Overcoming Addictions

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A few years ago, I had a rough time, mentally. I’ve had more than one episode, actually.

Somehow I got addicted to YouTube. True Crime, Comedy and History documentaries are my go to’s. Every once in a while, a reaction/opinion creator; a movie that’s free with ads.

At the time, it was an excellent way to drown out the negative noise in my head.

A few more episodes, two surgeries with a month of required sitting on my ass each, and now I can’t stand the silence–not having something playing in the background drives me up the wall with some form of bizarro anxiety.

I know binging YouTube, Day-in Day-out, is not accomplishing anything constructive towards my own personal goals. I can actually measure how much time I lose daily on YouTube. I am consciously AWARE of HOW I am WASTING my time.

I cannot seem to let go of the algorithm choosing my next sensory guzzle.

It’s such an easy thing to slip into–no thinking because the darkness is too loud.

When I was a teenager, I would select cd’s to be alone in my room with. I remember cycling through my collection of movie soundtracks until I found one that fit my mood.

That feels like so much work, right now. It’s felt like so much work for a long time. Everything feels like work. I know it is work to overcome even a “non-harmful” addiction like this, but it would be nice if there was an easy substitute for it.

It feels stupid to complain about this. Just put a timer or a lock on your YouTube. Set up a reward system for every hour/day/week you don’t watch. Explore new hobbies, dive into old ones, make a list of everything you could do if you weren’t constantly eye-guzzling mindlessly.

So many suggestions to how to break a bad habit, but it’s so hard to just do it.

Not impossible.

Just really, really, stupid hard.

2 responses to “Overcoming Addictions”

  1. Laer D M Avatar

    Thank you. Good suggestions. I’m getting help from Unchained Leader. I am even getting help fighting the bad habits of lashing out in anger, angry tone of voice, and swearing. When I realize I am hooked to scrolling through screens I start goi g around the room tidying and cleaning. I listen instrumentals if I can’t stand the silence.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Esther O'Neill Avatar

    Can’t get addicted to a b&w snowstorm… Or even silence. On and off, the word spreads like ( you can guess which one my fingers almost used. Impossible, still hoping all my SoCal cousins stay safe)

    We’re getting fibre ! Real broadband at last, and a signal too!

    Never happens though. Still living in the wrong century, mostly without 20th C addictions Even my gran used to smoke!

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