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Last month, I celebrated 4 years of ERP therapy/being in recovery for OCD. Who I was 4 years ago is wildly different than who I am now, in all the best ways. In the course of those 4 years, I: -got the courage to leave an abusive relationship -got the courage to make a career change, and leave a job I hated but was comfortable at because it was familiar -worked through emotional contamination around my grandma, before she passed away -got over my driving fears, I drive all over the place now, in rain or good weather -learned to accept the sexual intrusive thoughts around a family member And many other things. Things aren’t perfect, I have rough days and great days, I’ve backslid and worked my way forward again. But recovery got me my life back. I’m happy to answer any questions or hear your stories of recovery.
I am feeling really scared lately, as my ocd has twisted triggers a bit for me. I keep having intrusive thoughts while feeling happy or I feel happy afterward, which TERRIFIES me. I have had SO-OCD/HOCD for about 2 and half months now. I just really want to know if anyone else has experienced intrusive thoughts in this way. I also can get really anxious at some specific people in general (namely people I find attractive (not in a weird way) or gay people/lesbians). Is this normal for people with SO-OCD/HOCD? I haven't had ocd for very long and only recently started ocd based therapy, so I dont know much yet.
So I have staring ocd and it started a couple of years ago it’s so intense I always worry someone is going to think I’m a pervert and that anxiety never stops. I always worry I’ll be fired about it. I think by now they understand it’s a medical issue I have addressed it but it doesn’t stop the anxiety. It makes it worse. Any tips ? How do I break up the compulsion? And the mental ones as well? It’s like a never ending cycle of anxiety. And as you guessed it staring is one of my biggest pet peeves.
So I have been treated poorly in relationships for a long time. My first one was 2 years of emotional, mental, financial, and sexual abuse back in high school, my second was amazing with tons of physical attraction but he was later emotionally unavailable so we broke up, and I was also groomed in a friendship and I have an emotionally abusive stepmother all in the span of about 4 years. So I have not been in a great spot with relationships and have told myself that I would not get into a new one unless I was sure about everything to a degree. I recently started going out with this new guy this week. Absolute precious sweetheart and he hasn’t done anything wrong at all. We love all the exact same things, love being goofy and weird, and I had an amazing time with him in the first date (yesterday) and had nothing bad to say whatsoever and had no fears or anything. And I was pretty attracted to him physically too and many times I wanted to cuddle with him or hold his hand but we haven’t done any of that yet because we are still in the stage of getting to know each other. Then the second date tonight was different. I started to notice certain super small things he did (like if he made a cringe joke or something) and it gave me a slight “ick” and it was so overwhelming and I couldn’t enjoy it nearly as much as the other night. I started to wonder if I was really attracted to him or if I was just pretending to like him. I also was thinking of the second guy I dated where I was always super physically attracted to him but we just weren’t emotionally compatible. I compare this new guy to my previous boyfriend physically and I just get so in distress in the differences. And I felt bad and sobbed to my roommates tonight in fear because he is so sweet and kind and there are times where I AM attracted to him but I can’t stop fixating on the way he looks when he laughs or some of the random jokes he says and my brain is telling me those are dealbreakers and that I’m jus leading him on 😭 PLEASE HELP!!
Hello! Today my psychiatrist recommended I start lamotrigine alongside Zoloft and I’m really looking for some advice. For a bit of background, I’ve been on Zoloft for almost three months now. Most of that time I’ve been on a starting dose of 25mg daily, but that has now been upped to 50mg daily. I haven’t really felt that much different, and the little difference I do experience are from the strategies I have learned from my weekly therapy sessions. But my obsessions are still rampant and I still fall victim to my thoughts and compulsions pretty much daily. I really don’t feel like the Zoloft has had too much of an effect, but I’ve only been on 50mg for a short amount of time so I just thought that was the reason I wasn’t feeling that much of a change yet. Today I had my second session with my psychiatrist and told him I haven’t felt much different. He immediately recommended a mood stabilizer alongside the Zoloft, but I’m feeling very hesitant. I feel like it’s too soon to tell if the 50mg is or isn’t working, so adding a mood stabilizer seems like a big jump. Has anybody tried a mood stabilizer alongside an ssri, specifically lamotrigine with Zoloft? How was your experience? Did it reduce ocd symptoms? I’m really feeling a little lost right now. Any advice is greatly appreciated!
can someone inform me of what mental compulsions can be or feel like? i feel like i do many compulsions but im not sure if they actually are compulsions or not ☹️
I’m curious if anyone else has experienced this, and if they have any advice. For about five years now I’ve been struggling with feeling uncomfortable when my stomach is full or has any water in it because I fixate on the difference in feeling. Because of this, I often feel nauseous when I have food in my stomach and I end up preferring to not eat until the end of the day so I don’t have to go about my day and interact with people feeling nauseous. Unfortunately this also makes me throw up often because I have health OCD and I get nervous that the nausea is because there’s something wrong with my body. I understand that this presents a lot like an eating disorder but I can tell that it’s related to my OCD and I’m not sure how I can break focus from this cycle. I’m also always dehydrated because I don’t like to drink water since I don’t like the way it feels in my stomach. I feel like I can trust that I won’t feel this feeling when I just continue this, but it can’t keep being this way. I hate always feeling uncomfortable in my body and I want to be able to go out to eat without being constantly distracted by the way it feels—and if I’m gonna throw it up because I feel nauseous and like something’s wrong with me. I’d like to know if anyone else feels uncomfortable with the way it feels when there’s food or water in their stomach. Does anyone have any tips of how to distract themselves from such a feeling or break the pattern?
A lot of my really bad episodes of OCD , as I call them, are false memories of harming someone . It's as if my memory of what i knew really happened starts getting replaced by all of these "what ifs " no matter how crazy they are . What usually precedes them are my fear of another episode happening again almost like a self fulfilling prophecy. I feel so helpless to it .
This article is written by Simon Schnell with fact checking added by AI to ensure accuracy against research and philosophy. It’s using my Buddhist views which you don’t have to follow but using the view as a lens might show you soemthing new. Enjoy When the Mind Lies OCD Through Emptiness, Impermanence, and the Courage to Not Respond Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder can feel like being trapped inside a mind that no longer trusts itself. A thought appears — intrusive, unwanted, often disturbing. What if I did something terrible? What if I lose control? What if this thought means something about who I really am? The anxiety hits fast. Not mild discomfort — but a surge. Urgent. Moral. Personal. And then comes the pull to act: * Check * Replay * Analyse * Seek reassurance * Avoid Not because you want to — but because not doing it feels dangerous. This is the hidden structure of OCD: It doesn’t just produce thoughts. It convinces you those thoughts require a response. But what if that assumption is wrong? What if the thoughts are not the danger — and the compulsion is not the solution? This is where two powerful frameworks converge with surprising precision: * The Buddhist insights of emptiness and impermanence * The clinical method of Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) One philosophical. One scientific. But both pointing to the same place: You do not need to control your thoughts to be safe. ⸻ The First Insight: Thoughts Are Empty In Buddhist psychology, emptiness does not mean nothing exists. It means things do not carry fixed, inherent meaning. A thought can feel like: * A warning * A confession * A signal of danger * A reflection of who you are But when examined closely, it is something far simpler: A mental event. Arising from: * Memory fragments * Emotional states * Conditioning * Random neural activity You didn’t choose it. And yet OCD performs a subtle distortion: It takes a neutral event… and treats it as evidence. This is often called thought–action fusion: * “If I thought it, it must mean something.” * “If I imagined it, it’s as bad as doing it.” But from the lens of emptiness: A thought has no built-in meaning unless it is interpreted. ERP doesn’t try to argue with the thought. It does something far more powerful: It removes the response that gives the thought weight. ⸻ The Second Insight: Thoughts Are Impermanent Everything in the mind changes. Thoughts. Emotions. Urges. Even the most intense anxiety cannot sustain its peak indefinitely. But OCD interrupts this process. Instead of allowing thoughts to pass, it engages: * Analysing * Checking * Reassuring * Mentally reviewing These are not neutral actions. They are forms of resistance. And paradoxically: They are what keep the thought alive. Like trying to flatten a wave by pushing on it — you create more disturbance. Impermanence reveals a different truth: Thoughts don’t need to be solved to pass. They need to be left alone. ERP is the structured practice of discovering this firsthand. ⸻ What ERP Actually Does (And Why It Works) Exposure and Response Prevention works in two steps: Exposure: You allow the feared thought, image, or situation to be present. Response Prevention: You refrain from performing compulsions — both physical and mental. This creates a powerful learning process. At first: * Anxiety rises * Urges intensify * The mind screams for resolution But if you don’t respond… Something unexpected happens: The anxiety peaks. And then it begins to fall. Not because you solved anything. But because that is the nature of the nervous system. Research consistently shows ERP leads to significant improvement for many people with OCD, often reducing symptoms substantially when practiced consistently. It is considered the gold-standard psychological treatment — not because it eliminates thoughts, but because it changes your relationship to them. Just as importantly, it is honest: It does not promise certainty. It does not remove all discomfort. It teaches you how to live without needing either. ⸻ A Real Moment (Vignette) You’re sitting on the couch. Someone you love is nearby. A thought appears: What if I hurt them? Instant panic. Your mind reacts: * Why would I think that? * What does this say about me? * I need to be sure I’d never do that. You feel the urge to: * Replay past interactions * Check your feelings * Seek reassurance * Create distance This is the familiar path. Now, something different. You pause. You notice: “There’s a thought.” Your chest tightens. Anxiety rises. You don’t push it away. You don’t analyse it. You also don’t act on it. The urge builds. Your mind says: This is dangerous. Do something. But you stay. Seconds feel long. Then something shifts — subtly. The intensity wavers. The thought is still there, but it’s different now. Less sharp. Less convincing. Not gone. But not in control. This is ERP in action. This is impermanence, seen directly. ⸻ The Engine of OCD: Meaning + Resistance OCD runs on two forces: Meaning-making “This thought is important.” Resistance “I need to do something about it.” Together, they create the loop: Thought → Meaning → Anxiety → Compulsion → Relief → Reinforcement ERP breaks the loop at its weakest point: The compulsion. And from a Buddhist perspective, this is the release of: * Grasping (needing certainty) * Aversion (rejecting discomfort) Without those, the system begins to unwind. ⸻ The Hardest Shift: Allowing Uncertainty OCD demands certainty. Am I safe? Would I act on this? Can I be 100% sure? ERP refuses to answer. Not because the answers don’t matter. But because the search is what keeps the cycle alive. From a Buddhist lens: Certainty is not something the mind can secure permanently. Trying to achieve it is like trying to freeze water in motion. The shift is this: Can you allow the question to exist… without answering it? Not comfortably. But willingly. ⸻ Guided Practice (In-the-Moment Script) When you’re triggered, use this: There’s a thought. I don’t need to figure this out right now. I’m allowed to feel this discomfort. I’m not going to respond with a compulsion. This will rise… and it will pass. I’ll stay here while it does. Read it slowly. Not to calm yourself immediately — but to anchor your response. ⸻ The Deeper Fear: “What If I’m the Exception?” At some point, OCD tightens its grip: What if this time is different? What if I actually need to act? This is not a new problem. It’s the same mechanism, wearing a more convincing disguise. ERP doesn’t eliminate this fear. It changes how you respond to it. Because the truth is: Compulsions don’t prevent danger. They prevent learning. They stop you from discovering that: * Thoughts are not actions * Anxiety is survivable * Uncertainty is livable ⸻ You Are Not Your Thoughts If thoughts are empty and impermanent, they cannot define you. They are not stable enough. Not reliable enough. Not truly “yours” in the way OCD suggests. They arise. They pass. They do not own you. OCD says: “This thought is me.” Clarity says: “This is something happening in the mind.” That distinction is freedom. ⸻ What Recovery Actually Looks Like Recovery is not: * A silent mind * Permanent calm * Complete certainty It is something more grounded: * Thoughts can arise without control * Anxiety can exist without urgency * Uncertainty can remain without collapse From both ERP and Buddhist insight: Recovery is freedom of response. The ability to not engage. Even when it’s hard. ⸻ Final Reflection: Leaving the Courtroom OCD turns your mind into a courtroom. Every thought is examined. Every possibility debated. Every doubt prosecuted. But the trial never ends. Because the mistake was never the thought. It was believing the thought required a response. Emptiness shows you: The thought is not what it claims to be. Impermanence shows you: The thought cannot hold itself together. ERP shows you: You don’t have to respond. And together, they offer something simple and profound: You are allowed to leave the courtroom
Sometimes when an idea or anger over an idea comes to me, I quickly unload this by presenting all of this to artificial intelligence. Is this reassurance?
my brain is trying to convince me i’ve always been in trans denial and it was a matter of time before i found out because i used to hang out with boys and i have boyish humour and i used to pretend to be a boy with my sister as a joke when we were like 6 and 8 what if all of that means something I just saw this video of a little boy playing Fortnite and i don’t know why but i got a little jealous of boyhood for a moment like if i, a girl play fortnite (which i do) most of the time we’re seen as pick mes or just less than boys. plus the female fortnite circles online get a lot of hate and in my opinion i don’t like it very much either and i’m worried that makes me trans. It’s weird because i’ve never felt any discomfort with my gender until october last year. pfft not even discomfort. the thing is last year i had this fixation in squid game and the biggest character ship was In-ho and Gi-hun. i shipped them too. they got the most attention so my mind went boy x boy = funny and trendy. girl x girl = boring. so i started picturing myself (as a woman) being the dominant one in a relationship so i could be cool like a boy. and one day i saw this video in october 2025 saying “i’m a girl but i wanna be in a mlm relationship.” i resonated with that. i checked the comments and the top one was “this is how i found out i was trans”. i got scared so i went onto chatgpt and it gave me all these labels like demigirl although i didn’t feel like a boy i was also quite alternative so everyone in that community was sort of apart of the lgbtqia community too so i just thought ok that’s me. i didn’t feel masculine. i felt alt. fast forward to november i had a dream i was wearing a suit and tie and that was because i was stressed about the trans thing. that’s what really set it off. now it’s march and it’s worse than ever. today i tested if i liked having a deep voice and i felt dizzy, wanted to cry and anxious. and now i just feel like i am one and it makes me so sad. i was diagnosed recently and i can’t stop questioning the diagnosis. i’m not asking for any reassurance i just need to vent. and hear opinions. i’m currently struggling with tocd and up until recently the thoughts have started to come with false emotions. i get butterflies a lot when i’m anxious and sometimes i get scared that the butterflies are actually me being drawn to the thought. so i just want to summaries my whole experience with this disorder. so, when i was only 4 years old i had a very strong urge to touch all of the corners in the room. nothing would feel right if i didn’t. when i was 10 i had to do everything 6 times, had to say “night, night” as my last words, and had to get to the door before the garage closed or i thought i’d die. when i was 11, i started experiencing what i think was existential ocd. nothing felt real. i constantly asked my mum for reassurance that i’m real. i remember avoiding going out because i felt so dissociated. i was so scared of developing derealisation and depersonalisation and frequently checked in mirrors to see if i recognised myself, and i would also type out the word ‘derealisation’ on a keyboard on my ipad to see if the word came up. if it didn’t come up, i felt okay. but i literally couldn’t watch movies like the matrix because i was terrified. now fast forward to when i was 12, i feared i was becoming a psychopath. i genuinely worried that i would grow up to be a murderer. i would have frequent intrusive images that would cause distress. i also had pocd around this age. for pocd in particular, i saved many tiktok videos to reassure myself that i wasnt becoming a pedofile. omg i also always thought i had posted something onto social media and always had to check that i did. now i’m almost 14. yeah, i’m young. but my current theme tocd is really not questioning. i’m going to summarise my experience with it a little bit here. i use envy men a lot. like i always thought they got more attention, more power and people swooned over them more than women. i was introduced to a popular fandom at the start of 2025 which i literally loved. the main ship were two straight men. i shipped them. i admired the dynamic. their ship got the most attention in the show. i of course blamed that on gender. i got very jealous of the attention and wanted to be in a relationship like that. like i would try and act like one of the characters (i didn’t try to look like him i just wanted to be like him because he seemed cool) and imagined myself being with a boy (me as a girl though) and basically ‘wearing the pants’ in the relationship because the more dominant man in a mlm or even the most dominant person in a straight ship always seem like the coolest. i still imagined myself as a woman like i didn’t want to be in a gay relationship, i wanted to be in a straight relationship. but in October last year i saw a video that resonated with me. it said “i want to be in a mlm relationship as a woman” and the top comment was “this is how i found out i was trans btw” and that dont scare me. but then i got curious. i didn’t feel like a boy and i still don’t now. so i went onto chat gpt… yeah i know. not the best. but i told it about what i was going through and it said all these different labels which i didnt understand. demigirl however, resonated with me. at least i thought it did. i few weeks later it kinda just wore off. but i started to get involved with political matters and yada yada i was an alt girl. i was very accepting of the lgbtqia community. i wanted a future in human rights or politics. i think i kind of tried to push labels onto myself as the alt community is very diverse. so i just left that aesthetic because again, it wore off. but in november i had a dream of me wearing a suit and tie. it freaked me tf out. like i was asking chatgpt why i had that dream. this is where my tocd started. (i have a history with ocd). i basically got really scared and started compulsively checking my memories, my feelings and i had so many uncomfortable intrusive thoughts of me as a boy. god it’s scary. this ocd subtype ruined my holiday, my christmas and more. all of the things i wrote here are extremely hazy as ocd kind of gives me false memories. so, yeah. i don’t feel like a guy. never have. i literally had pinterest boards of feminine clothing i wanted to wear when i was a mum/older. all i ever wanted was to be a beautiful, feminine woman. i forgot to mention that the other night i did my makeup and felt so happy. i was happy with what i looked like and for a moment, i felt absolute certainty in my gender. but then the doubt came back in. i’m so worried because it feels like i like the thoughts sometimes, especially when the anxiety fades for a second, an intrusive thought comes up like “but it would be cool and unique to be a boy” and then i panic because why did i have a split second of false desire? I’ve noticed that my brain often gets intensely interested in new ideas, objects, or changes, even if they don’t match what I’ve always wanted. For example, when I loved Barbies, I wanted more and more of them, and that intense interest eventually faded. The same pattern has been showing up with pronouns — when I was reading someone’s pronoun list, my brain latched onto “he/him” because of the way it sounds. I really like the soft “i” in “him” and “his,” and I even thought “she/him” sounded cool because of how it flows. This reaction seems similar to how I enjoy lists, collecting things, and exploring possibilities — my mind gets excited by novelty and options, but the excitement doesn’t necessarily reflect a desire to change my identity. At the same time, I recognize that “he/him” is masculine, and imagining myself being referred to that way feels forced and uncomfortable. My real-life instinct is clear: being called “he/him” is not me, and I don’t want to present masculine. I realized that liking the sound of something doesn’t mean I want it to apply to me. I’ve also noticed some anxiety when wearing feminine clothing that I previously enjoyed, which seems connected to my brain’s hyper-awareness and over-analysis around gender-related things. This doesn’t mean my preferences have changed — it’s just that anxiety and overthinking are blocking the natural comfort and enjoyment I used to feel. Overall, my experiences fit the pattern of TOCD: my brain gets caught up in analyzing and questioning identity-related ideas, often creating temporary spikes of interest or concern, even though my core feelings about myself remain consistent. My bully joined my class at school and it got horrible. I have now started online school and since I’m at home all day I have nothing to do apart from work and worry. I also had my period the other day and that made the anxiety so much worse. My mum thinks it’s OCD but she doesn’t understand the whole subtype thing so she just says “yes it’s OCD but just hyper fixated on the trans thing” and despite me showing her the symptoms of trans OCD and she just told me the exact definition of a subtype and said like “maybe you don’t have to label yourself as OCD and just focus on recovery” and yeah that’s okay but it scared me like what if she thinks I’m in denial. And I’ve had physical symptoms. It feels like I’m developing gender dysphoria. Like I’m uncomfortable with my breasts and I fixate on whether I like having a curvy body. I’m so exhausted. Do you still think this is OCD? i remember looking at old pictures of myself and i felt so happy. like, yes, this is me and i don’t want to change her. i could nevr forgive myself for it. but i just cannot stop crying. i’ve started emdr therapy and it made me feel like i want the thoughts even more. my name is sophie. i am a 13 year old girl who is turning 14 in august. i started online school because i’m bullied relentlessly and the ocd got worse when my bully joined my class and when i’m alone.
Does anyone's ocd create fake memory of things that never happened? Im not talking about an existing memory and ocd distorting it, I'm talking about something like you're at ur home and it hits you what if u did x when u were a kid" and suddenly in stress ocd creates fake memories of you doing it as a kid
I’m a 17-year-old high school student. I used to be excellent in studies from a very young age, but when I was 13, OCD hit me hard and completely turned my life upside down. My first theme was religious OCD, and I struggled with it for around 2.5 years. Eventually, it started to fade, but then a new theme developed—something very strange and hard to even explain. Over time, I worked on reducing my compulsions. I used to have many, but now they’re about 90% gone. However, the main problem is still the obsessions. I feel completely stuck. I can’t focus on anything because thoughts keep popping into my mind constantly. These thoughts don’t even have any real meaning. Earlier, I used to think this was something external (like Satan), but now I understand it’s OCD. Still, it feels like my brain is working against me. For example, if I decide to memorize a page, my mind immediately resists, like it’s saying, “No, I won’t let you do this.” Whenever I try to study or recall something, my brain keeps throwing random thoughts at me over and over again, making it impossible to concentrate. I don’t argue with the thoughts anymore. I don’t try to fight or prove them wrong. I just say “fine” and continue with what I’m doing. I follow the proper approach, but the thoughts still don’t stop. Because of this, I’m unable to focus properly. I forget things easily, I can’t fully enjoy anything, and I never feel completely engaged. My mind is always noisy in the background. I’ve been doing everything I’m supposed to. I’m seeing a good doctor who has tried many treatments, but nothing has worked so far. It’s extremely exhausting. My studies have suffered a lot. During exams, these thoughts come in and interfere, making me forget what I’ve learned. Everything I study feels mixed up in my head. I honestly don’t know what to do anymore. OCD has seriously damaged my academic performance.
This article has been fact checked against sources and grammar assisted by ai whilst keeping my content and language. I’ve done it this way to make sure the view and information is as accurate as possible. This statement of fact is simply that it’s not reassurance. I suggest anything that you doubt please go and fact check for yourself to ensure the position is correct and true It’s long and starts now OCD Is a Bully by Simon Schnell 17/4/26 We often think of OCD as a protector because that is how it starts. The intrusive thoughts appear, and it feels like an inner alarm, warning us that danger is near. This perception usually begins after a stressful or traumatic event, or even after a random scary thought pops into the mind. The brain suddenly treats the thought as an urgent threat. The first few times we respond with checking or avoidance, we get a short-lived feeling of relief. That temporary calm tricks the brain into believing the action protected us. So the pattern quickly locks in and begins to form the chain of fear through a process called negative reinforcement—the relief we feel makes the brain more likely to repeat the same response next time. Many studies show this is how OCD gets its foothold, turning normal fear into a constant bully and a liar. People with OCD do not just have random worries. These thoughts feel like protectors because their brain assigns deep meaning to them. In fact, this belief is frequently a form of thought-action fusion. That is when a person believes that just having a bad thought is as serious as actually doing the bad thing, or that the thought itself can make the disaster happen. Research on this pattern shows it plays a key role in keeping people trapped in torment. In my experience, I have seen how this plays out in everyday life. Imagine a person who constantly fears that if they do not check their oven, something bad will happen, like a fire. At first, it feels protective, like a safety net. But this thought pattern and the compulsive checking that follows is not keeping them safe. It is a bully and a liar. It never stops at one check. The fear always escalates, and the person feels even more trapped. Studies on compulsive checking show that repeated checking often increases doubt and uncertainty rather than reducing it, feeding the bully’s power. Another example: someone who has intrusive thoughts about harming their child. These thoughts feel terrifying, like a warning. The person might think, “I must keep checking on them. I must avoid any danger.” But these thoughts are not clues. They are just thoughts. The more the person tries to neutralize them through avoidance, checking, or reassurance, the more the bully takes over. Instead of protecting, the thought is torturing, keeping them on edge every moment. Importantly, these intrusive thoughts in OCD are ego-dystonic. That means they feel completely out of line with who the person really is and what they truly value and care about. They feel alien and wrong, like they do not belong to the real self at all. This clash is why they cause such deep distress. The liar convinces us the thought means something dangerous, when it does not. These intrusive thoughts often trigger rumination. Rumination is when the mind gets stuck in repetitive loops, endlessly turning the same thought over and over. The person might mentally review what the thought could mean, why it appeared, whether it says something bad about them, or how to make sure nothing terrible happens. In OCD this rumination acts like a silent compulsion. Psychologist Dr. Michael Greenberg points out that rumination is not just a passive obsession. It is something we can make an active choice to stop, even though it often feels automatic and necessary at the time—and even when it feels scary to let go. It feels like trying to solve an unsolvable puzzle for relief or certainty. But instead it keeps the anxiety and distress going much longer. It drains emotional energy, deepens the feeling of being trapped, feeds the bully and the liar, and can make symptoms feel even stronger over time. This destructive pattern locks the chain of fear in place and leaves less room for calm or everyday life. This pattern often stems from a mix of factors, including how the brain’s fear response can become overactive. Childhood experiences or past trauma can play a role. If, as a child, you felt unsafe or unheard, that fear pattern can take hold and strengthen the cycle. Research links childhood maltreatment, especially emotional abuse and neglect, with more severe OCD symptoms in many cases. These thoughts are not warnings. They are the mind trying to protect you, but it has got the wiring wrong. Instead of safety, the bully offers constant fear and lies that we must obey. Real-world examples make this clearer. Think of someone who has a thought, “What if I forget something crucial?” Instead of just letting the thought come and go, the body floods with panic. They obsess, checking repeatedly, even when logic says everything is fine. Each time, the thought bullies them into action. They feel trapped, as if they can never be free, even when there is no real threat. Clinical work backs this up. These intrusive thoughts do not protect. They hijack our natural fear response. Instead of guiding us to safety, they lock us in a loop, acting as if the fear is real, even when it is just a thought. This faulty view traps us in a tormenting cycle. The bully and the liar thrive here, growing stronger with every obeyed compulsion. In summary, when we see these thoughts for what they really are, just thoughts, we stop obeying the bully. We interrupt the chain. By naming them as bullies and liars, by staying present, and by using evidence-based therapies like Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), we stop their hold. ERP, or Exposure and Response Prevention, is a practical approach where you gently face the scary thoughts or situations without doing the usual compulsions or rituals. For example, someone afraid of causing a fire might sit with the thought of leaving the oven on without checking it repeatedly. Over time this helps the anxiety naturally come down on its own as the brain learns the feared outcome does not happen. CBT, or Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, helps you spot the unhelpful thought patterns and beliefs that feed OCD. Then it gently challenges and changes them so the bully loses its power. For instance, if you believe a bad thought means you are a bad person, CBT helps you examine the evidence and shift to a more balanced view. ACT, or Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, teaches you to notice the thoughts and feelings without getting hooked by them. This way you can keep doing the things that matter to you even when the bully is shouting. You might practice accepting the uncomfortable thought while still going to work or spending time with family. Multiple studies show that these approaches lead to big reductions in OCD symptoms. We do not deny fear. We recognize its presence, but we do not let it drive. In that space, the chain weakens. Thoughts still come, but we do not give them the power to define us. And with practice, we reclaim our calm, one step, one breath at a time, refusing to listen to the liar. Progress is rarely a straight line—setbacks happen, and that is normal—but each time we choose not to obey the bully, we grow a little stronger and move closer to the life we want. Note: This article is for informational and supportive purposes. If you are experiencing OCD symptoms, consider reaching out to a mental health professional trained in ERP and related approaches for personalized guidance.
For the ones who have spiritual OCD what do you guys think about instead of disappointing God. I believe in God and Jesus Christ I really think I do. And with that people say to put God first. How do I do that with this subtype of OCD, how do I do this without suffering? I’m constantly checking myself to see if I’m doing something that goes against Gods will and it’s exhausting. And honestly the idea of repenting for your sins triggers be oddly? Repenting the way it’s explained is come to him and ask for forgiveness, but then that is also always checking yourself and adding on the spiral. It doesn’t help my anxiety when I think of God. But then I don’t want to give up on God because I know he is love and he is the only way I can have a peaceful afterlife. And also I don’t think I believe in everything in the bible because something’s seem so hateful for it all to be Gods word but to others if I don’t believe it’s Gods word I’m not a real believer. Guys I’m literally at my lowest point right now
OCD is a bully and liar Note- these are my words but I have used ai to help me refine its structure and test facts. ⸻ OCD is a Bully and a Liar We often think of OCD as a protector. Those intrusive thoughts show up, and it feels like a warning system—like something inside us is trying to keep us safe. But from what I’ve learned—and what research in psychology shows—OCD isn’t a friend. It’s a bully and a liar. It uses fear to create urgency. It demands certainty where none exists. And it convinces you that if you just do one more ritual, check one more time, or think it through one more way, then you’ll finally feel safe. But it never ends there. That’s the lie. ⸻ How OCD keeps its grip Evidence-based research shows that people with OCD often misread the brain’s own alarm system. The mind generates intrusive thoughts—random, unwanted, sometimes disturbing ideas—and OCD treats them as if they are meaningful warnings instead of noise. So what starts as a thought becomes a command. And what starts as uncertainty becomes fear. OCD thrives on control. Not because it is wise—but because it is repetitive and convincing. It keeps you chasing certainty in a world that does not offer it. ⸻ What actually happens in the body and mind When an intrusive thought appears, something very real happens in your system. Your brain interprets it as threat. * Stress hormones like cortisol are released * Your nervous system shifts into alert mode * Anxiety rises quickly and feels urgent and physical * The mind starts searching for “solutions” or certainty And because the body feels real fear, the thought feels real too. But this is the key point: A feeling of danger is not the same as actual danger. OCD blurs that line. ⸻ Why awareness changes everything There is strong evidence in psychology that change begins with awareness. Before we can shift a pattern, we first have to see it clearly. Not judge it. Not fight it. Just see it. When we actively observe our thoughts without reacting automatically, we step out of autopilot. We begin to notice: “This is the pattern.” “This is the loop.” “This is OCD speaking.” And in that moment, something important changes—we are no longer fully inside it. ⸻ Grounding: coming back to reality To help bring yourself back into the present when OCD spikes, simple grounding practices can help. These are not about fighting thoughts—they are about reconnecting to the real world. 1. Pause and breathe * Plant your feet on the ground * Inhale for 4 seconds * Hold for 4 * Exhale for 4 * Repeat a few cycles This signals safety back to the nervous system. ⸻ 2. The 5–4–3–2–1 method Notice: * 5 things you can see * 4 things you can feel * 3 things you can hear * 2 things you can smell * 1 thing you can taste (or imagine) This pulls attention out of the mind loop and back into the present moment. ⸻ 3. Notice without reacting Try gently labeling the experience: “This is an intrusive thought.” “This is the OCD alarm system.” “This is anxiety, not instruction.” Not to push it away—but to see it clearly. ⸻ The key shift When OCD speaks, it demands action. But awareness creates space. And in that space, you don’t have to obey the thought. You can feel the anxiety rise—and not turn it into action. You can let it pass without feeding it. ⸻ Final truth OCD is loud, but it is not accurate. It is convincing, but it is not wise. And every time you choose awareness over reaction, you weaken the loop. Not by force. But by seeing it clearly for what it is. One breath at a time. One moment at a time.
Kinda similar to my last post, but i did my first communion recently, so i can take communion now, but i feel like i dont really want to! Its like ill miss having church mass be just sitting and listening without being expected to do anything, but like now i feel that now im just expected to just fast and take communion and then kneel and pray every week and i feel like i dont want to! Praying is hard for me because scrupulosity makes me do it a specific way but ive been really tired of religion lately its been too stressing and i dont really want to have to take communion each week now even tho ik i dont need to, but the thing is i know my mind will drive me insane and i keep thinking if i dont take communion even if i havent sinned then im just denying Jesus 😭 Plus i have hypoglycemia and fasting is hard for me but my teacher didn’t let me eat much on my first communion cause i was supposed to take communion soon (dw i was okay i had glocuse pills) but like i know that since i have a health condition its not necessary to fast but i still feel like i should be fasting atleast until my blood sugar goes down cause im going to take communion, but like i dont wanna be having low blood sugar in church plus i sometimes liked eating before church started! I know that its okay to not take communion each week but ill feel like my family will be expecting me to even tho they said its okay if i dont, and my mind will make me think im denying jesus too, i dont think i have sinned but im also tired of having to act so perfect just so i dont have to confess again which i really dont want to im socially anxious Any tips? Please dont try to convince me to pray more or be more religious or take communion, i really appreciate it but it honestly stresses me out more and i feel i may need a break from religion because its been making me lose my will to live… i just need to know if im okay lol
An intrusive thought arises, chemicals are released, and an emotional response follows—all in a lightning-fast sequence. That emotional response is strongly tied to a pattern. When we begin to separate the two—thought and physical/emotional response (the physical being a chemical release of adrenaline and cortisol, the stress hormones)—we can start to use neuroplasticity. These are the brain’s wiring pathways—they send signals and interpret them. I’ll give an example. As a child, someone is bitten by a dog. A neuronal connection forms. These pathways are created through experience, somewhat like a road. The signal begins from that experience—one side says dogs are bad, the other says be afraid of dogs. With repeated bad experiences, that road gets more traffic and widens. It begins to perceive all dogs as bad and to fear all dogs. At that point, the thought has gone further than logic would allow if applied with practice. The best practice is exposure. With positive experiences with safe dogs, a new neuronal pathway forms. It says: not all dogs are bad, don’t be afraid of all dogs. At first, it’s a small road. But the more good experiences someone has, the wider it becomes and the more traffic goes down it. The old road is still there—it formed for a reason—but it begins to narrow. Less and less of those old signals fire off. This is why exposure to our fears is so important, and why ERP and similar therapies are helpful. Anxiety and the chemical release that comes with it follow a pattern: Thought → chemical response → emotional response. With OCD, anxiety, depression, and other disorders that trigger these chemical releases, the response can happen incredibly quickly. Years of these patterns create automatic reactions. It’s not just OCD—many people with intrusive thoughts or related conditions experience this same rapid cascade: thought, chemical response, emotional response. Everything runs on these patterns, and they sink in from childhood, from repeated practice, and from trauma. But once we see that these patterns exist, we can begin to interrupt them and reshape them. Neuroplasticity offers us a way out. Once we catch the thought and the physical response, we recognise we’re not stuck—we can practice new pathways. When a thought arises, chemicals are released, and together they create a “whole” feeling. Panic attacks work the same way. The body pumps blood, releases chemicals, and prepares us to run or fight. Many of us see anxiety as something horrible—an enemy. It’s not. From ancient times, humans and animals have always scanned for danger. Animals still do. At any moment, they can feel fear and have a chemical response to escape or fight. Ancient humans had many dangers. Some people were “watchers”—they stayed alert, scanning for threats to protect others. Without them, humans may not have survived. Anxiety is actually a friend. But in the modern world, it can become over-wired—too sensitive, constantly scanning for danger where there isn’t any. When I learned anxiety wasn’t my enemy, but a friend trying to help—just misguided—I stopped hating it. And when I stopped fighting it, it became less powerful. I had to learn that it tells me things that aren’t always true. That’s hard at first. It gives you a strong feeling that something is wrong—that doom is here. But it starts with a thought. We can learn to catch the physical response and separate it from the thought, recognising the body is trying to help by giving us energy. An OCD thought arises. We get the response, and then we want to avoid it. For many, that means doing rituals to self-soothe. But those rituals are band-aids. They actually keep us stuck. Give your OCD a name. Separate it from “me.” You are not your disorder. I often say: “maybe, maybe not.” A thought is just a thought. Thinking something doesn’t make it real. We can’t stop thoughts. They come and go as they please. Trying to push them away gives them more power. The mind is like a clear blue sky. Thoughts are clouds. Are the clouds the sky? Don’t be afraid of the chemical response. It’s trying to help. Recognise that thoughts can be doubted—even when we’re used to believing them. Try this: think about making something catch fire with your mind. You quickly see you can’t. It’s a simple way to show that thoughts are just thoughts. Mindfulness helps. Mindfulness is the practice of bringing your attention to the present moment without judgment. It means noticing thoughts, sensations, and emotions as they arise, and letting them come and go, like clouds in the sky. One last example. You’re driving, and someone cuts you off and nearly takes you off the road. They’re unaware and drive off. A thought arises. A chain of thoughts follows. Chemicals are released, and an emotional response occurs. “That was dangerous. I could have been killed.” Fear and anger arise. Our bodies join in, and we experience a whole world inside ourselves. There’s a valid reason for that feeling. Now imagine this: moments later, someone walks up and hands you a briefcase filled with money. It’s yours. How long does the anger stay? It dissolves. A new feeling arises. Where did the anger go? That awful feeling shifts into something else. It felt permanent, solid, and real before. The nature of thoughts is that they arise and pass. How long they stay depends on us—on rumination or where we place our focus. Intrusive thoughts arise on their own. But we give them energy that allows them to persist. Even compulsions give them energy. So the root of it is this: observe the thought. “Oh, it’s that thought again.” Notice the body response—heart racing, trembling, sweating. Recognise these are separate. Bring your focus to the body. Let it settle. Slow your breathing. Relax your muscles. Adrenaline and cortisol only last for a while. Then, when you’re able, return to the thought. Thoughts are clouds. We have to give up the idea that our thoughts are always truthful. They’re a paintbrush, and the mind is the canvas. Don’t help hold the brush. Recognise you’ve been through this before. While it’s not pleasant, it does pass. We have to see the impermanence in it. This thought and this feeling are not permanent states. Even in the darkest moments, there are brief gaps where it isn’t exactly the same. ⸻
Like the title said. This may sound silly, but I left a conversation an hour ago because I wanted to leave that part of me behind. However I realised I may have not deleted a lot of my older messages. That gave me a lot of anxiety as its with a group of people and I worry someone might find an old message that is embarrassing and use it against me. This is very clearly OCD and if someone wanted to use a 10 year old message against me then they would have done it already. But I'm having a panic attack and I'm scared. My heart is pounding out of my chest and I'm drinking alcohol again. All of this on the eve of my first proper date in a long time. I'm not asking for reassurance. I just want company. Because I'm scared and alone right now and I'm ashamed of who I was in the past.
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OCD doesn't have to
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