- Date posted
- 2y ago
I was forced to do an exposure at work
I was forced to fight thru my contamination OCD cause I couldn’t let myself look weird in front of people 👀
I was forced to fight thru my contamination OCD cause I couldn’t let myself look weird in front of people 👀
Good for you💪💪💪
How was it? Were you able to move forward without much distress or sticky thoughts?
@Aaanonymous I couldn’t move forward after I was by myself. Then I gave in to my compulsions.
@mentaltorture They say not doing it right away helps too…I’m not sure it does…sigh…for me it feels that time cements the feeling/thought further.
@Aaanonymous Yeah sometimes it feels like the compulsions have a delayed fuse. I was forced into an exposure today too and had to deal with it and gave in when I was alone hahaha man!
@divyD I tried an ERP task where eventually I’d have to wash my hands but not inbetween as I’d prefer. And it seems that made it so I had to wash them extra afterwards b/c now the feeling/thought was further cemented in my mind. I felt frustrated afterwards.
@mentaltorture - Maybe you weren't ready for this exposure? It's okay to take it slower and reevaluate your exposures.
I have contamination OCD that causes me to excessively wash my hands/clean items with disinfectant wipes. I know I just need to start with small exposures but how do I do that without spiraling? I tried a while back by just touching the outside of my dishwasher and not washing my hands after and it led to me being unable to even exist in my house. I basically lived on my couch for three weeks as it was the only 'safe' space that I had not touched with my dirty hands. I had to take a week off work to clean my house to make it somewhat liveable. I still haven't got round to cleaning everything though so things like my kitchen are still no-go zones that I don't enter. I just don't know how to start ERP without it making everything worse. Any advice would be appreciated. I am not seeing a therapist at the moment due to financial constraints.
Those of you who have overcome at least a bit, if not all, of your OCD. When you went through the CBT and ERP, did it feel like the end of the world? And how did you face the fact that your fears and uncertainties might actually come to life?
Looking back, I realize I’ve had OCD since I was 7. though I wasn’t diagnosed until I was 30. As a kid, I was consumed by fears I couldn’t explain: "What if God isn’t real? What happens when we die? How do I know I’m real?" These existential thoughts terrified me, and while everyone has them from time to time, I felt like they were consuming my life. By 12, I was having daily panic attacks about death and war, feeling untethered from reality as depersonalization and derealization set in. At 15, I turned to drinking, spending the next 15 years drunk, trying to escape my mind. I hated myself, struggled with my body, and my intrusive thoughts. Sobriety forced me to face it all head-on. In May 2022, I finally learned I had OCD. I remember the exact date: May 10th. Reading about it, I thought, "Oh my God, this is it. This explains everything." My main themes were existential OCD and self-harm intrusive thoughts. The self-harm fears were the hardest: "What if I kill myself? What if I lose control?" These thoughts terrified me because I didn’t want to die. ERP changed everything. At first, I thought, "You want me to confront my worst fears? Are you kidding me?" But ERP is gradual and done at your pace. My therapist taught me to lean into uncertainty instead of fighting it. She’d say, "Maybe you’ll kill yourself—who knows?" At first, it felt scary, but for OCD, it was freeing. Slowly, I realized my thoughts were just thoughts. ERP gave me my life back. I’m working again, I’m sober, and for the first time, I can imagine a future. If you’re scared to try ERP, I get it. But if you’re already living in fear, why not try a set of tools that can give you hope?
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