@juaddictart: L'ALCOOLISME CHRONIQUE #addiction #tik_tok

JU ADDICT ART
JU ADDICT ART
Open In TikTok:
Region: FR
Thursday 04 June 2026 12:40:15 GMT
1943
89
22
17

Music

Download

Comments

gaetan.masson46
Gaetan Masson :
merci bien
2026-06-04 13:13:59
1
laloueloute
laloute :
c'est dur de parlé... avec qui ?...
2026-06-04 13:54:59
1
francoise76220
francoise76220 :
que pensez vous de Loana ?
2026-06-04 20:54:18
0
marie.noelle.davi
Marie Noelle David :
c est exactement ça
2026-06-04 12:57:22
0
hikadam22
Hika_Dam22 :
c surnois l'alcool
2026-06-04 15:53:04
1
gien455007
gien455007 :
un verre pour oublier quand on ta démoli oui on ce noie dans l alcool
2026-06-04 12:59:51
1
valerieknopke
Val :
Malheureusement il faut réussir à demander de l'aide et suivre son traitement correctement pour vouloir réussir à s'en sortir sinon le problème vient d'ailleurs
2026-06-04 21:36:17
1
daren7755
Amaury Megrat :
c est la veriter
2026-06-05 00:09:29
0
gaetanf62
gaetanf62 :
🙏🙏🙏🥺🤯
2026-06-04 15:51:42
1
To see more videos from user @juaddictart, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

We stopped fighting somewhere around year twelve. I remember noticing it as a good sign. Less conflict. More peace. Proof that we had finally figured something out. It took me two more years to understand what we had figured out: How to stop expecting anything from each other. The quiet wasn’t peace. It was the sound of two people who had each, separately, decided it wasn’t worth it to try anymore. Here’s what nobody tells you about that: It doesn’t feel like a decision. It feels like maturity. Like you’ve both grown past the need to push, to reach, to want something from each other. You haven’t. You’ve just stopped. The difference between a relationship that has worked through conflict and one that has quietly given up looks identical from the outside. From the inside, there’s one signal: do you still feel the pull toward them? Not obligation. Not comfort. Pull. The couples I know who are genuinely well — not managing, not coexisting, but alive together — still have friction. Not cruelty. Friction. The evidence that two people are still engaged enough to want something from each other. Silence can mean peace. Or it can mean withdrawal. The BODY knows the difference, even when the mind has decided to call it fine. … The nervous system under emotional withdrawal runs a quiet version of the same threat response it runs under acute conflict. Not identical — but not neutral. Chronic disconnection shows up in sleep quality. In cortisol patterns. In the specific fatigue that isn’t tiredness — it’s the cost of being consistently alone in a room with someone. The body was designed for contact. Real contact — the kind that requires something from you. The kind where the other person can still disappoint you because you still want something from them. When that possibility disappears, the body registers it. The quiet that feels like peace often costs more than the noise it replaced.
We stopped fighting somewhere around year twelve. I remember noticing it as a good sign. Less conflict. More peace. Proof that we had finally figured something out. It took me two more years to understand what we had figured out: How to stop expecting anything from each other. The quiet wasn’t peace. It was the sound of two people who had each, separately, decided it wasn’t worth it to try anymore. Here’s what nobody tells you about that: It doesn’t feel like a decision. It feels like maturity. Like you’ve both grown past the need to push, to reach, to want something from each other. You haven’t. You’ve just stopped. The difference between a relationship that has worked through conflict and one that has quietly given up looks identical from the outside. From the inside, there’s one signal: do you still feel the pull toward them? Not obligation. Not comfort. Pull. The couples I know who are genuinely well — not managing, not coexisting, but alive together — still have friction. Not cruelty. Friction. The evidence that two people are still engaged enough to want something from each other. Silence can mean peace. Or it can mean withdrawal. The BODY knows the difference, even when the mind has decided to call it fine. … The nervous system under emotional withdrawal runs a quiet version of the same threat response it runs under acute conflict. Not identical — but not neutral. Chronic disconnection shows up in sleep quality. In cortisol patterns. In the specific fatigue that isn’t tiredness — it’s the cost of being consistently alone in a room with someone. The body was designed for contact. Real contact — the kind that requires something from you. The kind where the other person can still disappoint you because you still want something from them. When that possibility disappears, the body registers it. The quiet that feels like peace often costs more than the noise it replaced.

About