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Was I a fucked up kid? Thinking of a freaky thing I used to do.

79 replies

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:09

Something that's been bugging me for a while, which I only started thinking about seriously over the past year or so, as prior to that it was just "something that I did".

When I was a child, and I mean since I can pretty much remember, so young, I used to do this thing to myself when I would induce what I can only describe as a state of disassociation. I achieved it by repeating to myself the words "I can't believe I'm here, I can't believe I'm here" over and over again until I was taken over by the intense feeling of not being present in my surroundings - I suppose I can explain it as like the real world was a movie which I didn't feature in. In hindsight it was a very bizarre thing to do, and I did it often as a child.

I can still induce the same feeling on demand, but it scares me now, so I don't.

Has anyone else done this? Come across anyone who did or does this?

OP posts:
FatimaWhippedRed · 07/01/2024 14:16

I actually DO know someone who did this but it was more a case of her needing to escape reality during tough times. She swears she really could force herself to leave reality when needed.

Faffette · 07/01/2024 14:19

Omg! I did. I used to say to myself "why me". It was very strange. One time I felt like I was leaving my body. I was in the kitchen buttering a slice of bread. It scared me so much, I called out to my mum. Too scared to try again after that. I sometimes wonder whether I should try again.

Foxglovesandprimroses · 07/01/2024 14:19

As a child, I used to deliberately make myself remember snapshots of the present. I can still recall my exact feelings and surroundings many decades later. Nothing remarkable - once I was sitting on the loo on a sunny day!

SequoiaTree · 07/01/2024 14:20

A friend suffers from this. She was beaten as a child and had a stressful childhood with bullying at school as well as by her mum.

Faffette · 07/01/2024 14:21

It's interesting that the words you told yourself are so similar to mine. @inigomontoyahwillcox

Devilsmommy · 07/01/2024 14:21

It's akin to what happens when you properly meditate. It must be so cool to be able to do it that quick😁

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:22

Faffette · 07/01/2024 14:21

It's interesting that the words you told yourself are so similar to mine. @inigomontoyahwillcox

That does sound d very similar.

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RoughAsABadgersArse · 07/01/2024 14:23

I had this but it just happens, not something that I make happen

Still happens now, i think it is panic attacks

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:23

I did have a bit of a rough childhood - draconian father who used his hands/belt a lot. Wonder if that was anything to do with it.

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User1775 · 07/01/2024 14:23

I used to do this and it morphed into maladaptive daydreaming when I was about 7, which I still do.

Disguisedasnormal · 07/01/2024 14:24

I used to do this every morning as I hated school so much. I’d totally zone out in the playground and disassociate in order to cope but I’d often be unable to come back out of it for hours . I was diagnosed with autism not long after it started

Tempytempy · 07/01/2024 14:24

It’s commoner in people who have had a traumatic childhood, does that apply to you?

@Devilsmommy I think this is actually the opposite of what most kinds of meditation are supposed to do, dissociation isn’t a good thing really.

Silverbirchtwo · 07/01/2024 14:24

Sounds like self hypnosis, repeating phrases is one way to get into a hypnotic state. Much like dreaming while awake.

MooQuackNeigh · 07/01/2024 14:24

I have a couple of distinct memories of sitting on the carpet at school (it was year 2 so I was 6or7) and feeling like I was looking at everything through a portal and I was somewhere else or like I was watch TV or something. It happened a few times but less as an adult. I'm (probably) neurodivergent so always assume it was a result of my autism retrospectively. Are you NT op?

I don't know if it is related or normal at all but I had an extreme dissacociative experience in labour with my second child. I was induced and epidural stopped working. I was observing myself screaming in pain to the point that I was laughing at myself internally about how bizzare the situation was. Felt like it lasted a minute when it was over an hour.

GeneCity · 07/01/2024 14:25

I could do this as a child as well, and think I probably still could. It's quite scary though - I ramener having to think of familiar things to get back if that makes sense.

And yeah, sub-optimal childhood too.

ToBeOrNotToBee · 07/01/2024 14:25

I used to do something very similar, it was a way of dissociating from an abusive childhood.
I also used to be able to completely empty my mind as in think nothing, completely quiet everything down. It was a way of controlling something when everything else was out of my control.
I recently went througha spell of acute anxiety and I realised these things I used to do were coping mechanisms of an anxious child.
I'm a lot more kind to myself now I understand.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:26

MooQuackNeigh · 07/01/2024 14:24

I have a couple of distinct memories of sitting on the carpet at school (it was year 2 so I was 6or7) and feeling like I was looking at everything through a portal and I was somewhere else or like I was watch TV or something. It happened a few times but less as an adult. I'm (probably) neurodivergent so always assume it was a result of my autism retrospectively. Are you NT op?

I don't know if it is related or normal at all but I had an extreme dissacociative experience in labour with my second child. I was induced and epidural stopped working. I was observing myself screaming in pain to the point that I was laughing at myself internally about how bizzare the situation was. Felt like it lasted a minute when it was over an hour.

Not diagnosed as ND, strongly suspect I have ADHD (daughter is diagnosed).

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RoughAsABadgersArse · 07/01/2024 14:26

Depersonalisation is where you have the feeling of being outside yourself and observing your actions, feelings or thoughts from a distance. Derealisation is where you feel the world is unreal. People and things around you may seem "lifeless" or "foggy". You can have depersonalisation or derealisation, or both together.

Faffette · 07/01/2024 14:26

I had maladaptive daydreaming too but this was different. A bit like going into a trance. The question "why me" was me trying to understand why out of everybody, out of all the minds out there, I was only aware of mine. If that makes sense.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:27

GeneCity · 07/01/2024 14:25

I could do this as a child as well, and think I probably still could. It's quite scary though - I ramener having to think of familiar things to get back if that makes sense.

And yeah, sub-optimal childhood too.

This is exactly it, I would have to drag myself back into reality.

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MooQuackNeigh · 07/01/2024 14:27

Ah that's interesting pp. I also was and am a maladaptive daydreamer. I think having a vivid imagination and 'rich' inner world may have something to do with it. I didn't have a traumatic childhood though. Not perfect but good by most standards.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:27

RoughAsABadgersArse · 07/01/2024 14:26

Depersonalisation is where you have the feeling of being outside yourself and observing your actions, feelings or thoughts from a distance. Derealisation is where you feel the world is unreal. People and things around you may seem "lifeless" or "foggy". You can have depersonalisation or derealisation, or both together.

It sounds a lot like derealisation as well.

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TrueFacts44 · 07/01/2024 14:28

I used to do something like this where I would not believe I was in my body and that I existed as the subject that I was. But I think this was simply an expression of a healthy interest in philosophy and metaphysical questions about subjectivity in particular. I’m now a professional philosopher.

inigomontoyahwillcox · 07/01/2024 14:29

It's really interesting to hear all your experiences and backgrounds that may be related to it.

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MooQuackNeigh · 07/01/2024 14:30

Ah, mine was derealization then. The sudden feeling that nothing I'm seeing is real, similar feeling to de ja vu.