- Date posted
- 2y
Struggling
Hello, I’ve really loved reading all the NOCD posts it’s makes me feel less alone but I’ve never posted something myself. I’m having trouble sleeping because my ocd has been so bad lately. I decided to read my college application essay on overcoming ocd at a time when I was doing better. I don’t know if it would be helpful to anyone but I thought I would share it. I am sitting at my desk in history class. The desks are arranged in a circle which always makes me feel more comfortable as it means class is going to be more discussion based. Everyone has a paper in front of them. I look down and it’s an excerpt from Louisa May Alcott's novel Little Women. The teacher wants us to discuss if during the Civil War women gained more rights. I read the document; I analyze it. That’s our assignment- read and analyze. I look up and most of the students have already decided that women did gain more rights during the Civil War. They argue that women could become nurses, make their own money, and travel on their own. My classmates assert that women gained both social and economic independence. I thought about this for a couple of minutes and I decided that I disagreed. I felt that war allows for women to take on more roles in society and assert their independence. In the Revolutionary War, women were nurses, started the Daughters of Liberty, and made homespun goods to protest the Stamp Act. Yet, when the war ended and the men returned, life went back to normal and the progress made was lost. The same happened in the Civil War; there wasn’t really progress for women, but rather one step forward and one step back. Women could. . . but then, again, couldn’t really. As I was explaining my point, I realized that my obsessive-compulsive thoughts had stopped. I have OCD, which is mostly cognitive. I have to go over in my head what I said in a previous conversation. Or, I ask myself if I remembered to unplug every appliance in my house. Sometimes my mind feels so full that I feel it might implode. My mind is like my room. My room is incredibly messy with clothes that should be in closets, scattered all across the floor. Some I wear, but most are from when I was younger. It makes it hard, when getting ready in the morning, to find the clothes I need, those that fit. The old clothes represent my unnecessary obsessive-compulsive thoughts, while those I wear represent my necessary thoughts like the argument I made in history class. Finding interests that I am passionate about is my escape and how I overcome my compulsions. When I was sitting in that class, I was so engaged that it felt like I didn’t have OCD. It just felt right. Learning takes up so much of my brain that there's no room for the unnecessary thoughts, for the clothes scattered on the floor, for the thoughts that no longer fit. It’s like my OCD is an invader in the room of my mind. It wants me to spend all my time thinking about things that don’t matter in order for me to fail. But, I haven’t allowed for the invader to succeed. I spend time, increasingly, focusing on what’s important to me. Over the past four years, I’ve started sorting out the room in my mind. I began by simply focusing on getting good grades because that was expected of me. But, what I received from those classes was more significant than grades. I found a passion for writing, for being able to express my thoughts on the pages. I found an admiration for historical figures who promoted social change. This love of learning allows my mind to be clearer. I don’t have everything figured out. Initially, college will be an unknown, but I have learned to take chaos, calm it down and harness it to have a positive impact on me. I suppose I’m a lot like the women who made progress during the wars we talked about in class, but unlike them, I will not go back to the way I was. I’m going to continue taking steps forward