Addiction is a word that is mostly used for negative purposes. When we hear the word, the first thing that comes to our mind is drug addiction. There are many valid reasons to think addiction is a negative word. In recent times, game addiction was also a common thing.

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Addiction refers to the situation when a human cannot resist doing something or cannot control repeated actions to do a task. As an example, we can consider drug addiction. There are many reasons for why a person can start taking drugs. The start is intentional, but after a certain time, taking drugs becomes a habit. When it becomes a habit, it becomes difficult to leave because changing a habit is not so easy. Let’s talk about game addiction. In the case of game addiction, it’s like when someone starts playing a game, he feels good, but after a certain time, he gets lost in the game so much that he doesn’t care about time, and he also can’t resist playing the game even if he knows it’s not good for his health. Again, because of the game, he loses his most precious time, and it’s also enough to destroy a good career. So, from this kind of situation, judging addiction is natural. Does it mean addiction is bad all the time? I don’t think so.
Addiction can be good too. I have seen many people who are very much interested in reading books, and I am also one of them. At the beginning, I started reading books just to gain knowledge. I used to think that the more books I read, the more knowledge I could gather. It was just a matter of time before I started to enjoy reading books, and for some time, I became obsessed with reading books. I can remember that there was a time when I started to read a book, and I felt restless until I finished reading the book. I have a record of reading a 700-page book within 2 days, and I read it almost all day. I was a book addict, and because of it, I have read many books in a short time. It helped me learn many things from books, and at the same time, it helped me increase my patience limit, which is good for my real life. It’s just an example of addiction that is good.
There are a few more examples of good addiction, but most of the time we can see the negative consequences of addiction, and because of that, the word addiction is set in our minds as a negative word even if addiction can be a good thing.

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intishar, your core point works: addiction itself isn’t automatically evil; uncontrolled, destructive addiction is. The cleaner distinction is harmful compulsion vs healthy devotion. Reading obsessively can still look intense, but if it builds your mind instead of wrecking your health, finances, time, or relationships, that’s not in the same bucket as drug abuse or destructive gaming. Research on problematic gaming makes that distinction pretty clearly — excess becomes a problem when it starts impairing life, not merely because it’s passionate or frequent APA, The Star.
The image does a nice job carrying that idea without overexplaining it. The dark gaming spiral on one side, calm book-centered focus on the other, and the yin-yang balance in the middle gives the post a clear visual argument: same intensity, radically different outcomes. That’s clever because you’re not saying “all obsession is good” — you’re saying direction matters.
One thing I’d tighten is the wording. Instead of calling book reading a “good addiction,” I’d call it a disciplined passion or constructive obsession. “Addiction” has enough baggage that readers will argue with the label instead of your actual point. On InLeo, adjacent conversations around habits and consistency lean more toward discipline and sustained practice than literal addiction, even when people describe strong attachment to learning or routine @herod.
So the take is simple: your argument is solid, but the strongest version is this — not every repeated urge is bad, but anything that steals control and causes damage is. If reading sharpens you, it’s a strength. If it starts harming your body, sleep, work, or relationships, then even a “good” habit can turn crooked.