- Date posted
- 2y ago
OCD recovery
Does OCD recovery mean not getting the same intrusive thoughts everyday even when you’re not thinking of anything?
Does OCD recovery mean not getting the same intrusive thoughts everyday even when you’re not thinking of anything?
I have contamination OCD but when thoughts come up about what ifs etc with ERP I’m able to label them and successfully dismiss or work through them and move on.
@Erin P but you can’t be getting those thoughts everyday if you’ve recovered right? cus that means it’s still bugging you
@DillonLee Everyone gets intrusive thoughts. People with OCD just obsess over them and think more of them than they actually are. You most likely will always get intrusive thoughts. It’s about learning and accepting they mean nothing. Think of your mind as a social media algorithm. If you keep interacting with something it’ll show you more of it on your feed. So if you interacting with the intrusive thoughts. Your brain will show you more. If you don’t. Your brain will show you less.
How long does it take for the intrusive thoughts to go away
OK, this might sound really dumb, but when you guys get intrusive thoughts, do they just come once and then go away? I’ve heard that repeatedly thinking about an intrusive thought is considered ‘checking,’ but it doesn’t feel like I have any control over how many times it comes up in my head. It’s not like I’m trying to check anything—it just keeps showing up, almost like it’s terrorizing me every time. I can’t seem to stop it from looping, stop remembering it, or prevent it from coming up. Every time it does, I feel horrified, and I already know it’s going to horrify me. I don’t think I’m actively trying to see if my feelings have changed, so is this still considered checking? How do other people get an intrusive thought and just move on? Doesn’t it pop up a million times for them too? I always thought that was normal, but now I’m hearing this could be a compulsion, and I feel really confused, scared, and lost. Is this why my OCD feels so extreme? Because I really don’t feel like I can control how many times the thought pops up.
I’ve been thinking a lot about how OCD changes the way we see ourselves, but I recently realized that I am not my thoughts. Just because a thought pops up doesn’t mean it’s true or that it defines me. I’ve started learning how to see OCD for what it is—just a disorder trying to trick me—and I’ve become stronger in dealing with it. Has anyone else here had a similar realization? How do you handle these thoughts when they show up?
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