- Date posted
- 2y
Just realizing I probably have OCD... sorry this is long...
I'm going through fertility treatments with my partner and it is a huge stressor. At the beginning of all this (with the help of hormones), I started having obsessive thoughts and fears about being a lesbian. For context, I have never had romantic feelings for a woman, grew up in a family that would have been totally accepting if I did, have always just lightheartedly accepted that sometimes I'm attracted to people who aren't men, and gone on my merry way. I thought I was totally ok with the fact that sexuality is a continuum, I have several close friends who are gay, blah blah blah. And then this! Out of left field. I started worrying I have been living a lie my entire life. I'm repressed, I don't know myself, I will have to leave everything (a wonderful partner I love, our plans to try and have a child...). What if I get pregnant and then we break up because I fall in love with a woman... and on and on. I was doing all the checking, rewriting past friendships with women, over-analyzing, judging appearance of self and others, etc. etc. I just thought I must be experiencing extreme anxiety (true), but I stumbled upon a list of OCD symptoms when searching for anxiety meds that could help with rumination and "obsessing about sexual orientation" was on there and eventually Google lead me here and to other reputable sites explaining SO-OCD. I cried from relief! This is a THING! Oh my goodness, I have never felt so seen and relieved. So I thought I should post and say thanks for sharing your struggles! I certainly have always had a tendency to over-analyze and cling to thoughts. To ruminate, etc. I just never really thought about it as OCD. I also do very minor counting behaviors, etc. that don't affect my daily life. It's never really been an issue up to now. I think the stress I'm going through right now (the "permanence" of trying to become a parent, committing to my relationship with my partner *at least* enough to want to co-parent, and ideally to spend the rest of our lives together) triggered an intense episode unlike anything I've experienced before. We have very little control over how this process will go (like most things in life) and I am having a LOT of trouble accepting that. My obsessive thoughts have basically completely stopped since yesterday when I had this "eureka" moment. I'm sure they'll come back, or new ones will make an appearance. But I'm feeling much more positive about my ability to cling less and move forward.