What do I like? I love to daydream. Vanish into another world that only I know about. Escape from the struggles of reality and breathe easy knowing that nothing is wrong anymore. Everything is OK. I can picture a paradise, and fall deep into the unexplored realm of imagination. I can be separated form those I need no company from, and become closer with the people I want to love. The test tomorrow would disappear, and in it’s place would be adventure and a different life. A different life. An unattainable postulation, but a desirable one. A daydream can transport you away from stress and bring you to a life that you know deep down that you need to attain to feel at peace. A daydream can be a reflection of hope, and true sign that you’re mind is crying out for something that reality cannot provide you. If you want to fly, spread your wings and go. You have nothing to hold you back.
I am not merely daydreaming. This is my introverted escape from socialisation, which has always been my secret fear. While the rest of the world seeks contact, I withdraw. Even though relationships are important to me, I neither need nor desire the same amount of social contact as some. Instead, I thrive on solitude. The time that I have spent alone has shaped me more than relationships have.
Sometimes it seems as though I have lived half my life through books. Reading has been a passion ever since the revelation that the symbols in my beloved storybooks formed words, and I could decipher the magical code and unlock the mysteries in the pages. I still greedily devour books. The words lure me in and I find myself entering the life of another. Books are my doorways. I can open them at will and in doing so step out of the tribulations of my life into a place distant and foreign. Through this, I gain wisdom I might never have gotten otherwise – at least not without the personal pain that usually comes with the acquisition of such knowledge. Reading has contributed to both my moral values and my imagination.
I have found that some of my best thinking happens just before I fall asleep. The doors to my subconscious are not as tightly shut then, and the things that I was too fearful of while awake are more able to enter my consciousness.
I relish the time I am given to relinquish the anxiety of my day and make use of the silence that grants me the ability to hear myself.
Introspection is essential to me; it saves me from when I feel like my outward self is just a clown, dressed up in a way that is both silly and grotesque. At these times, if I can uncover the truth buried in layers of falsity, I can retain my sense of identity. Lying in bed and searching for truth within, I patch together the pieces of me like a quilt. I will never stop stitching.
The more that I become in touch with myself, the more I discover that all my emotions, passion and dreams need an outlet. I have found that through writing, I am able to loosen my creative spirit and let it fly.
When I write, my concentration deepens much like it does when I read, though writing requires more effort. But I am rewarded when I see something beautiful beginning to take shape. Even I often do not know where I am headed; inspiration may strike and cause me to veer off my intended course. Writing brings out parts of me that I was unaware of, expresses things I didn’t know I felt, mirrors the mysteries that make up the deepest crevices of my being. By devoting my hours of solitude to writing, I have uncovered some of my own secrets.
I am by nature a solitary person. I have spent a significant portion of my life alone, both physically and mentally, because it frees me from the complications of interacting with others and helps me to understand my personality. Without this time in individual activity, I cannot imagine I would have become the person I am today. That is why when I grow tired of being with others, I look forward to the relief that comes with solitude.
8 comments
What about that feeling you get just before you’re fully awake? That shadowy dawn between sleep and waking consciousness. You can’t feel your body, you’re not sure of where you are, there is no noise, no distractions, just a calm stillness. Stress and worry are light years away. In that moment there is nothing but tranquil bliss. Anything is possible, but there’s nothing you want except for that sublime feeling to last as long as possible.
That’s usually when the alarm clock goes off.
@C4: I’ve had the nightmare version of what you are describing. My first time between consciousness and unconsciousness was when I had a fever as a child. I could see the world, but my identity was obliterated. My first experience of the abyss….
@Sasquatch; That sounds rough, I wouldn’t wish that for my worst enemy. Fear and pain are nonexistent in the state I was describing.
@Pum; I enjoy reading your stuff. Thank you.
I have always been exactly like this… I could and do sleep days away sometimes not sleeping but just laying around, thinking, dreaming, reading, watching about worlds away… never thought anyone would get me but wether its reading, dreaming, or watching something i get so attatched to the other world that while im zoned out its like that other world IS my life. I can finally live something im happy to live through… i have friends but i only talk to them in school.. outside i keep to myself not even touching my phone, people could say that seems lonley but ive never once felt unhappy when im alone its always when im surrounded by other people that makes me a wreck.
I agree with you C4: Pum writes good, thought-provoking posts.
I remember the feeling of isolating yourself in books… i used to do that all the time when i was younger (10-17)… it would always help me to escape reality, and sometimes i would read things i didn’t even like in order to learn something… and now that you mention all that in your post i wish i never would have break out of that “shell”… everything seemed easier and less painful back then 🙂
I love day dreaming too. I like to day dream while taking walks to the fields or to a forest. Drawing and listening to music and getting lost to some other place is nice too. Personally I don’t do it to escape from socialisation, but on the opposite I can sometimes use it to escape loneliness.
hmmm. i love (or maybe used to love) speculating. making wild theories about mind, life and universe. that’s my type of daydreaming. that’s my type of escape.