- Date posted
- 1y
Need help coping
Hi, I have lived with OCD for 47 years. I was 12 years old in 1977 when this was diagnosed. Unfortunately at that time very bad decisions were made at that time on how to treat this. Just in case I forget, I place no blame on my parents for this decision. I was the typical OCD starter story. I washed my hands constantly after I came home from school to wash out thoughts of people I saw at school (grade 7). In my mind, I washed my hands because I didn't want to look or act like kids who were being made fun of. I told my mom that I thought I might be going crazy. Within a month of me telling her this the psychiatrist had me institutionalized. I was there with kids who were up to 6 years older than me. Severely autistic kids, kids who were violent, kids who were obviously there for sexual reasons. 3 months. I'll make this long story on this brief by saying the 1st day I was there, I was showering at the boys side of this place, came out to see two girls standing outside the shower room commenting that I had hair down there. I didn't belong anywhere near a place like that. So when I came back home, I went back to my life. Travel hockey (goalie), and baseball and hid my obsessing from everyone for the next decade. I was afraid to ask for help out of fear of being thought to actually be crazy and put back in a place like where I was. I apologize if this is long. I am sure if I dont do it this way, I might never share my story. Without treatment up until I went to college was very difficult. I had an extremely mentally and emotionally abusive father. Hockey wad extremely difficult, especially once I reached high school a played goalie for 2 years on that team. When almost the entire school is there watching being very nervous before a game was a given. But that on top of my OCD going full blast. Now it was seeing a geek kid ( yes I know the label is wrong), sent me to obsessing that unless I wash my skin, or whatever compulsion, that I would play goal the way he would and get embarrassed in front of the whole school. In college for those 3 years it eased up. Never disappeared, just eased up. I'm getting long winded so I'll try to summarize. I did not tell my wife of my illness until it exploded on me a year after we were married. I know that was very wrong of me. But we're still together ( sort of) all this time later. From that time in 1989, it took until 2018 before I found a psychologist who actually knew how to deal with OCD. I went years without looking for help because of being so discouraged. Now my time's spent with psychiatrists were worse. The 1st one prescribed drugs that I ended up in hospital after having a seizure in my family doctor's office. I was seeing him because I thought I had a severe case of the flu. I didn't know any better in 94 that it wasn't the flu, it was the drugs. I didn't know this until an anxiety med I was on was discontinued and in trying to find something to replace it I got the same case of the flu. I actually walked out on a psychiatrist when on the 1st visit in the mid 2010s he was writing out 3 prescriptions after we talked for 7 whole mins. I said sort of still married. We have 2 young daughters just now hitting there teenage years. Over time (and not because of not telling her of my OCD, but just who she is), she has been the trigger of my anxiety which flows to my OCD. Which is where the help coping comes in. The initial overload that brought my OCD out after a year of being married was her telling me that she'd stopped taking her birth control. We were young and I didn't want children so quickly. I have to continue staying here with her now because she has no parenting instincts at all. So I need to counter balance her with my daughter. The level head if you will. But she is a constant trigger of my OCD. After finding the psychologist who finally had a firm handle on OCD and having a number of sessions, during one he stopped me a said that we can talk about the illness all you want but you have ( and I did) a firm handle on all the ins and outs of it, but until you get away from what triggers you ( my wife) it won't ease up in how often it hits you. But as he knew I can't just leave my daughters. I was supposed to have a knee replacement a few years ago that I canceled because my youngest daughter who was 8 at that time went in full panic mode because I said I would probably stay at a friend's for a couple weeks as he was in a bungalow and our bedrooms are on the second floor. She was in panic saying you can't leave me alone with mom. Now how we have the girls is a long story, but it's true that you most times never know what unconditional love is until you feel it for your kids. So here I am. I've had family doctor and a relative and a couple friends tell me I'm an abused spouse. I basically in a nut shell married the female version of my father. So I had one of the worst fathers for dealing with OCD and then went on to marry the worst the same type in my wife. It will be a number of years before my girls can hit yhe leaving the nest stage, so I have a number of years left with the person who triggers my OCD. The second that time comes, I see a divorce lawyer. I wish that I had seen the right person for my OCD 20 years ago, so the divorce would be way in the rear view mirror but it didn't work that way for me. I'm asking anyone in a similar situation, in that you're with a person that triggers your OCD and you can't just leave. How do you cope, what things do you do....