Post by Dimmer on Jun 25, 2019 18:34:30 GMT
I made a Glossary of terms commonly found in the MD community (the source links didn't carry over from my google doc and I'm too lazy to go back through and add them one by one, I'll leave a link to the google doc in the comments)
Note: Some of the following were coined by the MD community and definitions may not be found via traditional sources. Some terms are defined by their relevance to MD(eg. kinesthetic activity), wider definitions may be found elsewhere.
Acronyms
AU Alternate Universe
CBT Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
CF Compulsive Fantasy
ConLang Constructed Language
DD Daydream
ICMDR International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research
ID Immersive Daydreaming
IDer Immersive Daydreamer
MaDD Maladaptive Daydreaming Disorder (this is a Tumblr tag which people sometimes use in place of ‘MD’)
MD Maladaptive Daydreaming
MDer Maladaptive Daydreamer
MDS Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale
OC Original Character
SelfDx Self Diagnosed
Note: MDD (Major Depressive Disorder) is sometimes mistakenly used as an acronym for Maladaptive Daydreaming.
Adaptive [Behavior] (source) Actions, skills, and behaviors that humans develop and use in order to perform basic skills, be able to cope with novel situations.
Alternate Universe (source) A descriptor borrowed from fanfic communities used to characterize works which change one or more elements of the source work's canon. An AU may transplant a given source work's characters to a radically different setting, shift the genre in which their adventures occur, and/or alter one or more of their professions, goals, or backstories.
Behavioral Addiction (source) A non-substance addiction, related to Impulse Control Disorder, a repeated failure to resist an impulse, drive or urge to perform an act that is rewarding to the person, in the short-term, despite long-term harm to the individual or others.
Benign Masochism (source) An enjoyment of negative sensations and feelings thought to be possible in the context of feeling safe and reflecting pleasure at mind over body. MDers report actively seeking the experience of aversive emotions. See also hedonic reversal
Constructed Language (source) An artificial language, for example one invented for a film, TV series, or book.
[Daydream] Binge (source) An occasion when an activity is done in an extreme way.
[Daydream] Block (citation needed) Term adapted from ‘writers block’. A temporary state during which the MDer experiences an inability to create or proceed with their fantasy plot, sometimes resulting in a distressing failure to immerse themselves in daydreaming as they are accustomed to.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (source) A common type of talk therapy (psychotherapy aimed at helping you become aware of inaccurate or negative thinking so you can view challenging situations more clearly and respond to them in a more effective way. MD researchers currently recommend CBT to address problematic daydreaming behavior.
Compulsive Fantasy (source) Coined by researchers in one paper which asserted that Compulsive Fantasy was a more accurate description of subjects experience than Maladaptive Daydreaming. See also Maladaptive Daydreaming, Daydreaming Disorder (MD)
Coping Skill/Strategy/Mechanism (source) To invest one’s own conscious effort to solve personal and interpersonal problems, in order to try to master, minimize or tolerate stress and conflict. Can be adaptive or maladaptive.
[Daydream] Crash (source) When a person comes down from their daydream world or escapism and reality hits them. Alternatively, when daydreams no longer have the same effect they used to, and the MDer has to prolong that good feeling by revisiting their escapism or face negative experiences associated with facing reality.
Daydream (source) Typically begins spontaneously and is experienced as an ongoing series of brief associated thoughts or images triggered by internal or external stimuli or cues and deals most often with current life concerns.
Daydreaming Disorder (MD) (source) Official name of Maladaptive Daydreaming; Extensive fantasy activity that replaces human interaction and/or interferes with academic, interpersonal, or vocational functioning. See also Compulsive Fantasy, Maladaptive Daydreaming
Default Mode Network (source) A group of brain regions that show lower levels of activity when we are engaged in a particular task like paying attention, but higher levels of activity when we are awake and not involved in any specific mental exercise. It is during these times that we might be daydreaming.
Diminished Motivation (citation needed) Characterized by impairment in goal-directed behavior, thought, and emotion.
Dissociative Absorption (citation needed) A tendency to become absorbed in imagination or in an external stimulus to the point of obliviousness to one’s surroundings and reduced self-awareness.
Distress (source) Occurs when we have excessive adaptive demands placed upon us; the demands upon us are so great that they lead to bodily and mental damage. Distress is damaging, excessive or pathogenic (disease producing) stress. Required for a ‘diagnosis’ of MD.
Faceclaim (source) A term used in role play games to describe a person used for the physical description of a character. Some MDers note that they used the faces of TV characters, actors or public figures to create their fantasies.
Fantasy (source) May be an elected pastime; elaborate and continuous, composed of pure imagination and directed at self-amusement, pleasure, distraction and escape.
Fantasy Prone Personality FPP (source) A unique constellation of personality traits and experiences that coalesced around a deep, profound and long-standing involvement in fantasy and imagination.
Hedonic Reversal (source) An enjoyment of negative sensations and feelings thought to be possible in the context of feeling safe and reflecting pleasure at mind over body. MDers report actively seeking the experience of aversive emotions. See also benign masochism
Idealized-Self (source) An Idealized version of yourself created out of what you have learned from your life experiences, the demands of society, and what you admire in your role models.
International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research (source) Website designed to promote scientific knowledge on MD by fostering studies on the developmental trajectories, phenomenology, psychopathology, brain function and treatment of MD. Also to understand the trait of immersive daydreaming, the non-pathological form of absorptive daydreaming, and its psychological and brain features.
Immersive Daydreaming (source) Fantasizing in a state of dissociative absorption, which is not inherently disordered or maladaptive. MD represents a subset of Immersive Daydreaming.
Kinesthetic Activity (source) Movement which stimulates or prolongs an MDer’s fantasy state.
Maladaptive [Behavior] (source) Actions or tendencies that don't allow an individual to adjust well to certain situations. Typically disruptive and dysfunctional behaviors can range from mild to severe in scope, used as a means of reducing mental discomfort and anxiety but are not effective and can sometimes make it worse.
Maladaptive Daydreaming (source) Extensive fantasy activity that replaces human interaction and/or interferes with academic, interpersonal, or vocational functioning.
Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale MDS-16 (source) A 16-item self-report MD questionnaire that is rated on a 10-point Likert scale presented as percentages, designed to gauge abnormal fantasizing.
Mind Wandering (source) A shift in attention that can occur without explicit or deliberate intention but which nonetheless incorporates goal-relevant internal information.
Mindfulness (source) A state of active, open attention on the present. MD researchers recommend mindfulness techniques to curb problematic daydreaming behavior.
Original Character OC (source) Any character which is not infringing on a person or party’s copyright; a character who is not already in existence or an edit of an already existing character.
Pace/Pacer (source) Walk at a steady and consistent speed, especially back and forth and as an expression of one's anxiety or annoyance. Most common movement among MDers, other movements include jumping, swinging, hand movements etc. See also kinesthetic movement, stereotypic movement.
Para (source) Any character in a paracosm, typically one the MDer has an emotional attachment to.
Paracosm (source) A detailed imaginary world, often originating in childhood.
Parame (source) The character one MDs as. May or may not also be the paraself.
Para(girlfriend/husband/brother/mother etc) (source)The girlfriend/husband/brother/mother etc of ones parame.
Paraself (source) The daydream version of the MDer’s self.
Reality Monitoring/Testing (source) The psychotherapeutic function by which the objective or real world and one's relationship to it are reflected on and evaluated by the observer. MDers retain intact reality monitoring and can easily distinguish fantasy from reality.
Self Diagnosed (source) the diagnosis of one's own health problems, usually without direction or assistance from a physician. MD is not recognized as an official disorder, most MDers are self-diagnosed.
Somer, Eli (source) The clinical psychologist who discovered MD and coined the term “maladaptive daydreaming”, director of the ICMDR.
Stereotypic Movement (source) Repetitive, nonfunctional, motor behavior that markedly interferes with normal activities or results in bodily injury.
Note: Some of the following were coined by the MD community and definitions may not be found via traditional sources. Some terms are defined by their relevance to MD(eg. kinesthetic activity), wider definitions may be found elsewhere.
Acronyms
AU Alternate Universe
CBT Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
CF Compulsive Fantasy
ConLang Constructed Language
DD Daydream
ICMDR International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research
ID Immersive Daydreaming
IDer Immersive Daydreamer
MaDD Maladaptive Daydreaming Disorder (this is a Tumblr tag which people sometimes use in place of ‘MD’)
MD Maladaptive Daydreaming
MDer Maladaptive Daydreamer
MDS Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale
OC Original Character
SelfDx Self Diagnosed
Note: MDD (Major Depressive Disorder) is sometimes mistakenly used as an acronym for Maladaptive Daydreaming.
Adaptive [Behavior] (source) Actions, skills, and behaviors that humans develop and use in order to perform basic skills, be able to cope with novel situations.
Alternate Universe (source) A descriptor borrowed from fanfic communities used to characterize works which change one or more elements of the source work's canon. An AU may transplant a given source work's characters to a radically different setting, shift the genre in which their adventures occur, and/or alter one or more of their professions, goals, or backstories.
Behavioral Addiction (source) A non-substance addiction, related to Impulse Control Disorder, a repeated failure to resist an impulse, drive or urge to perform an act that is rewarding to the person, in the short-term, despite long-term harm to the individual or others.
Benign Masochism (source) An enjoyment of negative sensations and feelings thought to be possible in the context of feeling safe and reflecting pleasure at mind over body. MDers report actively seeking the experience of aversive emotions. See also hedonic reversal
Constructed Language (source) An artificial language, for example one invented for a film, TV series, or book.
[Daydream] Binge (source) An occasion when an activity is done in an extreme way.
[Daydream] Block (citation needed) Term adapted from ‘writers block’. A temporary state during which the MDer experiences an inability to create or proceed with their fantasy plot, sometimes resulting in a distressing failure to immerse themselves in daydreaming as they are accustomed to.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (source) A common type of talk therapy (psychotherapy aimed at helping you become aware of inaccurate or negative thinking so you can view challenging situations more clearly and respond to them in a more effective way. MD researchers currently recommend CBT to address problematic daydreaming behavior.
Compulsive Fantasy (source) Coined by researchers in one paper which asserted that Compulsive Fantasy was a more accurate description of subjects experience than Maladaptive Daydreaming. See also Maladaptive Daydreaming, Daydreaming Disorder (MD)
Coping Skill/Strategy/Mechanism (source) To invest one’s own conscious effort to solve personal and interpersonal problems, in order to try to master, minimize or tolerate stress and conflict. Can be adaptive or maladaptive.
[Daydream] Crash (source) When a person comes down from their daydream world or escapism and reality hits them. Alternatively, when daydreams no longer have the same effect they used to, and the MDer has to prolong that good feeling by revisiting their escapism or face negative experiences associated with facing reality.
Daydream (source) Typically begins spontaneously and is experienced as an ongoing series of brief associated thoughts or images triggered by internal or external stimuli or cues and deals most often with current life concerns.
Daydreaming Disorder (MD) (source) Official name of Maladaptive Daydreaming; Extensive fantasy activity that replaces human interaction and/or interferes with academic, interpersonal, or vocational functioning. See also Compulsive Fantasy, Maladaptive Daydreaming
Default Mode Network (source) A group of brain regions that show lower levels of activity when we are engaged in a particular task like paying attention, but higher levels of activity when we are awake and not involved in any specific mental exercise. It is during these times that we might be daydreaming.
Diminished Motivation (citation needed) Characterized by impairment in goal-directed behavior, thought, and emotion.
Dissociative Absorption (citation needed) A tendency to become absorbed in imagination or in an external stimulus to the point of obliviousness to one’s surroundings and reduced self-awareness.
Distress (source) Occurs when we have excessive adaptive demands placed upon us; the demands upon us are so great that they lead to bodily and mental damage. Distress is damaging, excessive or pathogenic (disease producing) stress. Required for a ‘diagnosis’ of MD.
Faceclaim (source) A term used in role play games to describe a person used for the physical description of a character. Some MDers note that they used the faces of TV characters, actors or public figures to create their fantasies.
Fantasy (source) May be an elected pastime; elaborate and continuous, composed of pure imagination and directed at self-amusement, pleasure, distraction and escape.
Fantasy Prone Personality FPP (source) A unique constellation of personality traits and experiences that coalesced around a deep, profound and long-standing involvement in fantasy and imagination.
Hedonic Reversal (source) An enjoyment of negative sensations and feelings thought to be possible in the context of feeling safe and reflecting pleasure at mind over body. MDers report actively seeking the experience of aversive emotions. See also benign masochism
Idealized-Self (source) An Idealized version of yourself created out of what you have learned from your life experiences, the demands of society, and what you admire in your role models.
International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research (source) Website designed to promote scientific knowledge on MD by fostering studies on the developmental trajectories, phenomenology, psychopathology, brain function and treatment of MD. Also to understand the trait of immersive daydreaming, the non-pathological form of absorptive daydreaming, and its psychological and brain features.
Immersive Daydreaming (source) Fantasizing in a state of dissociative absorption, which is not inherently disordered or maladaptive. MD represents a subset of Immersive Daydreaming.
Kinesthetic Activity (source) Movement which stimulates or prolongs an MDer’s fantasy state.
Maladaptive [Behavior] (source) Actions or tendencies that don't allow an individual to adjust well to certain situations. Typically disruptive and dysfunctional behaviors can range from mild to severe in scope, used as a means of reducing mental discomfort and anxiety but are not effective and can sometimes make it worse.
Maladaptive Daydreaming (source) Extensive fantasy activity that replaces human interaction and/or interferes with academic, interpersonal, or vocational functioning.
Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale MDS-16 (source) A 16-item self-report MD questionnaire that is rated on a 10-point Likert scale presented as percentages, designed to gauge abnormal fantasizing.
Mind Wandering (source) A shift in attention that can occur without explicit or deliberate intention but which nonetheless incorporates goal-relevant internal information.
Mindfulness (source) A state of active, open attention on the present. MD researchers recommend mindfulness techniques to curb problematic daydreaming behavior.
Original Character OC (source) Any character which is not infringing on a person or party’s copyright; a character who is not already in existence or an edit of an already existing character.
Pace/Pacer (source) Walk at a steady and consistent speed, especially back and forth and as an expression of one's anxiety or annoyance. Most common movement among MDers, other movements include jumping, swinging, hand movements etc. See also kinesthetic movement, stereotypic movement.
Para (source) Any character in a paracosm, typically one the MDer has an emotional attachment to.
Paracosm (source) A detailed imaginary world, often originating in childhood.
Parame (source) The character one MDs as. May or may not also be the paraself.
Para(girlfriend/husband/brother/mother etc) (source)The girlfriend/husband/brother/mother etc of ones parame.
Paraself (source) The daydream version of the MDer’s self.
Reality Monitoring/Testing (source) The psychotherapeutic function by which the objective or real world and one's relationship to it are reflected on and evaluated by the observer. MDers retain intact reality monitoring and can easily distinguish fantasy from reality.
Self Diagnosed (source) the diagnosis of one's own health problems, usually without direction or assistance from a physician. MD is not recognized as an official disorder, most MDers are self-diagnosed.
Somer, Eli (source) The clinical psychologist who discovered MD and coined the term “maladaptive daydreaming”, director of the ICMDR.
Stereotypic Movement (source) Repetitive, nonfunctional, motor behavior that markedly interferes with normal activities or results in bodily injury.