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NEW VIDEO: I Quit MMOs and THIS Happened

jeffacce

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  1. # Day 11 I met with some of my friends from long ago. Video games came up and they were very understanding that I quit. It's surely unimportant as we don't meet often, but supportive nonetheless.
  2. # Day 8-10 Mostly packed days with work and socialization. Gaming thoughts became much less frequent (although I had one this morning) and easier to deal with. Rested and feeling much better now. More stuff ahead. Onwards!
  3. # Day 6–7 Two days filled with work. I think I've overworked myself and I'm very tired right now – undesirable, but observably different from the lethargy coming from boredom and no games. I notice that I now like to watch videos instead late into the night, and I will try to control that by leaving my laptop outside before sleep.
  4. # Day 5 Thanks for the support here! Again, occupying myself with work and socializing with my friends were very helpful. I just noticed that I didn't do much outside of home last weekend; that might have contributed to my boredom. I filled my calendar this week with work and get-togethers with old friends and classmates.
  5. # Day 4 I got depressed when I resisted playing video games, and I went on a day-long quest of observing myself and diagnosing what caused it. To bring in here some of what I learned from statistics, this is in fact an interesting causal inference problem: I am only aware of the symptoms and I have to deduce the causes. Statistics makes one wary of correlations – to oversimplify, things happening next to each other aren't necessarily causing one another. In my case, I could have attributed my lethargy to any combination of lack of caffeine, lack of exercise, yesterday's heat stroke from overexercising, and a myriad other potential causes. I don't think I'll be knowing this one for sure, but I hypothesize it was largely because of video games. I'll have to be aware of my changes and react accordingly. Caffeine helped elevate my mood in the morning but I was feeling down after lunch. Usually I resort to playing video games when I get bored – bad mood seems to be a trigger of this habit. By now I have mostly succeeded in substituting exercising for my old gaming habits. Onwards.
  6. # Day 3 Working and socializing seemed to curb my gaming urges. Exercised at night and deleted remaining games in my home desktop.
  7. # Day 2 Strong urges to play video games during the day. Feelings of angst came up as I restricted myself, so I watched gaming videos (will be switched to reading books), exercised, played guitar and meditated instead. I will be more occupied in the next few days with various work, and it would be easier not to think about games. I believe growth mindset here is important: willpower is acquired rather than inborn. Rewiring a brain likely involves exertion and effort (think about education, habit forming, motion recovery, sports learning, etc.) Looking forward to completely quitting video games.
  8. Hi all, I'm Jeff. I'm a college student trying to improve personally. Starting today, I will stop playing video games, and I plan to journal my experience here. Cheers. # Day 1 A few interesting observations as I break the habit of resorting to video games when I have downtime. While this is still an insufficient sample size of observations to reach any solid conclusions, it seems that I get a sense of urgency if I plan my day in advance. Right now, I'm trying to reform my habit of Downtime (cue) – video game (routine) – stimulation (reward) to Downtime (cue) – resting/exercise (routine) – refreshment (reward). There might be other triggering scenarios like stress and procrastination, and I am finding a replacement routine for them. Meditating is a promising option – I have been doing it occasionally and I plan to commit more.
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