[-] Remy@lemmy.today 1 points 19 hours ago

I guess many of us can learn more from Minecraft then from school. Minecraft teached me basic principles of economy and bussines, when I was playing on server's that had a big economy

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 1 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

When I can’t get off my phone, I switch the display from colour to greyscale, and about 15 minutes later it’s much easier to put the device down. NB make a shortcut so that it’s easy to change the colours without leaving the app you’re in.

I enabled this has an automated feature, but most of the time, I turn it off manually without thinking much about it

If an alarm is really important, I put the alarm clock on the other side of the room. Close enough that I can’t ignore it but far enough that I have to stand up and walk over to switch it off.

This could work if I put the alarm in a difficult to reach position, so I realy need to stop the current thing to reach it, and then it may be easier to start the next thing?

I combine activities to keep my brain sufficiently stimulated e.g. listen to a podcast or music while doing something repetitive. So when task switching, my 1st step is fun, deciding what I want to listen to.

I think listening to music could be a good task switcher, especially if the music is motivating

I try to avoid digital content that I identify as being addictive or very difficult to break out of. Natasha Dow Schüll defines what she calls the “ludic loop”, which is an activity that is solitary, doesn’t include natural breaks, doesn’t have a definite end, and has random rewards.

This definition seems to match on almost all digital activities?

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 2 points 19 hours ago

I don't think this is always possible. Researching something in the internet or playing a video game, will probably always be more interesting then to some necessary daily routines

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 1 points 19 hours ago

Can I ask what medications you take?

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 1 points 1 day ago

"I also used cigarettes to ‘mark’ the transition between activities. They help, and also are rotten bad for your health, expensive, and stink like hell." Do you think something more healthy, could also work? But it most be limited in time so it doesn't become the next activity I can't stop.

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 2 points 1 day ago

Disobeying my own schedules and reminders is one of things that I disrespect my self the most for, but I just can't really figure out how to make my self obey the reminders.

I wish I was one of these people that have a relation to their reminders like the reminder is some military sergeant and you do what it says, without resisting the authority.

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 2 points 1 day ago

You mean like a transitioning ritual? If the transitional ritual is

  • Limited in time (so that it can't just be the next activity I don't stop) -Is always available
  • Has high dopamine so I can get me to do it, then I think this could be good helper But I first need to find such a ritual that works for me 🤔
[-] Remy@lemmy.today 1 points 1 day ago

Thank you for replying

"When I realise that I should stop, instead set a 5 or 10 minute timer and stop when it goes off." The problem is that I press the snooze again and again, sometimes for over an hour.

"Start an inner dialogue, e. g. like: “What do I gain from this? Why am I doing this?” Don’t consider it implicit pressure to stop, just an open, honest dialogue. The goal is not to stop right away, but to keep learning about yourself for a couple of weeks while you still do it. But for some people, they feel caught by themselves in the action and might stop right away; that is also okay." I think this would work, but you do I get my self to start the dialogue in this moments? These situation that I don't stop, mostly happens when I do something I find very interesting or I will like its very important.

"Make a deal with yourself to do something productive, and then continue the thing guilt-free. That feels much sweeter! The productive thing can be as little as to write a list, or to think about the tasks on the existing list and what it would feel like to do them." Most of the times where I should stop but don't, are when the next thing I need to do, is something that takes more then 60 minutes until its finished, so I can't say to my self to just do it 5 minutes.

"Technical solution, such as Leechblock NG browser plugin to limit usage of some websites. Could have a time limit, or time of day limit, and can do a hard block or “soft” block by going black/white." Yes, since the wifi block works great (if I remember to put out the SIM) I maybe should expand technical solutions to cover more.

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submitted 3 days ago by Remy@lemmy.today to c/adhd@lemmy.world

Hello, I have a big problem that interferes with every aspect of my life. And I want to ask you all if you experience this too and/or you have any ideas on how to improve this behavior?

The Problem

When I do anything interesting, or anything that just isn't completely boring, I can't stop when it's time to stop and start the doing the next thing. I always think, something like "Just five minutes more" and then I sometimes finish hours later than I had planned. This breaks all time-sensitive plans and also causes me to go to sleep far too late.

I don't think that its simple procrastination, because what I feel when I do it, is not about not wanting to start the next thing, but about not wanting to stop the current thing.

List of things I already do / have already tried

  • Setting up alarms that remind me that I need to stop doing the current thing and start doing the next thing
  • Creating schedules
  • Configuring the Wifi Router to turn of at certain times: This is very effective (when I have taken out my SIM card before), but its only helping with cutting the wifi at the end of the day for bedtime, not other time sensitive tasks that are necessary to even enable me to sleep on time (like eating dinner early enough)
  • Buffer time: Most of the time I can't get my self to view the buffer deadline as the actual deadline
  • Reading books about habits: I read some books about habits, but these books are mostly about starting an activity, or don't starting an activity at all, but I need to do certain things, and stop doing them on time.
  • This list is probably incomplete
[-] Remy@lemmy.today 2 points 4 days ago

I need this. Can you provide a link (if links are allowed?) or the name of the product? I would be very grateful

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

I can't provide any good tips on how to get out of bed better, because I too struggle with this.

But I have some tips on getting awake in the morning after getting out of bed:

  • Try to get outside and get sunlight into your eyes as fast as possible. Aim for 100k Lux minutes (This means for example 10k Lux for 10 minutes or 5k Lux for 20 minutes).
  • Get some movement, this can easily be combined with being outside by taking a walk
  • DONT take any form of caffeine for the first 90 minutes of the day and not until you got enough sunlight into your eyes. This is important because caffeine hinders your brains ability to adjust its hormones if you take it too early.

I learned these tips from an Andrew Huberman podcast (not sure if I can post links here, so I don't)

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 6 points 4 days ago

What does he means with "ancient homosexuality" vs "feminized homosexuality" ? And then why he even cares about it?

[-] Remy@lemmy.today 5 points 4 days ago

Me at the beginning of every day

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Remy

joined 5 days ago