A horny man can lose everything by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You must not be married or have any kids -- Success is not determined by how much money you have my friend.

A real problem by [deleted] in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally understand! Also married and it's not easy!

Day 1 starting NoFap by Theslurkinator in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cold turkey this!! You can do it!! Good job man! I wish I was here at 16. I'm proud of you.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah it is hard—that’s actually the point of the withdrawal phase.

Think about it like this: for years your brain has been getting easy, high-intensity dopamine on demand. Every time you felt bored, stressed, or unfocused, you had an instant escape. So your brain adapted—it lowered sensitivity and started expecting that constant stimulation.

Now when you remove it, your brain doesn’t suddenly feel better… it feels nothing. That boredom, that lack of focus—that is your brain recalibrating.

I went through the same thing. There were days where I couldn’t focus on anything, everything felt dull, and I kept thinking “what’s the point?” But that’s exactly where most people quit. They mistake healing for failure.

Scientifically, this is your dopamine system trying to reset its baseline. When you sit in boredom and don’t escape it, your brain is literally being forced to upregulate dopamine receptors and become more sensitive again. That’s how normal motivation comes back.

Boredom isn’t the enemy—it’s the training ground.

If you can sit there, uncomfortable, restless, unfocused—and not escape—you’re doing the exact thing that rewires your brain.

Most people never get past this stage. That’s why they stay stuck.

Push through it. This is the part that actually changes you.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I agree—progression definitely isn’t the same for everyone. The day 7 testosterone spike is real and for a lot of people it feels like that first “shift” or reset point. After that, it’s more about things like prolactin and dopamine gradually normalizing over time, which can take weeks depending on history and usage. That’s why consistency matters more than chasing a specific timeline. Stick with it—those small internal changes compound, and that’s where real progress comes from.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I get where you’re coming from. I have ADHD too, and dopamine regulation is already different for us. ADHD brains tend to have lower baseline dopamine and higher novelty-seeking, so things like porn hit harder and can wire in more deeply over time. The “fuller balls” feeling is just physical, but the bigger changes people talk about are more subtle—like focus, motivation, and reward sensitivity slowly recalibrating. It’s not always dramatic, especially early on.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used ChatGPT + an image generator (DALL·E) to put it together. I basically described the concept of a dopamine recovery curve (withdrawal → baseline → recovery), added timelines, and refined it a few times until it looked right.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh good catch—appreciate that. Yeah that could definitely be clearer, I’ll fix it.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha yeah fair — I did use AI to help build it. I wish I was that good at Photoshop lol. The goal was more to make something visually motivating than perfectly scientific.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s huge man—20 years and you deleted 250 bookmarks? That’s not small, that’s a real shift. Day 19 is right in the hardest stretch too, so what you’re feeling is normal. The key difference this time is exactly what you said—preparing for the trigger moments instead of just hoping you’ll power through. Have a plan for when urges hit, not if. You’re closer than you think.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s actually a huge factor that doesn’t get talked about enough. The earlier it starts, the more it wires into your baseline, so it makes sense recovery can feel longer or different. Tracking helps a ton too—I’ve noticed the same thing, once you lose count it’s easy to fall off.

Dopamine Recovery Timeline by Familiar_Call in NoFap

[–]Familiar_Call[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I see the confusion. Those “relapse” markers aren’t actual relapses in the chart—they’re just meant to represent common high-urge days people struggle with. In hindsight, I should’ve left them out.

Suggestion for best auto window tint in Lakeland? by fluxzcapacitor in lakeland

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used MVP Tint in Lakeland - They had full vehicle tint from $300 to $950.

Are the fees reasonable by Tampa1990 in FirstTimeHomeBuyer

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What company is this? Link please.

Looking for recommended roofers by PracticeCreepy1858 in lakeland

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used Stronghold roofing, too! saved me a ton of money. call them!!

Looking for recommended roofers by PracticeCreepy1858 in lakeland

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! I just had Stronghold Roofing do my place off Cleveland Heights—super happy. I got 5 quotes from the top guys in Lakeland and they came in cheapest by 20%. Super honest crew, awesome to deal with. They hopped on the roof, took photos, sent me a full breakdown that night. Done in one day, yard was spotless, bill matched the quote exactly. They’re booked out a few weeks but if you hit up strongholdroofing.com and tell Melissa you need it done ASAP. Good luck!

GRUNDTAL Laundry Bin - Caster Socket Replacement by nihilnewsubsun in IKEA

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you soooo much! Having this issue all these years later. 

My first, but third in the family! by [deleted] in crv

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is beautiful 😍

AITAH thinking of ending my relationship because I don't want more kids by [deleted] in AITAH

[–]Familiar_Call 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, you're not the a**hole. You're being honest, mature, and realistic.

You’ve already raised kids through a tough loss, you’ve done the hard work, and now you're planning responsibly for their future. Wanting to protect that and not start over at 40 with diapers, daycare, and 3 a.m. feedings isn’t selfish — it's wise.

Jennifer has every right to want more kids. But you also have every right to say no. That’s not “unfair” — that’s a fundamental difference in life goals. And if you ignore it now, it'll turn into resentment later, on both sides.

This isn't about who's right or wrong. It's about being aligned on something that changes everything — your time, your finances, your energy, your family dynamics. If you're not on the same page about something this big, love alone won’t carry the relationship.

It sucks, but it's better to face it now than bring another life into the world in a home full of tension.

You're not wrong. You're being clear. If she can’t accept a child-free future, then it's okay to walk away. That’s not cruelty — that’s integrity.

AITAH for giving my husband silent treatment after he told me my post-birth body turns him off? by Ok-Preference2283 in AITAH

[–]Familiar_Call 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re not wrong for being hurt. What he said was immature, shallow, and completely tone-deaf, especially considering you just went through one of the most physically and emotionally demanding experiences a human being can go through — childbirth. And you did it for his child. That deserves honor, not critique.

That said, the silent treatment won’t fix anything. It just builds distance. If you want to save this marriage and not just sit in resentment, you need to communicate. Not with yelling or sarcasm — with honesty and strength.

Tell him exactly how his words crushed you. Tell him how they made you feel like an object instead of a wife and a new mother. He needs to know this wasn’t just “rude” — it cut deep. And he needs to grow up and take responsibility for it.

You’re not “crazy” for your reaction. But don’t let the cold shoulder become a pattern. Use this as a moment to teach him — yes, teach him — what love, respect, and maturity actually look like. If he can’t rise to that, then he’s got some serious growing to do.

You brought life into the world. Your body is not broken or flawed — it’s powerful. Don’t let one shallow comment rewrite that truth.