Am I not that creative? Which leads me to question: what would I like to be better about myself? How would I like people to see me based on the way I really am? What practices can help me be healthier physically, more beautiful, sexier, more interesting as a whole? Can't I use all this creativity to earn money and give life to this pile of things that I have nowhere to put?
All of these questions refer to a different area of life that you need to manage.
First, you are very creative. If you were not creative, you would not be coping with your trauma by making up stories in your head. If you were not creative, you would choose a completely different stimulation to keep you going.
Only you know what you can make you feel better about yourself (I believe that is what you mean?). It is about self-exploration and mindfulness. You are the only person who knows the answer to that question, even if you think you do not.
The same goes for how other people perceive you. Only you know. However, it should be the least of your concerns. Don't rely on the opinions of others. It will be biased and will be a fleeting impression of you most of the time. Other people are unreliable because they don't know what you are going through, just like you don't know what they are dealing with. It is a lose-lose situation.
The best practice to change your relationship with daydreaming is journalling. It doesn't have to be anything fancy. You grab a very thick, cheapest notebook you can find in a supermarket and clock in every daydreaming episode. Describe what happened there, then reflect on what triggered it, and how you felt before the episode and after. Maybe you aren't comfortable with handwriting, in that case just type it on a keyboard. The device doesn't matter as long as you write about it.
Whether to use this creativity or not is entirely up to you. If you don't want to profit from it, that's okay. But you need to record somewhere to start progressing.
Hope some of it helps.
I believed so much in my imagination, though knew deeply that it will never match up to reality. I've always faced the same problems of being socially awkward, very quiet, kind of shy, and unable to develop long-term meaningful relationships. Being 38, I feel that life just passed me by, and didn't ever get to experience the things I wanted to experience, because I was always daydreaming and didn't commit to resolving my socially challenged ways. I never had a big circle of friends or any BF's, and I was closer to my imagination, even if it wasn't REAL.
I'm awake now, but I have so much work to do. I have to seriously improve every aspect of myself, something that I should've done eons ago. Meanwhile time is ticking, and I'm not seeing the life experiences I should've seen, if it weren't for the fact I've been so downright weird and taking trip to Europa. I've even noticed that everybody else is much happier than me for reasons like, they knew exactly what they were doing, and of course, they lived on earth. Point is I started doing MD, because like you, I wanted to be somebody else. And in my imagination, I was a much better and idealistic kind of woman. I was a hero in fictional life.
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