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Mine is porn addiction. I don't ever want to become a coomer but I think I've became that already a few times in my life. I shamefully have watched porn, saved porn images and visualized people who're probably not as into porn as I was.

I really do wish to be done with porn, it's done nothing for me. I've masturbated for many years and I feel like it has hollowed out my mind. I don't even get that much enjoyment from masturbating as much and the porn hasn't really gotten any better so I guess I can say that I've seen porn when it was at its best when I was younger and everything.

Now all of it is just loli shit, artificial shit and that's gross or the fetishes have gotten too niche and unappealing. I look around me in porn communities and I haven't found anyone worthwhile to speak to or associate with. Everyone is six feet under in porn that there's no way for them out.

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[-] DeICEAmerica@lemmy.world 4 points 16 hours ago

Cigarettes. Crack was easier to quit. Removing yourself from bad places and bad people doesn't help with cigarettes. They are on every street corner shop in every town.

[-] blackroses97@lemmy.zip 3 points 16 hours ago

For me its was self harm , it took over 10 years to stop finally . Im truly blessed that I healed mentally and physically ( barely any scarring , infections or anything of that matter )

[-] Cattail@lemmy.world 1 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

Alcohol. Quit nicotine multiple times. THC variant are hard to stop but once I run out I don't have withdrawal symptoms

[-] Weydemeyer@lemmy.ml 11 points 1 day ago

Following the news.

Between internet sites, twitch, podcasts, etc I spend hours a day just following the news.

What’s insidious about this for me is that following the news is a good thing. I feel I’ve found enough solid news sources that I can stay informed about what’s happening in the world. When I don’t follow along with what’s happening I feel anxious, like I’m going to fall behind and then I will somehow get behind and not be able understand what’s happening around me.

So while following the news in itself is not a bad thing, it has negative consequences in my life, mainly around time. It cuts into my time with my kids a bit. And it definitely cuts significantly into my time for reading books, which is probably my #1 hobby.

I’ve tried to reduce the time I spend on it all but it doesn’t usually work. So it’s a habit I’m trying to kick but not really being successful at it.

[-] mattyroses@lemmygrad.ml 2 points 16 hours ago

I left the US 3 years ago

I've always been well informed - but I realized I've made my choices, and most of checking the news now is looking for confirmation. It's an anxiety behavior. It doesn't change what I'll do in any way - so why do I need to read it?

[-] SilverFlame@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

I generally don't condone AI use but this seems like a case where it may be beneficial. Is it possible to feed your news sources into a chat bot and have it generate a "daily feed" of headlines and summaries? If it works right it could save you a lot of time.

[-] claymore@pawb.social 11 points 1 day ago

I wish I had the willpower to stop wasting days in front of my PC and go out more, but it always feels impossible, no close friends, no car, live in a small town with an average age that's probably in the 50s. All I do is go to work and come home to sit in my room. I also hate talking to new people over voice chat (and it takes me some time to warn up to someone when only talking over text) so I don't do much socialising when sitting at home. I've been thinking of moving to a bigger city but that's a whole other can of worms and doesn't fix my ability to hold conversions past pleasantries

[-] crash_thepose@lemmy.ml 2 points 17 hours ago

I feel for you and I hope you can figure out a way to work on it! Therapy and pushing myself to socialize even when I don't want to has helped me.

[-] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 15 hours ago

I joined a crafts group with my therapist solely for practicing socialization. It helps a lot more than I thought it would. I'm no artist, but it doesn't matter for this.

[-] crash_thepose@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

League Of Legends without a doubt

[-] yoyoyopo5@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Oof. I feel for you.

[-] UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml 21 points 1 day ago

Housing. This addiction is crippling me. I'm spending thousands on it every month.

[-] unrealMinotaur@sh.itjust.works 8 points 1 day ago

Social media. I kicked out all the "algorithmic" stuff 6 years ago. Still find myself spending hours each day refreshing RSS feeds looking for a cheap dopamine hit.

[-] oyo@lemmy.zip 8 points 1 day ago

Using the phone in bed. Before going to sleep. Immediately after waking up.

[-] mattyroses@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 16 hours ago

Turn it to grayscale might help

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[-] ClassIsOver@hexbear.net 6 points 1 day ago
[-] RiverRock@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Dabs for sure. I didn't know that you could use it heavily enough to cause actual physical withdrawal symptoms, but I sure found out

[-] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 15 hours ago

A number of years ago, I was about 28 years old. My neighbor was my coworker, about 25, and we were friends.

One day he was having a small get together and invited me over. About 8 people, all 21-26 years of age. They were doing dabs. I did a couple, and wanted to do something fun, a game or something. Everyone at that "party" had done so many dabs they were couch zombies, falling asleep. I left from boredom.

It was so weird to me, and sad. I hope you're feeling better these days with your relationship to dabbing.

[-] Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com 30 points 2 days ago
[-] BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 12 points 1 day ago

I've slowly dropped 100 pounds over the last 3 years (50 more to go) and I literally eat whatever I want. The secret is in moderation, which is the real problem with food. It is VERY easy to overeat. I live by 3 simple and easy rules:

  • Stop all sugary drinks, or juices. As a doctor said to me: Don't get your calories from juice, eat the whole orange. And NEVER drink full sugar soda. Today, I drink Coke Zero Sugar (0 calories) when I'm in a fast food place, but other than that, it's only unsweetened Ice Tea, or my favorite beverage Ice Water. I have also been drinking those fruit flavored seltzer waters with 0 calories. My only real beverage indulgence is a single beer with dinner 3 or 4 nights a week. Cultivate a love for Ice Water.

  • Eat only when you are hungry, and only until you aren't hungry any more. I have found that I really don't need a whole sandwich, I am satisfied after a half of a sandwich. I'm generally satisfied with a couple of small handfuls of chips, I don't need to eat the entire bag. It takes a period of close monitoring to reset your satisfaction levels, but once you do, you are living a new food lifestyle that feels normal. It now feels strange to eat an entire sandwich. Or have a favorite food binge until you are stuffed.

  • Don't eat out of boredom, find another activity. This is a really important one. If you find yourself staring into the fridge for a snack, and having trouble deciding, you're not really hungry, you're eating out of boredom. My Dad quit smoking by picking up a Rubik's Cube whenever he got the urge, and it worked well because a big part of smoking are the hand-mouth habits that you develop. Quitters often say that those hand-mouth habits last long after the nicotine cravings have left.

Food shares that trait. Creating a late night mini-charcuterie tray, spreading cheese on a cracker, washing it down with a beer or wine, etc. are all hand-mouth activities that can become regular habits that help load in tons of useless calories just before bed.

I used the guitar as my distraction. I keep an acoustic next to my TV chair, and pick it up whenever I have a craving for food. It distracts me from my momentary craving, and I've advanced to an intermediate ability on the guitar.

Replacing one negative endorphin releasing activity with a positive endorphin activity is highly effective at changing habitual behavior. Exchange a bad habit for a good one. Learn a language, write a book, play a game, play with a pet, lift weights, do a Rubik's Cube, etc. whatever works for you.

Losing weight always requires a lifestyle change, and most people choose a temporary strict diet to do it, but it never works. The lifestyle change needs to be permanent, but nobody wants to go full keto, and never eat pizza or chocolate chip cookies ever again for the rest of their lives. It is nearly inevitable that anyone will fail that sort of diet.

Since you are committing to a lifestyle change, make it simple and effective, allows you the opportunity for guilt-free indulgence, and make it PERMANENT. Want some chocolate? Don't eat an entire chocolate bar, eat a few chocolate chips, let them melt in your mouth and coat your tongue, and it will satisfy your chocolate cravings with a fraction of the calories.

Of course, if you want to supercharge your weight loss, start exercising, especially cardio. I have a physically intensive job, so I don't worry about the exercise as much, but I am about to start running again, after getting the clearance from my doctor. I just got my new runners yesterday, and I'm going to add that to my efforts to lose my last 50 pounds.

Exercise could be my 4th rule, but I wanted to demonstrate that it is possible to lose a LOT of weight with a simple lifestyle change that doesn't include exercise (although exercise is always welcome). I've lost 100 pounds while eating anything I want, and learned to play the guitar at the same time. That's a food lifestyle that's worth the effort.

[-] ipkpjersi@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

It's really awful because unlike smoking or cocaine or anything else, you can't just quit food. You need it to live, without it, you will die. Having too much of it permanently alters your hunger levels which makes you require more of it, it's an endless feedback loop that scientists haven't figured out yet.

It does seem like they might be making some progress on it with weight loss medicine, if it doesn't outright cause cancer or other bad side effects. I guess we'll see.

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[-] communism@lemmy.ml 22 points 2 days ago

I don't have any answer to the "hardest addiction" thing but OP, I don't think watching a lot of porn is inherently a problem. Sometimes people just masturbate because they're bored, in which case you should try to get some hobbies you find more fulfilling. But if you're masturbating because you're horny, why not, it does no harm.

[-] davel@lemmy.ml 30 points 2 days ago

Do it for your health. Ejaculation frequency and prostate cancer

The scientists found no evidence that frequent ejaculations mark an increased risk of prostate cancer. In fact, the reverse was true: High ejaculation frequency was linked to a decreased risk. Compared to men who reported 4–7 ejaculations per month across their lifetimes, men who ejaculated 21 or more times a month enjoyed a 31% lower risk of prostate cancer. And the results held up to rigorous statistical evaluation even after other lifestyle factors and the frequency of PSA testing were taken into account.

[-] geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 day ago

Note that there are other ways to achieve ejaculation besides masturbating

😎

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[-] BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today 4 points 1 day ago

Use it or lose it.

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[-] Nemo@slrpnk.net 29 points 2 days ago

Sugar. I'm prediabetic and this shit is everywhere. I know, medically, what I need to do: significantly cut back for 6-9 months until the insulin-resistant blood cells are replaced by normal ones, and start doing HIIT exercises to move that closer to 6 than 9.

But like, doing anything consistently for 6 months is a challenge for me, much less avoiding something that gives me the happy brain chemicals.

[-] Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 15 hours ago

Are you in the states? I am, and once I started reading labels, I couldn't believe how much sugar was in everything. From bread to jar sauce, peanut butter, fuckin, soup. Like, it's incredible where you find sugar.

I'm fat from other stuff,mostly inactivity, but far from diabetic, and it's because I've been avoiding the hidden sugars in processed and ultra processed foods for over a decade. Read the labels, get grossed out, avoid. If I'm having sugar, it's my choice, not because they sneak 5g of sugar in a half cup of jar sauce, or 6g in a slice of bread. Know what's sweet? Red bell peppers. Avoid sugar a week, and then have a red bell pepper. You're taste buds will explode with its sweetness.

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[-] tophneal@sh.itjust.works 31 points 2 days ago

Nicotine. Started as a kid, 25y ago. Smoked for about 18y, then switched to vaping when it was new. Started lowering my mg over the last few years, until I hit 0mg late last year, then put that down. Of course, stress doesn’t want to let me fully stop and I’ve learned that after all that time I can’t lean on just one cessation aid. But a combo of patch+inhaler+the right company have mad it easier to not think about as much. Hopefully I can keep that trend going 🤞

[-] WizardofFrobozz@lemmy.ca 4 points 1 day ago

I’m 10 years without a smoke-

I still want one every time I have a beer at the bar or a morning coffee.

[-] jif@piefed.ca 12 points 2 days ago

"It's easy to quit smoking. I've done it hundreds of times." Mark Twain

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To stop smoking is a tough road to walk for anyone. I say stop, not quit, because I'm not sure the urge ever leaves you. Been 25 years for me, and just typing this makes me want a cigarette. At least a heroin addict can't buy a fix at the nearest 7-11.

[-] mattyroses@lemmygrad.ml 1 points 16 hours ago

Quit after smoking 30 plus years. Been completely clean for 6. You can do it.

[-] ianhclark510@lemmy.blahaj.zone 18 points 2 days ago

I wish I could stop chewing my stupid fingernails

[-] hyacin@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 day ago

I did it my whole life (~mid forties now).

I met and was talking to a guy about 10-15 years ago, and it came up - he said "oh yeah, I used to do that, I just stopped."

Now, consider that, we're both addicts and met at a 12-step meeting.

I'm like "You can't just stop guy, lawl, wtf?"

But he insisted - "No, really, I just stopped."

So I tried ... and was absolutely, completely fucking stunned - it worked - I just stopped.

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[-] some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 18 points 2 days ago

Smoking. Quit for seven years and picked it back up. Worst decision of my life. Was cutting back on vaping to quit when the pan happened. Allowed myself the vice for stress. Don’t plan on trying a third time. Too much effort.

[-] hyacin@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

This. I know 'nicotine' is already here, but it's not the same.

Confused the hell out of me when I was trying to switch to vaping that I'd keep going back to cigarettes - "I'M GETTING THE NICOTINE, WHAT THE HELL?!", and it wasn't just habit, it was overwhelming need to smoke.

I finally figured some of those other 2999 or whatever chemicals in there must be addictive too, or something, I don't know.

I've quit drinking, when I was a daily drinker at risk of a seizure because my body had grown so chemically dependent on it. I've quit countless other 'behavioral' addictions.

NOTHING, was as hard as trying to quit smoking. Until, thank the powers that be, I met vaping, and after a couple months of back and forth, was able to transition to it entirely. Haven't had a cigarette since, and it's been at least 10-11 years.

Eventually lowered my nicotine to 0 mg, then gave up the vaping. Haven't done either since. That was, probably 8-9 years ago now.

I still get the odd craving to vape. Zero cravings to smoke up until last year, first trip in my life to Vegas (and two more since). The casino environment with everyone smoking, I don't know what it is. Got me looking at it with the rose coloured glasses occasionally while there - but then I quickly remember how hard it was to shake, and how happy I am without it.

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this post was submitted on 05 Dec 2025
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