There is an interesting thing about daydreaming and fantasy: Sometimes it works to manifest what you want in life, and other times it keeps you stuck in your life. What makes the difference?
The difference has to do with your intent. Are you consciously imagining what you want from a place of inner connection and joy, or are you using daydreaming and fantasy to avoid your feelings and avoid reality?
When you consciously and joyously imagine what you want, you are participating in creating what you want. However, when you use fantasy and daydreaming as a way of avoiding your feelings and avoiding the reality of a situation, you are using them addictively.
For example: Fred did not like how he felt most of the time when he was aware of his feelings, so as soon as he felt badly he would immediately move into daydreaming. He would daydream about beautiful women or being a famous sports hero. As with any addiction, he would feel good while he was daydreaming, but because he was abandoning himself by avoiding taking responsibility for his feelings, he would end up feeling empty inside.
This painful inner abandonment was what Fred felt much of the time. Daydreaming became the major way he abandoned himself and the major cause of his pain. The thing he was using to avoid his pain was causing his pain. And it was a progressive disease. The more he daydreamed, the less present he was and the worse he felt. Until Fred became willing to feel his pain and take responsibility for it, he was stuck in his addictive pattern.
Beth was addicted to fantasy. When she met a man she liked, she would fantasize about him, making him up into whom she wanted him to be. Instead of staying present and getting to know him, she would make him up and then act with him as if whom she made up was the reality.
Over and over, Beth ended up getting hurt by men because they were not conforming to her fantasy of them. For example, when she met Dennis, she was immediately attracted to him. When he came over and talked to her at her friend’s wedding, she instantly decided that he really liked her. After the wedding, she started to make him up and “fell in love” with whom she made up. By the time Dennis called her for a date, she was already “in love” with him and had made up that he was in love with her. When he didn’t call for a second date, she was devastated. That’s when she set up a phone session with me.
She spoke about how abandoned she felt by Dennis. It took some time for Beth to understand that there was no external abandonment occurring — that it was Beth who was abandoning herself. Instead of staying connected with herself and with reality, Beth was handing responsibility over to any man she was attracted to and making up his attraction to her. Until she decided to learn to give herself the love and attention that she was always trying to get from a man, she would continue to be addicted to fantasy.
It is fascinating to me that the same behavior can have totally different outcomes depending on the intent. Just as we can use meditation to connect or to avoid our feelings, so can we use fantasy and daydreaming to manifest what we want or to abandon ourselves by avoiding responsibility for our feelings. Being aware of our intent to learn to love ourselves or to avoid responsibility for our feelings has far-reaching effects on our lives.
So really, Day Dreaming, is that a crime?
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