- Date posted
- 2y
How OCD Lies To You - Idiot's Version
There's a lot of you on here today who don't seem to realize this, so I would like to educate you on what's kinda going on with that troubled mind of yours. I am not a scientist, so this will be a TLDR version to cover what actually matters in terms of your recovery. Those of you who are smarter than me, please correct me if I forget anything or make any mistakes. The reason you feel so bad as someone with OCD is because this disorder attacks what you value. The intense distress can come from thoughts that go against your values which OCD then uses as a "a-ha!" moment as proof that "you're a bad person" or whatever you're afraid of. These thoughts can have any origin. Since someone with OCD cannot turn off the part of their brain that warns them to danger you end up stuck with repetitive, intrusive thoughts. People without OCD also have these thoughts, they're just not repetitive. This is why OCD tends to inspire a "I think this, therefore I am this" mentality. OCD thoughts tend to be much more disturbing and higher priority than our regular thoughts, often taking up a large percentage of our time thinking. When living with OCD, we don't encourage checking, research, confessions, or any other type of compulsions related to obsessions as they do not resolve OCD thoughts. Compulsions do not tackle the issue of the thoughts recurring and, often, result in doubts that bring the anxiety back with greater intensity. A compulsion, to be clear, is any action which you feel needs to be done to resolve the disturbing thoughts, even if it is trying to endlessly resolve thoughts rationally (a process know as rumination). ERP (Exposure Response Prevention) is the "golden standard" of treatment which involves acceptance of the disturbing thoughts and repeated intentional exposures to them. Such treatments include reading scripts related to your OCD thoughts, repeating disturbing thoughts out loud, writing disturbing lines over and over. When treating OCD a good support system (a ERP specializing therapist, a psychiatrist, and/or family/friends), medication, diet, and exercise can all be part of the solution. This is not a complete guide and there are outliers when dealing with any mental disorder. I hope this information is more helpful than harmful and I pray each and every one of you is able to recover from this terrible disease. I am here for you as is the rest of this community to help you get better, just please avoid any behavior which will not assist with your recovery. Wishing you all health, happiness, and success in your healing journey!