My name is Chantelle and I am addicted to writing.
Or at least it feels that way… like a drug, a high, like something I crave for and cannot live without…
It’s always like this but its worse when a new story has truly captured me. Last week I blogged about the reasons people stop writing, and I mentioned that as a child and teenager, I wrote constantly and endlessly, before having a 10-year gap where I barely wrote at all. The way I am now is exactly the way I was as a kid and I recently discovered that it may even be a clinical condition. Maladaptive daydreaming is where people daydream so intensely that they subconsciously leave this world for one of their own creation. Within these made-up worlds, they create characters and storylines that they replay and tweak in their heads for their entire life. One person in this article https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/aug/28/i-just-go-into-my-head-and-enjoy-it-the-people-who-cant-stop-daydreaming described it as like putting Netflix on and I relate to that in a big way.

As a child, I was nicknamed cloth-ears by my parents because it appeared I was never listening. I was the daydreamer, the one never paying attention, the one in her own little world. At some point, around the age of eight, I realised I could write these daydreams or stories down and that’s what I’ve been doing ever since. I am at the mercy of the characters who live in my head and the drama that surrounds them. I identified so strongly with the people in the interview that the only difference between us was that I write my daydreams down and publish them as books! I kind of think these people are missing a trick if they don’t do the same!
I’ve blogged before about The Boy With The Thorn In His Side series, and how the characters grew in my head at the age of twelve. I’d lie in my bed at night and move them around, like watching a film that I was in control of. I still do this now, every night. As that series will soon have a spin-off and a crossover book, I think it’s safe to say that my daydreams truly have control of me. I’m not sure whether I am addicted to writing, or whether I am an intense maladaptive daydreamer, but just in case you are curious, this is what it feels like:
- I can’t stop thinking about my story from morning until night. I wake up with an urge to write and a head load of possible scenes and conversations and then I go to bed and lie awake, dreaming up more. Every night I fall asleep with my characters in my head.
- I can switch between worlds with ease. One moment I will be fully submerged in my created universe, hearing their voices, seeing their movements, picking up on every facial expression or nuanced gesture, and the next I’ll be back in reality, teaching a class, paying for shopping, filling the car up with petrol. My mind seems to know when to switch back without too much disorientation.
- Having said that, I do sometimes find it hard to concentrate on other things and this is especially tricky when I am writing a new story that is going well. Some stories take time and patience and lots of rewriting, whereas some of them just write themselves. Those are the best but they do make it harder to switch between worlds. At the moment, my WIP is completely taking me over to the point of obsession, and I find it is all I can think about. I find myself drifting off into noticeably thicker daydreams when it’s like this…
- I get a nervous feeling in tummy, because I am scared I’ll not do it justice. The story plays out like a film or a TV show in my head and it looks perfect. Perfect locations, settings, characters and dialogue. Fight scenes look flawless yet realistic, dialogue is spot-on, facial expressions are just right and if I could just encapsulate it as it is in my head, it would be perfect. Yet the tricky bit is writing it and trying to make it how it is in my head so that the reader can see what I see. I am never sure I am up to the job and this can make me feel quite anxious at times.
- It feels like having a movie on pause when I’m not writing. When I’m not writing, I feel quite torn away from it, quite lost. It’s like I’ve been forced to put a good book down when I am dying to find out what happens next,. It feels like leaving a movie on pause. They are all just frozen until I can think about it or write it again.
- I can’t wait to get back to it. The frustration I feel when I cannot think about my stories, or write them, is quite awful at times. I don’t really want to live in this world, but I have to. Because of this, I am constantly longing to get back to my world, constantly pining for it and missing it when I’m not there.
Whether I am addicted to writing or just an intense daydreamer who writes them down, I wouldn’t have it any other way. Writing has saved me time and time again and without it I know I would struggle. What about you? Were you nicknamed a daydreamer as a child? Do you still daydream? Do you write them down? Feel free to comment and share!
This is so like the way I work. When it all started, I thought that I was going mad. It’s good to discover that I’m not alone.
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Me too! I have always worried that I am not quite right in the head, but at least now I can understand it better!
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The way I write inspired my novel, Life and Other Dreams.
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I’m enjoying it at the moment! đŸ˜€
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I recently discovered MDD as well and it absolutely sounds like what I’ve experienced my entire life. It’s an addiction to writing as well. I don’t know that I could ever stop! I love everything about the writing process!
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Me too! It definitely does feel like an addiction, at times. I feel quite anxious and agitated if I want to write and I can’t get to it! Thanks so much for reading and commenting!
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I was definitely a daydreamer as a child and I still am today. I’d much rather slip into a world of fiction sometimes. I equate it to putting on a good record and losing yourself in the music. The scenes and characters carry me off and before I know it I’m back in reality hoping nobody noticed I was gone.
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Yes, that’s how it feels – like you’ve gone on a little trip and hope no one noticed! Thank you so much for reading and commenting. Much appreciated!
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I totally identify with this too. I’ve always been a big daydreamer, and I find picturing scenes through my mind first the best way to get the words flowing. Great post, Chantelle.
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Yes, definitely! That’s how it works for me too. Seeing it in my head first and then trying to do it justice in words! Thank you so much!
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đŸ˜€
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You’ve rather wonderfully put this sensation into words, and yeah, it definitely resonates with me. I’ve always been a daydreamer and a writer since I was a child, but I have had many more daydreams than stories, plenty of ideas and characters I never wrote down, and just enjoying envisioning the scenarios anytime I could. Putting them into words was often the hard part, but rewarding when you can get something out of it.
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Yes, me too, Toby!
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