me_irl - eviltoast
  • sprite0@sh.itjust.works
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    23 hours ago

    I was trying some anti depressants and they didn’t work well for me but the bizarre side effect from taking them is that i couldn’t stop talking to myself. I go on walks in the evening and when i was on these meds i would be out there walking down the street having conversations out loud with myself, every day! I do this in my head sometimes but with these meds it wasn’t silent and i just couldn’t turn it off.

  • bricklove@midwest.social
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    2 days ago

    I was arguing with a wife I made up in my head about not wanting to go to some event and her being mad at me because I was mopey the whole time. Even though I told her I wasn’t going to have a good time and she could just go without me. This happens every time and I don’t know why she keeps asking.

    Anyway my fantasy wife and I are getting a divorce.

  • Komodo Rodeo@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    If that’s happening to anyone, it lowkey just means that you’re really stressed out about something(s), and not talking about it. In my experience, it’s because the person in question is either bottling it up, or spending too much time alone.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    2 days ago

    See, that’s why you build a therapist in a box inside your head, so it can mediate between the other aspects of your inner processes

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    You don’t need a sign, the tiktok watermark alone shows you’re in need of professional help.

    • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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      8 hours ago

      The idea is not that the conversation is illness, but that one might ‘hear’ what was said by the objectified self inside their head and recognize it as the sort of thing they’d more easily recognise as a sign of mental illness if said by someone else.

      • stinky@redlemmy.com
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        1 day ago

        right, that’s evident from the OP image. I’m asking why they’d “recognize it as the sort of thing they’d more easily recognise as a sign of mental illness if said by someone else”

        • Sunsofold@lemmings.world
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          8 hours ago

          Ah. Okay then. Sometimes looking at yourself from the perspective of the other can help you see things that are more visible from outside.

          For example: you could ‘hear’ yourself make a joke in your head about not wanting to go home and, because you have the perspective granted by being both the joker and the listener, you might be able to read that as the sort of joke someone might make when in an abusive relationship. Same goes for a joke about suicide, paranoiac explanations, etc. Finding a way to give yourself enough emotional distance from your own thoughts to judge them objectively is actually a part of certain styles of therapy. OP is essentially describing a certain kind of epiphany that can come from introspection, whether alone or guided by a therapist.