The Virtues of a Wandering Mind
In a previous post, I confessed to Walter Mitty moments. Turns out, that isn’t bad:
But now that researchers have been analyzing those stray thoughts, they’ve found daydreaming to be remarkably common — and often quite useful. A wandering mind can protect you from immediate perils and keep you on course toward long-term goals… Where exactly does the mind go during those moments? By observing people at rest during brain scans, neuroscientists have identified a “default network” that is active when people’s minds are especially free to wander. When people do take up a task, the brain’s executive network lights up to issue commands, and the default network is often suppressed.
Full article on the benefits of daydreaming.
I wonder how ADHD plays into to this? In people wiht ADHD it appears the executive network and the default network switch back and forth.
Glad to hear daydreamig is OK I do a lot of it.
Agree with Ken. This is a reassuring post.
I too have Walter Mitty moments.
Hey, it’s not just a guy thing.