- Date posted
- 2y
The Trap of Themes - "Why is mine so special?"
Don't let themes pigeonhole your treatments. Many of us get so focused on how "special" our themes are that we allow OCD to grow and convince us that something is truly wrong with us. In fact, trying to fix the theme head-on almost always makes OCD worse! All OCD is treated with a health amount of uncertainty centered around ERP (sometimes with addition to other treatments). The theme is just what OCD uses to grab your attention. Those of you with experience may notice the theme can change if you're making progress or you get bored of the same theme over and over. Guess what doesn't change? The anxiety and time wasted on these thoughts and compulsions. That will always stay the same regardless of theme. I suggest you consider treating your OCD like it is an invisible ghost bully. It doesn't matter what that bully knows about your theme, your goal is to remove any power from what the bully says to you so they have no way to bother you anymore. Making a special theme is just a trap used to ensure you continue to listen to OCD, but it can't work if you remove power from the meaning (ERP does this). I know what you're thinking: "But MacDuffo, why would my theme be so specific to me if it wasn't true?!" Well, as people with OCD, our brain is unfortunately more active than people who don't suffer from OCD. We have much less control over our danger signals than people without OCD. As a result, our brain (which knows you pretty intimately by the way) fires distress signals until we can resolve our (non-existent) problem(s). All it takes is a single intrusive thoughts for this to begin and you'll find you cannot switch the thoughts off. For the record, this is the same signal fired when you forget to turn off the stove or lock the door (for those of you without this theme). Compulsions are the actions you take to neutralize these thoughts to no avail (because, again, you have no actual problems to solve in the moment). This is why we discourage reactions (compulsions) to thoughts in treating OCD, because by not reacting we help to remove any meaning to the thoughts. I hope this makes sense because I see a lot of people getting hung up on themes when it really shouldn't prevent you from getting the help you need. Ignore the theme and get focused on learning to sit with the feelings your intrusive thoughts give you. It gets better, I promise. That's all. Hope you all have a fantastic day. Give OCD the ol' 1-2 today! Rooting for you all!