- Date posted
- 2y
My ROCD won’t let me enjoy a healthy relationship
I’ve been in a long-distance relationship for about a year, and he is the first healthy partner I’ve ever experienced. He is supportive, understanding, and has done a lot of work on his mental health and his boundaries. OCD is only just now coming to light for me this year but the patterns have been there for most of my life. I’ve also struggled with anxious/disorganized attachment which plays into the way I react to situations as well as my level of self-worth. Lately, he has been in the process of moving and while I want to be supportive and excited for him, I find myself so triggered by change, in fear of abandonment. I’ve had very strong fears of abandonment lately even though he has given no indication that he is going anywhere and has made an effort to try to be as present and reaffirming as he can, but distance can get pretty mundane over time especially when he is very driven and I am struggling to find what I am even passionate about in life. Yesterday, when we FaceTimed at the end of the night, I was very apparently upset at the fact that we hadn’t talked on the phone all day, which is something we tend to do frequently throughout our typical daily schedule, which my OCD finds comfort in the pattern. We had not been doing this all weekend while he was moving. He’d been working most of yesterday using his phone hotspot, and the rest of the afternoon was for cleaning his new space, but then he went to hang out with his friends afterward and that’s when I felt really triggered because I felt under-prioritized—immediately my OCD spiraled into thoughts of eventual abandonment (I’m used to very slow, painful, months-long breakup experiences with little communication throughout), and that spirals into thoughts of worthlessness. He had been texting me all day and I found myself acting dismissive and cold toward the end when I wasn’t getting what I wanted, and he noticed. The FaceTime confrontation and aloof texts made him uncomfortable because he’s had bad past experiences with overbearing and controlling partners himself. I told him I thought I wasn’t going to be waiting for him all day to call and felt distant from him lately and didn’t want to be tossed aside amidst all the change. He handled the disagreement very gracefully but held firm in his boundaries that he can’t always be expected to do exactly what I want and that I have to be okay with being by myself sometimes. I know these things are true logically, but I still feel this nagging fear that I’ve permanently damaged the relationship and he’s going to decide this is no longer something he’s willing to invest his energy into. I cried a lot with him, and quite hysterically, to which he told me to bear no shame for but I still feel deep, painful shame. I always have a hard time when my ROCD isn’t satisfied by the exact reassurance I want and perfect (but very unrealistic) consistency, because it builds up resentment that I didn’t get exactly the outcome I needed to reassure by ROCD and I act out. At the same time I feel an intense desperation to erase my vulnerability and do everything in my power to make things happy again so he won’t leave. He’s expressed that he invites the humanness and disagreements, and has remained consistent through his actions, but I’m always on defense just waiting for signs that he no longer wants me around. I’m so scared that I will bring abandonment around through my own self-sabotage. ROCD takes over so intensely that it’s hard to focus on anything else from my own day-to-day other than my hyper-vigilance of making sure I hold it together so we’re always happy. I don’t even get to enjoy his presence because I’m so caught up in the fear that he’ll leave. Fights and disagreements make me feel so disregulated that it feels like my entire world is falling apart in the moment. And I know deep down this obsessiveness is what suffocates relationships.