- User type
- OCD Conqueror
- Date posted
- 1y ago
Realization
I always thought my OCD was looking out for me and looking out for my happiness but now I see my OCD wants me to be alone, miserable and “safe”. It’s like Gollum.
I always thought my OCD was looking out for me and looking out for my happiness but now I see my OCD wants me to be alone, miserable and “safe”. It’s like Gollum.
Yup that’s exactly how it is It wants you to stay miserable for you to be safe
@Antoinekoi6 Yeah I always thought it was looking out for me. So dumb.
@Honeyshark It’s not, it wants you to stay WORRIED 24/7 to protect you, so it will always find something to bother you
My dad always tells me my OCD is a blessing because it keeps me safe and alert. But it’s such a curse and it feels like I’m serving a life sentence.
@julcd It’s not a blessing. It’s nice of him to try to reassure you.
Amen
My OCD has never been this strong, it's so real, it feels like it will never go away, it's never been this strong for me and it's very scary.
So, I know my capacity to get fixated on things. And it's normally something that's relatively remote but, my latest issue is really getting to me and I was wondering if people have any advice. I'm avoiding getting too into specifics, as I don't want this to get reassurance-y but, in essence.. I came to the realisation recently that people who I'd been "friends" (feels like the wrong term now) when I was younger were not very nice people, and normalized a lot of very unpleasant behaviour towards other members of the group. They really normalized it, sold themselves as figures of authority, as older and more responsible and grown-up than others, and looking back, they acted horribly. And coming to this realisation, that I'd been manipulated into just accepting their behaviour has just... broken me. My OCD has latched onto it and I can't stop feeling irreversibly tainted by it. I've talked to others about it, and they've reassured me, told me it's not a big deal and that I hold myself to too high a standard, but none of that sticks. I feel better for a bit, then think 'Maybe when you told them you were skewing it to make yourself look better' or 'Did you leave out a crucial detail'. I keep ruminating over and over, trying to remember exactly how everything played out, trying to figure out if I fed into the behaviour, if I did something bad myself (because y'know, I feel like I was accepting of it at the time, so what does it say about my own values?). I know I need to stop doing all this if I want to improve, but then some part of me keeps saying 'So, you're just going to let yourself off the hook then?' Normally, I can rationalize my own fears to some degree, assure myself something won't happen, but the realness of the situation, and the fact I only came to understand the reality of it because the thought had been bothering me means it feels so much more all-encompassing. I know confessing in itself is a compulsion, but I keep feeling that if I'm not I'm somehow concealing what I 'really am' from others around me, and any positive interactions are me deceiving them in some way. I feel like I can't enjoy anything in life right now, and a good part of me feels I should not enjoy it ever again. If anybody has any advice on it, I'm all ears. Or even hearing if you relate to these feelings, I might appreciate the solidarity at least.
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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