- Date posted
- 37w
Recovery Notes
Hi yall - Once people recover they typically don’t post, so I just wanted to post some of my notes as I reach full recovery to hopefully help someone. I had a BIG relapse with Harm OCD, after 10 years of being recovered. I never thought it would happen again, because I had my management tools in place from when I recovered the first time, but it did. I was too comfortable, so the first graphic violent graphic intrusive thought caught me off guard & I spiraled. Note one: Do the exposures. As directed. I would definitely do them with professional supervision, so they can note when the exposures become compulsive, because they might. Note two: It’s not going to happen overnight. There’s no deadline. Don’t give it a deadline. I would wake up in the morning after having a decent night & have to start from square one, but you know what? Each time it was easier to get out of the doom spiral. & that was progress. You have to have a realistic expectation that you will not be back to normal in the morning, or after a nap, or after a good few hours, but it will get easier & you will eventually get there. (It took me two months to feel recovered- just a note) Note three: This is the hardest one… Try to stop focusing on how recovered you feel. It becomes obsessive & then each time you slip up, back to the beginning of the doom spiral. Note four: You’re not alone. You’re not the only one. You’re not the exception. It is just the OCD. Even when it feels like the OCD is winning or it’s in control.. if you’re here & you’re disappointed about it, it’s not. You’re the same person you’ve always been, you’ve just been really scared of something & you will have to work at different angles every day as the OCD latches to different things because it’s creative & manipulative & it will try its best to stay. You’re not the monster, your OCD is.. I’ve thought every horrible thought there was to think & you know what? They are never going away… but they don’t affect me anymore.. Last note: Probably the second hardest one for me… It is okay to let go. I had trained my brain to think that I needed my OCD. It was protecting me. (With the harm ocd I felt like it was protecting those around me too)… that was the OCD talking. It lied. I never actually wanted those things no matter how much I thought I did due to the OCD… You can let go of the OCD. You’re not alone. We’re all in this together. You’re not your OCD. There is hope. It is hard. It does take work. You will get there. I believe in yall. ❤️