Great Escape

How to Escape While Standing Still

The science of daydreaming is complicated. What it meant to me in childhood was not.

Bryan Walsh
Elemental
Published in
8 min readAug 29, 2018

--

Credit: Westend61 via Getty

TThere’s no escaping childhood. I mean that in the literal sense — to be a child is to wake up each day with people you didn’t choose, in a place you didn’t choose, in a time you didn’t choose. Maybe you were lucky, or maybe you were very unlucky, but there is no picking up and moving to a new hometown, or a new family. If you grew up like I did, in a Northeastern suburb carved out of farms, there was nowhere to go, period, unless you could drive there. I was brought to places, or I stayed home, surrounded by an acre of grass, mowed once a week in the summer, which I remember felt as uncrossable as the ocean. I yearned for escape, by any avenue, though it was only much later that I understood why.

But if I couldn’t walk to freedom, or bike — unless I wanted to risk the oblivious drivers on Route 413 — then I could dream. At any moment of the day, if I was anywhere I didn’t want to be, if I were lonely or sad or bored or anxious, if I was breathing, I would slip away inside my mind, giving myself over to daydreams and reveries.

If I was anywhere I didn’t want to be, if I was lonely or sad or bored or anxious…

--

--

Elemental
Elemental

Published in Elemental

Elemental is a former publication from Medium for science-backed health and wellness coverage. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Bryan Walsh
Bryan Walsh

Written by Bryan Walsh

Journalist, author, dad. Former TIME magazine editor and foreign correspondent. Author of END TIMES, a book about existential risk and the end of the world.