- Date posted
- 2y ago
Acceptance of Uncertainty
What are everyone’s thoughts on what that statement means. Acceptance of uncertainty. Is it that I am accepting that I don’t know if something will or will not happen?
What are everyone’s thoughts on what that statement means. Acceptance of uncertainty. Is it that I am accepting that I don’t know if something will or will not happen?
To me it means “to know that I/we don’t know” 🤷🏽♂️
To me personally I am “ accepting that I’m unable to FEEL certain “ because I have ocd. I can have all the reassurance and facts and logic but still feel uncertain. That’s different to the thought itself being uncertain.
That's a key with OCD and it grabs on to that .. Its normal for anyone to want certainty in every day life.. It gets to be a problem when we want control in things we can't control... Which really is everything :) So what happens is that OCD demands that we get certaininty in everything and we get thrown into a loop of trying to solve a problem that just can't possibly be solved I now have come to the point that uncertainty is a part of living and life and I just really don't know what tomorrow brings Some days it's easier than others but my alternative is not living my life to the fullest... So I fight back with OCD when I can.. Somedays are good Somedays it's more of a struggle But thanks to therapy and this community.. I'm keeping up the fight
Yes. I found the comments in this link useful for this question: https://www.shalanicely.com/aha-moments/erp-scripting-for-ocd/
Ive always interpreted it as confidence not certainty, because we cannot predict every aspect of an object or event, but we can be confident in our assumptions.
I like the term, “embrace uncertainty!” Because it’s in the unknown that fun can appear.
Does anyone else experience a moment of clarity where you feel strong relief that the intrusive thought isn’t true, only to then immediately start questioning if you’ve only convinced yourself that because you don’t want the thought to be true? I’m pretty confident it would take some crazy mental gymnastics to actually successfully convince myself I didn’t do something that I deep down knew I did, but every time I resist the compulsions and try to sit with the uncertainty or tell myself to think about what is logical, I usually briefly know that this probably didn’t happen but am unable to move on out of fear I’m just in denial and have convinced myself of that.
I used to get caught in a loop with existential thoughts very frequently. Every question made my stomach drop: (TW: existential questions) … … ... "Why does anything exist at all? What will death be like? Is anything even real? Is there any meaning to this? Is the universe infinitely big, and if not, what's beyond it? Are there multiverses? Has the universe been around forever? Will the universe end for good, or will it keep going forever? What is forever like? What even IS reality?" It would get so overwhelming that I remember lying on the floor in a fetal position for hours because I felt like there was no escape. I spent most of my days reading articles and watching videos about theoretical astrophysics and philosophy in a desperate attempt to "figure it all out." Of course that only made me more anxious, raised more questions, and kept me trapped in the cycle. Things started to improve once I learned to turn TOWARD reality, rather than away from it, and ERP really helped me do that. I learned that these questions weren't the problem. I learned that I can actually handle the anxiety that arises when exposed to these ideas and concepts. I don't have to figure anything out to make the anxiety go away; it arises and passes away on its own. Ironically, bringing myself into the present moment and becoming more aware of reality helped me escape the cycle of existential dread. Because of that, this topic no longer takes over my life. If I'm triggered by something I see, hear, or think, I may still feel a little twang of anxiety, but then it just goes away. "Maybe, maybe not" has been the single most useful phrase of my life. Do you ever get trapped in a cycle of existential questions? Are you worried that the ERP approach would be too scary to handle? If so, I'm happy to give my advice.
Here is what I say to people: I wish I could make it stop. I really do. I also wish I could stop tinnitus. What is tinnitus, you may ask? Well, have you ever gone to a loud concert and after it had a ringing in your ears. Or, in movies when a loud explosion hears, first it is often muffled, and then there is a very loud ringing sound. Well, I have hear that sound for over 30 years. Turns out the medications I took as a kid for allergies and all the antibiotics I was on for Strep had a side effect for some people - tinnitus - that sound that I have heard every decade, year, month, day, hour, and second, for the past 30 years. I have learned to live with it. As I type this, it is REALLY loud, because I am paying attention to it. But, in a few minutes it will fade into the background, and, while I will hear it, I will not pay much attention to it, and therefore I will go on with my night. I will listen to music, practice my story for the MOTH radio hour, and work out. I will clean up the kitchen and load the dishwasher, and I will eventually get ready for bed. I will go to bed hearing that sound, and fall asleep for a few hours until tomorrow morning when I start the day all over again. I cannot make the sound stop. There is nothing to do for it - no surgery or medication. Just learning to live with it, and that is what I have done. It is the thing that I hate the most in my life, and, if granted three wishes, it would be the first thing to change. For now, as I have for 30 years, I will live with it, and I will ask you to live with your noises in your head - the thoughts, the images, and the urges, and we will practice together accepting that things are not always as we want them, but we can handle that. We got this.
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