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iloverachel

Enlightened
Mar 7, 2024
1,218
I went on a dopamine detox (I will explain what it is below) since May 19. Prior to my successful recovery from mental health issues, mainly severe anxiety and depression, my dopamine receptors were messed up. I got dopamine from so many bad sources, hours of video games, hours of watching movies and doom scrolling social media, junk food in large amounts, alcohol and drugs. As a result, I did not enjoy exercise at all and noticed any improvements. Why? Because my brain is already receiving dopamine hits from all these bad sources, which I need more and more of. So I went on a dopamine detox.

When you put down the pizza and chocolate and start eating fruits and vegetables, it does wonders for your mind (I speak from experience being borderline obese for many years and now at a healthy BMI and no longer feel depressed)


Here's a breakdown of the core idea behind the concept:

  • The Core Idea:
    • The concept generally involves abstaining from activities that provide immediate gratification, such as social media, video games, and even certain types of food.

    • The goal is to reduce exposure to these stimuli, which are believed to excessively stimulate the brain's reward system, leading to a potential "overactivation" of dopamine.

    • By reducing this stimulation, the idea is to allow the brain to reset and become more responsive to natural rewards.
  • What it Often Involves:
    • Limiting Screen Time: Significantly reducing or eliminating time spent on social media, watching TV, playing video games, and browsing the internet.

    • Dietary Restrictions:Avoiding highly processed foods, sugary drinks, and other foods that can trigger dopamine release.

    • Social Isolation: In some extreme cases, it may involve limiting social interaction.



    • Regarding the effectiveness for exercise enjoyment:
      • Indirectly:
        • By reducing distractions from activities that provide immediate gratification (like social media), a "dopamine detox" might indirectly make exercise more enjoyable.
        • This is because it can free up time and mental space for physical activity.
        • It can also help you appreciate the intrinsic rewards of exercise, such as the sense of accomplishment and improved physical well-being, rather than relying on external validation or rewards.
 
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timf

Enlightened
Mar 26, 2020
1,307
Anna Lembke has written books and done videos on this important topic. Recovery can be difficult enough without having to fight your own body.
 
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EvisceratedJester

EvisceratedJester

|| What Else Could I Be But a Jester ||
Oct 21, 2023
4,261
Dopamine detox? Looks like somebody is looking to start showing symptoms of early-onset Parkinson's disease and a decreased attention span and issues with working memory.
 
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ForgottenAgain

ForgottenAgain

On the rollercoaster of sadness
Oct 17, 2023
1,118
I didn't know that had a name. I noticed certain activities impacting me negatively because of instant gratification, the ones you mention: social media, scrolling, etc. So I cut those out.
The last few months I started reading books again and doing other non screen related activities that I like but never did. I feel better yes, the small satisfaction I feel from reading some pages of a book feels like it's of higher quality than scrolling and lasts longer.

Exercise is a different beast to tackle, but I do agree with what you said as I've felt the benefits of exercise in the past and it wasn't as hard to do after my mind adjusted to not being so chronically online.

I really like this post, you made me remember things I haven't really thought about as life has been so utterly unbearable. I hope you continue getting better, I'd love to read more on this topic from you. I like the way you explained things.
 
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iloverachel

Enlightened
Mar 7, 2024
1,218
I didn't know that had a name. I noticed certain activities impacting me negatively because of instant gratification, the ones you mention: social media, scrolling, etc. So I cut those out.
The last few months I started reading books again and doing other non screen related activities that I like but never did. I feel better yes, the small satisfaction I feel from reading some pages of a book feels like it's of higher quality than scrolling and lasts longer.

Exercise is a different beast to tackle, but I do agree with what you said as I've felt the benefits of exercise in the past and it wasn't as hard to do after my mind adjusted to not being so chronically online.

I really like this post, you made me remember things I haven't really thought about as life has been so utterly unbearable. I hope you continue getting better, I'd love to read more on this topic from you. I like the way you explained things.
Yeah when i was addicted to junk food, alcohol, drugs and bad sources of dopamine, i did not enjoy my hobbies or passion (lifting weights, exercise, martial arts). I was in a constant negative mindset, exercise felt pointless, my blood work came back and i had low testosterone.
I fixed it slowly by eliminating bad dopamine sources, haven't touched alcohol or drugs since May 19 last year, and exercising daily and now my sleep and mood is better than ever. First few weeks or months are super hard, giving up junk food after being a heavy addict for years is tough but if you want to improved bad enough you need to go through the tough times
 
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Scythe

Lost in a delusion
Sep 5, 2022
573
When I excerice it's boring, though a few minutes at a time isn't a bother. The bigger problem is my brain starts to insult and nitpick shit or play back shitty memories on loop. I have to always be distracted, else risk my brain wondering off into whatever intrusive thoughts rabbit hole it wants.

What do I do about this?
 
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liesabouthelp

Member
Feb 17, 2025
9
ok, and where exactly do i get the motivation for this shit?

"small steps, small changes"

i dont have any specific patterns to what i do, so how can i measure a "small change"?

"aim for actual patterns and schedules"

and the question is yet again, where do i get the motivation?

"just choose to do it, you can do it"

thanks, thats really fucking helpful. suicide it is.
 
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Shroomsonmyhead

Shroomsonmyhead

Member
Jun 18, 2023
57
When I excerice it's boring, though a few minutes at a time isn't a bother. The bigger problem is my brain starts to insult and nitpick shit or play back shitty memories on loop. I have to always be distracted, else risk my brain wondering off into whatever intrusive thoughts rabbit hole it wants.

What do I do about this?
As counterintuitive as it might seem, you actually don't do anything. All you do is fall into the shitty intrusive thoughts rabbit hole and then crawl back out of it again. If that is what is happening to you right now, then you are on the right track.

Doing so over and over is like building a muscle. The more times you catch your mind generating thoughts that make you miserable and then pop back out of that spiral, the less and less the spiral generates in the first place.

But the important part is that you have to CATCH your mind doing it, you can't fall into the negative spiral and then just cover up those bad feelings by distracting yourself with something entertaining. You have to consciously notice when your brain has fallen back into an old pattern.

It's not easy… but you can practice it anywhere, at any time, so it's convenient at the very least.

I've been at it for a few years now… to say that it changes the way you view the world is honestly an understatement. My brain is so much clearer now than it used to be, and doing things that I hate doing is vastly easier. Life is just less painful in general.

The trick is to never judge yourself for losing control of your own mind, because generating thoughts and worries is exactly what your brain evolved to do. Failing isn't part of the process, failing IS the process.

Unfortunately it is still a long and painful process… which is why a lot of people would rather just deny that there is any point in trying in the first place (which is, ironically, the exact type of negative behavior that exercises like these are intended to prevent). You can see a few of those people in this thread already.

I can agree with them on one topic, though: I still personally hate the term "dopamine detox." It's just a bizarre modern rebranding of various concepts (abstinence, exercise, mindfulness, meditation, etc) that humanity has been practicing for literal centuries, haha. But to each their own.
 
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Pluto

Pluto

Cat Extremist
Dec 27, 2020
4,529
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S

Scythe

Lost in a delusion
Sep 5, 2022
573
As counterintuitive as it might seem, you actually don't do anything. All you do is fall into the shitty intrusive thoughts rabbit hole and then crawl back out of it again. If that is what is happening to you right now, then you are on the right track.

Doing so over and over is like building a muscle. The more times you catch your mind generating thoughts that make you miserable and then pop back out of that spiral, the less and less the spiral generates in the first place.

But the important part is that you have to CATCH your mind doing it, you can't fall into the negative spiral and then just cover up those bad feelings by distracting yourself with something entertaining. You have to consciously notice when your brain has fallen back into an old pattern.

It's not easy… but you can practice it anywhere, at any time, so it's convenient at the very least.

I've been at it for a few years now… to say that it changes the way you view the world is honestly an understatement. My brain is so much clearer now than it used to be, and doing things that I hate doing is vastly easier. Life is just less painful in general.

The trick is to never judge yourself for losing control of your own mind, because generating thoughts and worries is exactly what your brain evolved to do. Failing isn't part of the process, failing IS the process.

Unfortunately it is still a long and painful process… which is why a lot of people would rather just deny that there is any point in trying in the first place (which is, ironically, the exact type of negative behavior that exercises like these are intended to prevent). You can see a few of those people in this thread already.

I can agree with them on one topic, though: I still personally hate the term "dopamine detox." It's just a bizarre modern rebranding of various concepts (abstinence, exercise, mindfulness, meditation, etc) that humanity has been practicing for literal centuries, haha. But to each their own.
Oh... I don't think this is worth it then. I don't exactly have enough time left for the entire process anyways.
I also can't just pop out of spirals it's not something I can control and I feel there's a chance of making my mental state worse if I just let my brain spiral at waking hours instead od just before sleep.
However, I can add something positive. Waking up early and going outside for breakfast's nice. Makes me happier in the morning. There's good food and that's enough motivation for me to go outside. I also do cook for myself, I find it enjoyable since I can make good food and I cook with mostly stuff I like.
 
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iloverachel

Enlightened
Mar 7, 2024
1,218
When I excerice it's boring, though a few minutes at a time isn't a bother. The bigger problem is my brain starts to insult and nitpick shit or play back shitty memories on loop. I have to always be distracted, else risk my brain wondering off into whatever intrusive thoughts rabbit hole it wants.

What do I do about this?
How many minutes of exercise can you handle? I think you slowly work your way up
I absolutely hated exercise when i was in my depressed suicidal state 10 months ago. I skipped many days. I would do maybe 10-15 minutes and stop. then i went to 20 minute, 25 minutes and so on. As I ate healthier and made some physical progress, i noticed small increase in mood too and that helped motivate me to continue

It is really hard at first, I almost gave up countless times. One time i went to the gym, panicked due to anxiety and crowds then went home
 
daysnumbered

daysnumbered

To be or not to be
Aug 21, 2024
44
I made it around 10 hours, but I then caved into browsing the web again. I felt extremely restless and chronically bored during the process. Technology has a massive hold on me, so unfortunately I just do not enjoy other activities as much anymore. It also doesn't help that I suffer from anhedonia. I will attempt to detox again one these days to see if I can last even longer.
 
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Shroomsonmyhead

Shroomsonmyhead

Member
Jun 18, 2023
57
Oh... I don't think this is worth it then. I don't exactly have enough time left for the entire process anyways.
I also can't just pop out of spirals it's not something I can control and I feel there's a chance of making my mental state worse if I just let my brain spiral at waking hours instead od just before sleep.
However, I can add something positive. Waking up early and going outside for breakfast's nice. Makes me happier in the morning. There's good food and that's enough motivation for me to go outside. I also do cook for myself, I find it enjoyable since I can make good food and I cook with mostly stuff I like.
Sorry, this is a common misconception so please allow me to try and re-clarify what "popping out" means:

Trying to prevent your brain from generating thoughts by sheer force of will is like trying to stop your heart from beating via the same method. Total Insanity.

Of course you don't "control" thought spirals… if you did, then they would never happen in the first place, right?

"Popping out" just means "noticing that you were spiraling at all." It's not about preventing negative thoughts, it's about consciously noticing when they are happening instead of mindlessly drifting into them.

If you have EVER meditated before, what you will quickly notice is that your brain generates a string of dialogue without you even noticing that its happening, then all of a sudden you "pop out" and think "wait, wasn't I supposed to be meditating?"

The insidious thing about thoughts is that they influence our behavior before we even notice that we are having them.

And since you cannot simultaneously think about two completely different subjects at the same time, you also cannot both be noticing a thought spiral and drowning in a thought spiral at the same time. (Although you can certainly bounce back and forth between the two.)

Obviously you don't have to take a stranger's advice on how to escape thought spirals, but unless you want to be dependent on outside stimuli to smother out your own thoughts until the day you die… this is the one and only way to practice internal control. All "mental self-control" advice eventually boils down to some variation of this one practice.

As for the abstinence stuff… until you can learn to comfortably sit inside your own head, the idea that you are going to be able to avoid media for days on end for the sake of a "dopamine detox" is obviously never going to work out, right? So there's no reason to worry about it. Cart before the horse, and all that.

Best of luck!
 
endofeverything

endofeverything

Member
Jan 14, 2025
40
never consciously did a dopamine detox, but i remember last year when things were going better i was doing most of these things anyway - even outside of following a protocol, it's just generally a good idea to eat healthy, limit screentime and avoid instant gratification. sadly, at the moment my self-control is paper thin....

what really pisses me off is that we humans have constructed a world around us that assaults our gratification system at every vulnerable corner. isn't that so fucking sickening? no other average human throughout prior societies had to struggle THIS hard to avoid becoming addicted, to avoid becoming drained of their time and ability to make reasonable choices, to avoid damaging themselves with things that are meant to be enjoyable. no other human before us had to exert so much self-control just to get through daily life. really think about this fact, really let it sink in!!!!

sure, there were dangerous pitfalls for as long as human societies existed - gambling, drinking etc. have always had the potential to ruin a person, should they spiral out of control - but it was never this bad. it was never this easy to do. it was never needed to put so much self-control into navigating daily life.

don't get me wrong, i also love video games, social media, junk food, and whatever else, and i know i should engage in these things only in moderation. but isn't it insane that we have to moderate ourselves in the first place? that we are required to exert self control, lest we fall victim to addiction, to having our life potentially ruined, so that some company somewhere can extract cash out of our pockets? there are science labs whose only purpose is figuring out how to trick our reward systems into spending as much time and cash on their product as possible. modern society is built, LITERALLY, to grab your attention and SUCK YOUR BRAIN DRY. i fucking hate it here!!!!!!!

....

sorry for the rant, i'm really glad dopamine detox has been a positive force of change in your life.
 
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liesabouthelp

Member
Feb 17, 2025
9
OP went from borderline obese to healthy BMI. theres absolutely no way they JUST decided to go on a dopamine detox and thats it. OP has NOT been a shut in for years and years and years. or OP has NOT been alone for years and years and years. OP has already had strengths or outside sources which helped them with it, which were the actual determining factors for it. none of this applies to people like me who have been completely stuck for most of our lives.
 
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S

Scythe

Lost in a delusion
Sep 5, 2022
573
Sorry, this is a common misconception so please allow me to try and re-clarify what "popping out" means:

Trying to prevent your brain from generating thoughts by sheer force of will is like trying to stop your heart from beating via the same method. Total Insanity.

Of course you don't "control" thought spirals… if you did, then they would never happen in the first place, right?

"Popping out" just means "noticing that you were spiraling at all." It's not about preventing negative thoughts, it's about consciously noticing when they are happening instead of mindlessly drifting into them.

If you have EVER meditated before, what you will quickly notice is that your brain generates a string of dialogue without you even noticing that its happening, then all of a sudden you "pop out" and think "wait, wasn't I supposed to be meditating?"

The insidious thing about thoughts is that they influence our behavior before we even notice that we are having them.

And since you cannot simultaneously think about two completely different subjects at the same time, you also cannot both be noticing a thought spiral and drowning in a thought spiral at the same time. (Although you can certainly bounce back and forth between the two.)

Obviously you don't have to take a stranger's advice on how to escape thought spirals, but unless you want to be dependent on outside stimuli to smother out your own thoughts until the day you die… this is the one and only way to practice internal control. All "mental self-control" advice eventually boils down to some variation of this one practice.

As for the abstinence stuff… until you can learn to comfortably sit inside your own head, the idea that you are going to be able to avoid media for days on end for the sake of a "dopamine detox" is obviously never going to work out, right? So there's no reason to worry about it. Cart before the horse, and all that.

Best of luck!
Unfortunately, I can do both 🥲 I always know I'm in a spiral because I feel like shit. I think I manage to both notice and be in a spiral because I'd agrue with myself about it. I believe it's also due to hating myself so like part of me believes I deserve to feel like shit.
How many minutes of exercise can you handle? I think you slowly work your way up
I absolutely hated exercise when i was in my depressed suicidal state 10 months ago. I skipped many days. I would do maybe 10-15 minutes and stop. then i went to 20 minute, 25 minutes and so on. As I ate healthier and made some physical progress, i noticed small increase in mood too and that helped motivate me to continue

It is really hard at first, I almost gave up countless times. One time i went to the gym, panicked due to anxiety and crowds then went home
Usually it's like 5, but I do go to a sports club for two hours a week. I cannot go to the gym, at all, just not for me. I'm fine with excerising at home or night running.
 
Last edited:
Shroomsonmyhead

Shroomsonmyhead

Member
Jun 18, 2023
57
Unfortunately, I can do both 🥲 I always know I'm in a spiral because I feel like shit. I think I manage to both notice and be in a spiral because I'd agrue with myself about it. I believe it's also due to hating myself so like part of me believes I deserve to feel like shit.
I don't usually post 3 times in any given thread but I'm going to try this one last time because at this point I'm committed, lol

You are wrong. It is physically impossible to do both at the same time. I can't blame you for misunderstanding though, as this concept is really difficult to explain verbally. Almost no one ever gets it right away.

Lets back up a moment:

You cannot both have the thought "I want to eat an apple" and the thought "when did I start thinking about apples?" at the same time.

The first thought is you thinking about apples. The second thought is you thinking about your own thoughts. By the time you move from the first thought to the second thought, the entire focus of your mind has changed.

To illustrate this a lot better, we can look at some literal examples:

Spiraling thoughts look like these:

"I am a lazy piece of shit."
"This isn't working."
"This is pointless."
"I'm wasting my time doing this."
"I have always been unattractive."
"Why am I always thinking like this?"
"Quit arguing with yourself, idiot."
"I deserve this."

etc.

Mindful thoughts look like these:

"I wonder why my brain just generated that particular thought?"
"How long was I just arguing with myself?"
"Did that particular thought really originate from me, or did it reflect a judgement I heard from someone else?"
"It hurt to have that particular thought, but a thought is all it is."
"How often have I been thinking about this, lately?"
"What a funny thought."


Spiraling thoughts are attention-grabbing, emotional, and painful. They involve judging things.

Mindful thoughts are detached, intellectual, and painless. They involve observing things.

As you can see, these are polar opposites.

But the more you practice moving from the former to the latter, the less the negative thoughts will appear inside your head in the first place.

This makes every difficult task in life substantially easier, as your brain stops violently stomping its feet every time you tell it do something.
 
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CapitánBeto

CapitánBeto

Member
Aug 3, 2019
29
Dopamine detox? Looks like somebody is looking to start showing symptoms of early-onset Parkinson's disease and a decreased attention span and issues with working memory.
Nick Young Wtf GIF


When I excerice it's boring, though a few minutes at a time isn't a bother. The bigger problem is my brain starts to insult and nitpick shit or play back shitty memories on loop. I have to always be distracted, else risk my brain wondering off into whatever intrusive thoughts rabbit hole it wants.

What do I do about this?
I would suggest you try therapy (CTB to be specific).
There's medication that can help you with intrusive thoughts, e.g. Risperidone.
I know this bc it helped me.

I say this not to contradict @Shroomsonmyhead advice on mindfulness and meditative practices.
Quite the opposite, these are all complementary options.

How many minutes of exercise can you handle? I think you slowly work your way up
I absolutely hated exercise when i was in my depressed suicidal state 10 months ago. I skipped many days. I would do maybe 10-15 minutes and stop. then i went to 20 minute, 25 minutes and so on. As I ate healthier and made some physical progress, i noticed small increase in mood too and that helped motivate me to continue

It is really hard at first, I almost gave up countless times. One time i went to the gym, panicked due to anxiety and crowds then went home
I felt the same way the first time I went to the gym.
I was waiting in the car, running circles in my mind, until I got that pinch of motivation to get up and go.
People just want to do some exercise, everyone minds their own business.
No one is judging you but yourself.
 
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EvisceratedJester

EvisceratedJester

|| What Else Could I Be But a Jester ||
Oct 21, 2023
4,261
Dopamine is involved in many functions, including attention, working memory, and voluntary movement. The joke is that saying that you are planning to do a "dopamine detox" makes it sound like you are trying to rid or decrease the amount of dopamine being produced by your brain, which would end up leading to a bunch of serious issues.
 
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S

Scythe

Lost in a delusion
Sep 5, 2022
573
I don't usually post 3 times in any given thread but I'm going to try this one last time because at this point I'm committed, lol

You are wrong. It is physically impossible to do both at the same time. I can't blame you for misunderstanding though, as this concept is really difficult to explain verbally. Almost no one ever gets it right away.

Lets back up a moment:

You cannot both have the thought "I want to eat an apple" and the thought "when did I start thinking about apples?" at the same time.

The first thought is you thinking about apples. The second thought is you thinking about your own thoughts. By the time you move from the first thought to the second thought, the entire focus of your mind has changed.

To illustrate this a lot better, we can look at some literal examples:

Spiraling thoughts look like these:

"I am a lazy piece of shit."
"This isn't working."
"This is pointless."
"I'm wasting my time doing this."
"I have always been unattractive."
"Why am I always thinking like this?"
"Quit arguing with yourself, idiot."
"I deserve this."

etc.

Mindful thoughts look like these:

"I wonder why my brain just generated that particular thought?"
"How long was I just arguing with myself?"
"Did that particular thought really originate from me, or did it reflect a judgement I heard from someone else?"
"It hurt to have that particular thought, but a thought is all it is."
"How often have I been thinking about this, lately?"
"What a funny thought."


Spiraling thoughts are attention-grabbing, emotional, and painful. They involve judging things.

Mindful thoughts are detached, intellectual, and painless. They involve observing things.

As you can see, these are polar opposites.

But the more you practice moving from the former to the latter, the less the negative thoughts will appear inside your head in the first place.

This makes every difficult task in life substantially easier, as your brain stops violently stomping its feet every time you tell it do something.
I can actually have two trains of thought at once, it's a matter of mental cordination. You should be able yes and no at the same time in your head and that would be two thoughts at once. I can't usually fully focus on both at once, what usually happens is I focus on one thing then something else runs in the background.
Using your example of apples, even if I start thinking about why or when I thought of apples, the thought of wanting apples continue to run in the background. So personally, even when I start to think of mindful thoughts, everything else continues running in the background.
Think about it like a computer, you minimize one app then open another, the app you minimize continue to affect the computer and take up RAM. It might have a lower activity compared to if you actively interact with it, but it's still there, maybe playing music, maybe downloading an update. So for me, if I get negative thoughts, I have to wait until it goes away or I find some way to use up all the RAM my brain can handle.

I do actually know a way to shut everything down without outer influence though, it's either playing one of those extremely loud rings you get when a microphone malfunctions or by imagining a highly detailed scene. However, just a stray thought won't do.
 
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Shroomsonmyhead

Shroomsonmyhead

Member
Jun 18, 2023
57
I can actually have two trains of thought at once, it's a matter of mental cordination. You should be able yes and no at the same time in your head and that would be two thoughts at once. I can't usually fully focus on both at once, what usually happens is I focus on one thing then something else runs in the background.
Using your example of apples, even if I start thinking about why or when I thought of apples, the thought of wanting apples continue to run in the background. So personally, even when I start to think of mindful thoughts, everything else continues running in the background.
Think about it like a computer, you minimize one app then open another, the app you minimize continue to affect the computer and take up RAM. It might have a lower activity compared to if you actively interact with it, but it's still there, maybe playing music, maybe downloading an update. So for me, if I get negative thoughts, I have to wait until it goes away or I find some way to use up all the RAM my brain can handle.

I do actually know a way to shut everything down without outer influence though, it's either playing one of those extremely loud rings you get when a microphone malfunctions or by imagining a highly detailed scene. However, just a stray thought won't do.
At the risk of coming across as a tad bit obnoxious, I cannot deny that reading this comment put an enormous smile on my face, haha

Because not only does none of what you said contradict anything that I said, but you actually just perfectly illustrated the concept I'm talking about in your own words, albeit unintentionally:

The point of the apple analogy is not to argue that you can't have multiple contradictory thought processes running against each other at once (you obviously can) but to underline that certain TYPES of thought tend to enthusiastically duplicate themselves, while others tend to terminate themselves, and that the two are opposites.

We can reiterate this concept by taking a look at your own claim:

So for me, if I get negative thoughts, I have to wait until it goes away or I find some way to use up all the RAM my brain can handle.

I.e, you either have to either wait until your pattern of thought finally changes on its own, or you have to "smother it out" using an external stimulus that is strong enough to fully-absorb your attention, thereby forcibly moving your mental state by itself. (Like the sound you describe)

Clearly neither of these options are ideal, which is exactly why you left your initial comment in the first place. If only there were any other options, hmm…

But before we circle back to that, I'd like to ask you a strange question:

Do you ever have spiraling, repetitive, obsessive thoughts about eating grapes?

Stupid question, right? Of course you don't. If you have grapes, you think "I want to eat my grapes," and then you eat them. If you don't have grapes, then you likely never think about grapes at all.

So what is the difference between thoughts about grapes and thoughts of self-loathing?

Obviously it has to be the emotional engagement. Thoughts of self-loathing are emotionally-engaging, whereas thoughts about grapes are completely devoid of emotion.

This is why ragebait is such a powerful emotional tool for grabbing human attention on the internet: some stimuli naturally create thoughts that duplicate themselves, while other stimuli generate thoughts that happen only once and thereby resolve quickly.

The whole evolutionary purpose of having negative thoughts in the first place is to force you to edit your behavior by making you feel pain WITHOUT other external sensory experienfes.

It's kind of like wearing a shock collar… but one that is built into the biochemistry of your own mind.

Just as touching a hot stove leads you to edit your behavior to avoid physical damage (by moving away from the source of the pain) guilt and self-hatred are intended to force you to avoid behaviors that could cause you social damage.

Unfortunately, every time we choose to either let these thoughts burn out naturally, or smother them out with a greater stimulus like a loud sensory experience or an engaging piece of media… nothing about our behavior actually changes. The metaphorical "grapes" remain on the shelf and uneaten.

Therefore our brains have no choice but to repeat those emotional signals over and over, with each signal steadily compounding each time that we actively choose to ignore them or cover them up with a blanket.

This is why if we choose to rely on exterior stimuli like loud sounds or passive behaviors like waiting for our negative thoughts to end that nothing ever improves for us.

Those are both short-term solutions that work in the moment, but only cause the long-term problem to continue building on itself.

In order "eat the grapes" so to speak, we have to engage in the difficult behaviors that we spend so much of our lives avoiding…

Which is exactly why we have no choice but to adopt behaviors that allow us to internally manage our negative thoughts in the LONG term, such as meditation, mindfulness, mantra, etc.

If we can't tolerate the baseline behavior of our own minds long enough to engage in the behaviors that help us change the baseline behavior of our minds, then we end up constantly losing fights against ourselves.

The unfortunate part is that practices like mindfulness ONLY work in the long term… in the short term, they appear completely pointless. Hence why no one wants to do them.

Usually, it can take weeks of in-person dialogue between me and another person before I can finally get them to put effort into any kind of treatment for invasive thoughts. It's specifically because I know how difficult it is to get people to even consider changing the way they think about their own thoughts that I usually choose to avoid conversations like these when online.

But here's the cool bit:

Your grasp on this topic is actually already a lot better than most people who I start teaching mindfulness to, which is why I am very confident that you are sitting right on the edge of a serious breakthrough.

So on that note, I'm going to do you kind of a weird favor. I'm going to block you.

Once I block you, here is what is going to happen:

Initially, you are going to be annoyed. Your brain is going to be agitated that some random stranger just suggested that you don't really understand how your own mind functions and then fucked off, and that is going to engender a mild emotional response.

That impulse will likely make you want to reply to my post again with reasons that I am wrong (even though I will unfortunately never get to see it) or it might drive you to cover up your current emotional experience by going and doing something else.

But here's the weird bit: the next time that you find yourself having a negative thought spiral, you are also eventually going to think about me and the contents of this thread.

I'm going to pop up into your head like an annoying little mosquito, seemingly smirking at you for trying to ignore or cover up your problems in the way that you typically do.

You might even continue fighting back the first few times it happens, but eventually you are going to notice that everything I underlined about your negative emotional thoughts is entirely true… and you are finally going to get sick of it.

When that happens after a few weeks or so, I want you to revisit the advice that you've been given by this thread… and ask yourself again if the mild discomfort of having to engage in a few months worth of intentional mindfulness, meditation or medication is really as bad as the constant inability to focus your own mind that you already experience all the time.


One final note:

However, just a stray thought won't do.

Just as lifting a weight a single time is not enough to gain muscle mass, so too is a single instance of mindful thought or meditation completely ineffectual at changing the way your brain behaves.

But just as it is obviously true that a single instance of weightlifting is not going to change the composition of your body, so too is it undeniably true that a year of intense weightlifting WILL change your body. It's not a matter of personal opinion, it's a simple biological fact. I watch it happen in action every single day.

Personally, I think your replies in this thread display significant intelligence… but that is exactly why you have to be extra careful when it comes to this topic. Your brain will use that high intelligence against you to come up with highly-specific justifications for continuing the exact behavior that landed you in your current position in the first place.

So watch out for yourself! (Literally)
 
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