Thank you all so much for the support and feedback! It means a lot to me that I'm able to share something that's really improvied my experience. I finally have some more time so I'll work on creating the new section! Again, anyone is free to reach out to me if they have a request
EDIT: Finally added a section going over visual changes, and a section going over how to disable the extension. Thank you so much for the feedback!Also, i just wanted to let anyone know who's reading this that you can censor images for WHATEVER reason you want. This is all happening on your own computer, under your own control and affects absolutely no one else. This is a tool that anyone can use, at any time, and for any reason. You don't have to have a phobia or a trigger to customize your experience
Minimanta wrote:I agree that phobias should be taken seriously however I disagree shielding yourself from your phobia is taking it seriously.
Exposure therapy is usually the way to go especially with animal phobias like spiders and snakes and whatnot.
Slow and steady just try to learn about whatever you are afraid of. Completely removing yourself from your phobia just makes the fear worse.
Knowledge and exposure among other things are powerful tools to overcome your phobias, not censoring silly pixels on the internet.
There are several pets on CS I would rather never look at again but I would never consider blocking the images.
But to each their own I guess.
I've actually been in and out of exposure theory for my phobia. The most important thing about that for me has been the feeling of control and safety.
It's a very slow process, and the first step with phobias like mine is even being comfortable around the very concept. I will literally pass out if someone around me discusses my phobia for an extended period of time.
With phobias, it's really hard to build up neutral or positive interactions with the subject, and a negative interaction has So Much more weight to it. Having a bad experience or seeing an image before you're ready can easily have you lose progress. It's important for me to be in the right headspace, know that I'm safe, and know that I can end it at any time. Otherwise the fear response takes over and I'm more reluctant to try and take steps next time
I wanted to share this tool to give people the freedom to control their chicken smoothie experience. Working on phobias is long, scary work. It's not my place to judge where someone is on their journey, or decide if exposure therapy would even be a feasible option for them. It's okay if you don't need or want to use these methods, but for some people it's very helpful!