- User type
- OCD Conqueror
- Date posted
- 1y
ROCK BOTTOM NARRATIVE
PREFACE: I’m a 23-year-old author with OCD and emetophobia. I wrote a narrative about what it felt like to be at my worst. My NOCD therapist urged me to post it. I hope this makes other people feel less alone in their experiences. ROCK BOTTOM: I imagine hitting rock bottom as a kind of free fall, like a skydiver jumping out of their plane, but there’s no parachute. And then the ground comes, but once I hit it, I just keep going deeper. I crash through layers of earth and sediment and skeletal remains that have all built up and broken down again, and again, and again over billions of years. I destroy everything in my path and, in the process, destroy myself the farther I go. Rock bottom feels like a constant, nagging pit of fear in your stomach. It is the disquiet of “what if’s” and dreading the sound of silence. Thoughts become louder when there’s nothing to fill the silence. Rock bottom feels like having the TV on while I stare at my phone as my knee jiggles up and down, desperate for the repetitive movements and the hum of noises and flashing screens to drown out the worry that creeps in insidiously, like cancer or dementia. Anxiety is an eater. It lives to consume. It reaches for the things you hold dearest and pries them from your clenched fists. As you struggle to hold on tightly to all that you love, anxiety nibbles away at your fingernails, then cracks the bones of your fingers and bites down hard. When there’s nothing left of your fists but the bloody stumps where your fingers used to be, you look at your palms and see that they are empty. You’ve lost everything you held on for. And there is no escape from the darkness that eats at your insides. Your stomach gnaws away at itself. It feels like skipping meals to avoid the possibility of vomiting. It feels like lying awake and staring at your phone because sleep feels like a lack of vigilance and a lack of vigilance is dangerous. Keep yourself alert; stay on top of it all. Scale the mountain before it has the chance to crumble before you. Rock bottom is disappointment on all sides of you: disappointment in yourself, disappointment from the people who love you and wished for better. It is contempt and meeting the expectations from the people who only ever saw you as one thing and always knew you’d amount to nothing. The freaky OCD girl. The label sticks in your mind over a decade later. Rock bottom is the absence of life. It is the slow draining of little bits of your life. It is living half-alive. And then you’re a zombie, passive and numb to everything except the anxiety that is still eating away at your insides. Your heart is beating but you’re not alive. Not really. And everything fades to dark.