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Pretending every psychological addiction (as opposed to physical addictions) is a separate disorder seems kind of retarded to me. Whether you are addicted to porn, gambling, videogames, eating, long distance running, or being a terminal undergrad, the underlying issue is the same. Only the focus of the disorder is different.
Whether you are addicted to porn, gambling, videogames, eating, long distance running, or being a terminal undergrad, the underlying issue is the same.
That's like saying there's no difference between a car accident and drowning because the issue is that you're dead.
Being addicted to sexual violence because you were abused as a kid, versus say, being addicted to video games because they give you a sense of accomplishment, are the not the same underlying issue. The underlying issue isn't "addiction," the issue is whatever's causing the person to become lost to the addiction. There are different psychological mechanisms at play.
You don't treat a veteran who's addicted to first-person shooters the same way you'd treat someone who's addicted to being pissed on.
Different shit is driving the addiction. That's why they're different disorders; they are different disruptions enabling behavior loops.
The loop isn't the problem, it's a symptom.
Pretending every psychological addiction (as opposed to physical addictions) is a separate disorder seems kind of retarded to me.
Pretending you know enough about psychology to make this statement seems equally retarded to me.
I think being addicted to sexual violence probably is in a different category. My point was that most addictions (that aren't physical addictions) are really a matter of obsessive behavior. It doesn't much matter what you are obsessing over, the treatment of how to change your thinking is essentially the same.
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[–] Thisismyvoatusername 0 points 5 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago
Pretending every psychological addiction (as opposed to physical addictions) is a separate disorder seems kind of retarded to me. Whether you are addicted to porn, gambling, videogames, eating, long distance running, or being a terminal undergrad, the underlying issue is the same. Only the focus of the disorder is different.
[–] AnotherGrayman 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
That's like saying there's no difference between a car accident and drowning because the issue is that you're dead.
Being addicted to sexual violence because you were abused as a kid, versus say, being addicted to video games because they give you a sense of accomplishment, are the not the same underlying issue. The underlying issue isn't "addiction," the issue is whatever's causing the person to become lost to the addiction. There are different psychological mechanisms at play.
You don't treat a veteran who's addicted to first-person shooters the same way you'd treat someone who's addicted to being pissed on.
Different shit is driving the addiction. That's why they're different disorders; they are different disruptions enabling behavior loops.
The loop isn't the problem, it's a symptom.
Pretending you know enough about psychology to make this statement seems equally retarded to me.
[–] Thisismyvoatusername 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I think being addicted to sexual violence probably is in a different category. My point was that most addictions (that aren't physical addictions) are really a matter of obsessive behavior. It doesn't much matter what you are obsessing over, the treatment of how to change your thinking is essentially the same.