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3 Ways to Power Up Your OCD Therapy
Everyone wants to be comfortable. But for those of us with OCD, seeking comfort paradoxically leads to continued discomfort. If you’re trying to get comfortable, that means you’re hoping to reduce your anxiety by doing a compulsion, making your OCD worse and all but guaranteeing you more discomfort in the near future. Trying to get comfortable doesn’t work if you want to tame OCD. People who win against OCD wrap themselves up in discomfort, actively searching for ways to get uncomfortable as a new way of life. They create a tectonic shift in how they approach their days, going from “I hope nothing triggers my OCD today” to “I'm going to look for opportunities to make my OCD anxious and uncertain. I hope I'm bombarded by so many triggers that OCD passes out!” This “go for the gusto” attitude is exhausting, yes, but it’s also exhausting for OCD. OCD thrives in a carefully curated, avoidance-centric world where it knows what to expect, like a snow globe perched just out of reach so that careless children can’t upset its delicate winter scene. But the attitude taken by successful OCD tamers is that they are going to turn OCD’s world upside down. They are going to give the snow globe to the kids because, hey, snow globes are meant to be shaken. If this sounds like a radical attitude that’s not all that practical, consider what Susan David says in her TED Talk, "The gift and power of emotional courage": “Discomfort is the price of admission to a meaningful life.” People who win against OCD sacrifice comfort for meaning. But do it self-compassionately. FULL ARTICLE CONTINUES HERE: https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/beyond-the-doubt/202001/3-ways-power-your-ocd-therapy