How to decompress

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


Lots of it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


Or gummies.
Anonymous
Nothing like a nice session with Rosie and her sisters!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


I hope you know that's a terrible idea.
- spouse of an alcoholic who started out using alcohol to decompress


Some people have the genetics to become addicts. Some do not.


And as shown with the cocain using soldiers coming back from Vietnam, it's a lot more complicated than that. One good rule for anyone to abide by is that if you're using a substance for relaxation (rather than for enjoyment in and of itself), you're not using it right.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


I hope you know that's a terrible idea.
- spouse of an alcoholic who started out using alcohol to decompress


Seconded
-recovered alcoholic, almost a decade clear
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


I hope you know that's a terrible idea.
- spouse of an alcoholic who started out using alcohol to decompress


Some people have the genetics to become addicts. Some do not.


This is a really dangerous thing to think, and an even more dangerous thing to say. Alcohol is an addictive substance. While some may be genetically predisposed to addiction, anyone can become an addict.

Using substances to decompress, as an occasional thing, might be an okay strategy for some, for a while. It is rarely a sound go-to strategy for anyone.

Please be aware, and stay safe out there. Kicking an addiction is the opposite of decompressing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Alcohol.


Or gummies.


Also an addictive substance, and, IME, the withdrawal takes longer and sucks harder (especially since a lot of people don't even understand that's what it even is).

Nothing says "polar opposite of decompressing" like blowing out your dopamine receptors and then feeling depressed as hell while they learn how to fire up again. The anhedonia was almost unbearable. Literally nothing was pleasant, and most of what I'd previously liked (e.g. music) wasn't even tolerable. Took about 8 months just to get past that phase.

0 stars. Do not recommend.
Anonymous
I'm really looking forward to spring so I can be out in my garden. Pulling weeds and micromanaging the borders is mindless enough, it's outdoors in the sun and the breeze, and when you're finished, it looks so nice.

I just wish I had more than my tiny city-house garden. I've seriously considered asking if any of my neighbors want me to start messing with theirs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm really looking forward to spring so I can be out in my garden. Pulling weeds and micromanaging the borders is mindless enough, it's outdoors in the sun and the breeze, and when you're finished, it looks so nice.

I just wish I had more than my tiny city-house garden. I've seriously considered asking if any of my neighbors want me to start messing with theirs.


Just add tons and tons of potted items. You have different heights and more options, including vegetables and herbs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I'm reading more and way less screens at night. Still suck at meditating.


Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Crafts, joking with my sister, spray painting a random Tesla, hot baths and shopping.



We should have a club. There's a truck in my neighborhood.
Anonymous
Living in a beach town and not in DC. We didn't move here to get away from DC politics, but it's a more lifestyle place to live. And we really are able to tune out the politics here. I hear my friends' stories in DC, and it's sounds like hell.

Stopped listening to NPR in the car and now listen the Sirius Comedy Channel 95. Three minute sound bites of the funniest parts of comedy acts. I'm not a huge standup comedy person, but man, the short bursts really make the time go fast.
Anonymous
Reading fluff books

Walking with a friend

Playing with my kids

S*x

Anonymous
Salsa dancing.
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