Anxiety disorders and maladaptive daydreaming
Description: How anxiety and maladaptive daydreaming are related - and why daydreaming is often used as an avoidance strategy for anxiety.
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Teaser (Lead)
When anxiety gains the upper hand, many people seek refuge in inner worlds. Maladaptive daydreaming becomes an avoidance strategy - but what brings short-term relief can increase anxiety in the long term. This article sheds light on the complex relationship between anxiety disorders and daydreaming.
Anxiety disorders and maladaptive daydreaming: when daydreaming becomes avoidance
First, read the detailed main article, Maladaptive daydreaming - understanding, treating and overcoming it
, or
The overview "Maladaptive daydreaming - causes, symptoms and help". This topic article examines the interaction between anxiety disorders and maladaptive daydreaming.
1 The functionality of escape: Why anxiety leads to daydreaming
Anxiety disorders and maladaptive daydreaming (MD) show a high co-morbidity of 50-70%. The link is functional: daydreaming serves as a coping mechanism for overwhelming anxiety.
Anxiety → MD:
Avoidance of anxiety-inducing situations by retreating into fantasy worlds
Emotional regulation through controllable daydream scenarios
Reduction of physical anxiety symptoms through distraction
MD → Anxiety:
Reinforcement of anxiety through avoidance learning
Social isolation increases vulnerability to anxiety disorders
Escaping from reality prevents the teaching of coping strategies
2. different anxiety symptoms - different daydream patterns
Generalised anxiety disorder:
Daydreams with controllable, predictable actions
Repetitive, calming fantasies
Avoidance of uncontrollable aspects of reality
Social anxiety disorder:
Daydreams of social competence and acceptance
Extensive "rehearsing" of social situations
Compensation for real social deficits
Panic disorder:
Daydreams as a " haven" during anxiety-ridden episodes
Focusing on controllable body perceptions
Avoidance of physical anxiety symptoms through distraction
3. The vicious circle of avoidance: how anxiety and MD build up
Anxiety triggers lead to discomfort and excessive demands
Retreat into daydreams for short-term relief
Successful avoidance reinforces daydreaming behaviour
Neglect of anxiety-provoking situations
Increased anxiety due to a lack of coping experiences
Increased withdrawal into daydreams
4. Treatment: confrontation instead of avoidance
Therapy approaches for comorbid anxiety and MD:
Exposure therapy: step-by-step confrontation with anxiety-inducing situations
Cognitive restructuring: changing thought patterns that increase anxiety
Mindfulness-based approaches: Accepting fear without avoidance
Reality-orientation training: Transferring daydream resources into reality
Special challenges:
Daydreams as a "safe place" must not be eliminated, but integrated
Gradual reduction of the avoidance function
Development of alternative coping strategies
5th case study: Thomas' way out of avoidance
Initial situation:
Thomas (32) suffers from social anxiety disorder
Daydreams for 3-4 hours a day about successful social interactions
Avoids real social contact completely
Therapy approach:
Exposure training with an ascending hierarchy
Identification of daydream triggers
Transfer of daydream resources into real-life situations
Development of fundamental social skills
Result after 4 months:
Social anxiety was reduced by 60
Daydreaming time reduced to 1 hour per day
Active participation in social activities
FAQ
Can maladaptive daydreaming make anxiety disorders worse?
Yes, through avoidance learning: the more you avoid anxiety-provoking situations, the stronger the anxiety becomes.
Should you give up daydreaming completely?
No, but reduce the avoidance function. Healthy daydreams can even provide resources.
Do anxiety medications also work against MD?
Only indirectly: When anxiety is reduced, the need for avoidance through daydreaming often decreases.
Can MD also be helpful for anxiety disorders?
As a short-term coping strategy, yes, but in the long term, it perpetuates the anxiety.
Where can I find specialised help?
Therapists with expertise in anxiety disorders and a behavioural therapy approach.
If anxiety disorders and maladaptive daydreaming occur at the same time, we recommend cognitive behavioural therapy with a focus on exposure training and reducing avoidance behaviour.