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Understanding the lived experience of maladaptive daydreaming

  • Amy Lucas

    Student thesis: DClinPsych

    Abstract

    Section A: Maladaptive Daydreaming (MD) is a distressful phenomenon with limited
    understanding and recognition, which leads to controversy regarding potential
    diagnostic classification. This literature review systematically investigated research
    prioritising the voices and lived experiences of people who identify with MD. Findings
    relate to quality of daydreaming and fantasy content, pervasion and absorption,
    compensatory fantasy themes, emotional salience in fantasy, dependence, impact on
    health and functioning, secrecy, and challenges with help-seeking. Implications for
    practice and future research are discussed.

    Section B: Fantasy in MD can include both positive and aversive content, yet little
    research has investigated aversive fantasy. The latter raises potentially important
    questions regarding its seemingly pleasurable, compulsive, and addictive nature. This
    study explored the experience of MD for people who engage in aversive fantasy.
    Findings illustrate three superordinate themes (a lonely adventure, seeking safety, and
    torn between worlds) and seven subthemes (ineffability of daydreaming, intrinsic part
    of being, is there something wrong with me, managing the world, dealing with negative
    emotion, a life of its own, and fantasy battles reality). Benign masochism may be one
    way to interpret outcomes, highlighting a potential subtype of MD (MD-AF) with
    unique emotion regulation factors. This is discussed in relation to research and clinical
    implications.

    Date of Award2021
    Original languageEnglish

    Keywords

    • Maladaptive daydreaming
    • Lived experience

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