Depression and Anxiety

Today I am going to be completely and brutally honest with you all. A good number of us who suffers from OCD will either go through a time of depression or have multiple bouts that can range from mild to severe. And the reason why we are more likely to suffer from depression along with our OCD is simple - our OCD can take over so much of our lives that at points in our battle we will feel as if it is easier to just give up. It seems odd though, seeing as anxiety and depression are completely opposite components of mental illnesses. Yet, the reality is that some of us will have to factor in our depression for our treatment if we want to conquer OCD.

What is Depression?

Many people have a hard time understanding and believing that depression is a real, serious Mental Health Illness. A lot of people equate depression with sadness but that is not the case. Depression is so much more than just sadness and the saying, "I am so Depressed" is so overused that it has created an invalidation of what Depression is for those who are actually suffering. It may also come down to the fact that it is hard for people to explain what it was like while dealing with Depression or even for people to recognize that what they are struggling with is Depression in the first place. 

I know, for me I never realized that I could have already been experiencing depressive symptoms way before that word depression was even mentioned to me. Yes, I knew I was struggling but I thought it was all because of my OCD. That my OCD was making me so empty and exhausted. The truth is that while it did play a factor in those initial feelings, it was my depression that made it stick and grow into an even bigger issue for me down the road. You see, the emptiness had grown in strength to the point I wanted nothing to do with anything. I also had strong bouts of an over-all sadness and lack of motivation. My mind stopped caring about my self-care and the things that made me happy. All I could do was go through the motions of my rituals my OCD put in place. My depression only got worse the more time went by and it reached the furthest point that depression can lead you to. The severe and debilitating feeling of life not being worth it anymore. And this feeling can bring on not only self-harming behaviour but suicidal ideation or suicidal attempts. All in all, not a place anyone should be in.



Edit: I am publishing this draft my daughter started in 2018. She has a brain injury now and won't be able to finish this post at this time.



Breaking Myths About OCD

It's been a while since my last post - Exposure and Response Prevention. So I want to dive back into our understanding and treatment of OCD slowly. One thing that I found confusing when I first started to look into what OCD truly meant were all the different theories and facts out there about OCD. Now, with everything I know and have learned, I realize that there are many, many, many myths about Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.

This creates a huge problem for those of us who suffer from OCD or know someone to find the right information. It can also affect someone from seeking help or knowing that they do in fact suffer from OCD.

And that is why we are going to debunk some of these myths here and now!



I have posted this video in our resource area before but wanted to re-post this here after receiving some questions that relate to the myths people think to be true about OCD. It may not seem as if there are that many out there but again that is another myth.

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is VERY hard for people to understand, including doctors. So, why do we think that there are not a lot of Myths surrounding this disorder? In my personal experience with OCD and trying to get treatment is that even though doctors know the basics of OCD when it comes to individuals who suffer the harder it is to understand and treat. Due to the range and variety of this disorder, it can become too convoluted that even the most experienced doctors can be at a loss. 

In previous posts, we mentioned the main typed of Obsessional Fears and Compulsions that help diagnose people. Yet there are many sub-categories that people who suffer fall into that aren't known or talked about. The reason for this is that OCD is similar to life. It changes and adapts and keeps progressing even when we think we finally have a handle on it. This only means that treatment and knowledge around OCD have to keep changing and growing as well. We can't fall into a lull or become stagnant when dealing with OCD. We must keep moving. That includes our knowledge too. 

 What we know now may change in a few years. This can be seen in the ever-changing theories on why people develop or are born with OCD.  Even the same doctors who theorized about OCD keep adapting and learning new things about this disorder. If their understanding can be changed or previous theories have been broken then what about the Myths on OCD? Myths on this disorder will keep being found and broken as our knowledge grows. So as the saying goes, take everything you hear about this disorder with a 'grain of salt'. Most people who have this disorder even struggle to explain it to others or know it's full effect because it is our norm. We may know we are struggling or do things differently but to us, our brains make it normal and therefore, harder for us to understand it ourselves. And when it comes down to it, it will be those of us who suffer from OCD who bring about the awareness and knowledge on this disorder - along with all those who study it as well. Keep searching and learning everything you can about Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. You never know what you may find or treatment that may finally work for you.

- This is for everyone who has struggled and lost hope of getting better. Hope is never gone. It just takes time to grow.

Exposure and Response Prevention

Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is known for being a very debilitating and life-altering mental illness. Yet, even thought there is no permanent cure to instantly make things better for us, there are treatment options and continuous research being done to better understand OCD. The thing is while there are many routes one can take in treating their OCD, one proven option that has the most success rate at giving people back control over their lives by managing their OCD is ERP - Exposure and Response Prevention Therapy


What is ERP?

If you type into google ERP you are not going to find out anything useful, besides the fact that ERP can an acronym for other information. So first we have to understand that while ERP is easier to say, type, and a bit less intimidating than the full term, we have to be able to know what the acronym means for us.

Exposure and Response Prevention!

That is what ERP stands for when we refer to it. It is a type of treatment that focuses on breaking that cycle we were talking about earlier. Here is a refresher for all of us on how OCD works and that cycle that keeps us trapped:

This is the diagram (Cognitive Model of Obsessive Thoughts) in our resource section that outlines how an OCD cycle is started. You see the trigger - usually, an intrusive thought we misinterpret - that leads to an Obsession forming and growing into a fear as we put more thought, appraisal, and overall importance to this Obsessional Fear. This, of course, will lead to anxiety, discomfort, or general unease. All bad feelings that make our bodies react so that we end up Neutralizing which just means doing our Compulsions - like avoiding, remember even though we aren't 'doing' anything, doesn't mean we have not just neutralized the fear by not facing it, doing rituals, or following a set of rules that our OCD has dictated to us. This will then create the cycle of Obsessions, Anxiety, Compulsion and Relief.


Therefore, it will only end up looping back again to the Obsession, which will trigger the cycle and add-on to the Neutralizing to relieve ourselves of the bad reaction our body goes in to - the flight or fight. Anxiety will grow and will motivate us to keep doing the cycle. It will continue to loop and loop around with the same steps yet as time goes by, more will be added to the Compulsion bit of the cycle. In the last post, we covered the reason as to the reason why we become stuck on an Obsessional Fear - it was due to the simple fact that each time we give in and do a compulsion(s), we are actually giving this Obsessional Fear validation of the intrusive thought that may have brought us harm or harm to others. It only allows this Obsessional Fear to grow until the cycle is hard to stop because it is just easier to comply with what our OCD is telling us.

Another image to help us grasps this cycle and something to keep in mind is this diagram...

Image result for ocd cycle


Therefore, if we understand how our OCD works we will understand why Exposure and Response Prevention Therapy is the leading - pretty much the only - treatment option for OCD. We have built this reality that tells us that the only way to handle our anxiety is to do what our OCD tells us because we see instant proof of it working in the relief given from the anxiety that was building. Yet, what if we just ignored the OCD demands after that Obsession forms and faced the anxiety?

Step One to ERP is to Understand our OCD Better:


Everyone's OCD is different yet the same, in that we are all stuck in the cycle of Obsessions, Anxiety, Compulsion, and Relief. But just knowing this will not help you as an individual. Everybody has intrusive thoughts and misinterpret them in their own ways. Meaning, our basic Obsession could be similar but how we handle it can vary. Many people fall into the Contamination category, yet we all have our own struggles. Some it's all about touch, sickness, crowds, etc. Others could focus on one thing, like food and how it can become or already be contaminated. We will have to cater the ERP to our specific Obsessional Fears and therefore, even finding someone similar, we will still have to do the first few steps ourselves - or see a specialist to help you set up your initial entrance into the treatment process of ERP.

By gaining a grasp on your own OCD and where you struggle the most, you can then begin the next step of building a hierarchy. But before we move on to that step, I want to bring to light a myth that many people who suffer from anxiety tend to believe in...

One of the huge myths most people with OCD believe is that once their anxiety starts to build that it will continue and continue until we can no longer handle it. This is completely wrong, as it has been proven that anxiety cannot be prolonged forever or indefinitely. There will be a peak and it can naturally disperse over time. It can last awhile for some of our very hard Obsessional Fears that have roots buried deep in our minds and bodies. But it will still end if you don't do your Compulsions, it will just be tough but something that needs to be done with ERP Treatment. Our anxiety tends to come in waves - small or big depending on the Obsession. So, knowing this, we can better prepare for our exposures.

Step Two Building your Hierarchy:


So, after reviewing and starting to get a better understanding of our OCD, we can start to make up a treatment plan to allow us to manage our OCD on our terms, not because of anxiety or obsessions. It involves you to do the one thing that goes against our OCD cycle though, which is to become triggered by an Obsessional Fear and feel the anxiety.


That's it. No more cycle, just two components that usually has us running to do our rules, rituals, avoidance, or any other form of compulsions.

This may seem insane and overwhelming. Yet, the first rule of ERP is to make your hierarchy. You take ONE of your Obsessional fears - maybe the fear of drinking unclean water. Then you list all the rules or compulsions around this area of your OCD. After that, rate what you do to compensate for the anxiety on a scale from 0-100. The technical term for this is SUD which you might notice on some of the resources given. This really just stands for the level or percentage of anxiety you rate for each action or exposure.


Once you rate your anxiety level, start with the exposures that have the smallest anxiety attached and perform this exposure over again, consistently until the anxiety rating you started with decreases by at least half before moving up your hierarchy to the more challenging exposure. The main thing to understand is that you must plan for good and bad days because consistency is important with doing exposures. For example, you may feel very motivated and are having a good day with minor anxiety so you push up your hierarchy thinking you can maintain this pace. That's the the funny thing about this though, is that by doing the smaller exposure you have started to break the connection between the Obsessional fear and it's actual importance. So the hard exposure becomes easier to do just like the exposure you are working on will slowly become easier with less anxiety initially and with the anxiety also fading away faster.

The trick though is in the second part of the title - Response Prevention. You can do as many exposures as you like, but if you keep neutralizing and validating the threat by immediately doing your neutralization. It will take longer and be harder to overcome an Obsessional fear.

Step Three Response Prevention


So, that brings us to the third aspect of ERP, preventing yourself from doing a neutralization even after surviving your exposure and seeing that the anxiety does, in fact, go down after time and nothing bad happened will be hard to do still. This can be hard and create another wave of anxiety as your OCD tries to maintain the Obsessional Fear hold on you which is strengthened by our compulsions. Therefore, the next task will be to either try to hold off doing our compulsions after an exposure for as long as we can, making it longer each time or just not doing any. This will play a factor in the severity of the anxiety you will feel the next time around doing the exposure.

Not to reassure anyone that there is not a risk, as in life there is no total control over everything, even if our OCD tries to make it feel as if that is not the case. You have to be willing to take the risk, the full risk of being exposed and then not do anything to counter-act the bravery you took in doing your exposures.

It takes practice and time to build this skill. It also can be more challenging depending on the exposure or factors happening in your life. Stress, change or the depth of the Obsessional Fear has on your life can change how you deal with OCD.






A Support Near You!

Hey,

I am posting this and going to pin it to the top of my blog for the next few weeks for people living with OCD in Edmonton and want to find more support in this area. On the side of our site, we have a link to The Alberta Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Foundation, run by a group of friends of mine. It is new so they are still growing into and developing supports and other programs to help us with OCD.

Right now, they only have the one support group meeting which happens once a month. It is a great place to meet and talk to others with OCD. If you are new to dealing with OCD or have yet to find proper treatment, this could be an excellent introduction to the world of mental health for you.

A support group is a place where you can talk freely about what it is truly like to live with OCD, and have others who understand some of the more complex nature of OCD that we sometimes struggle with. You will meet people with similar stories so that you won't feel so alone anymore. This group also spends half of its time teaching you new skills and techniques to manage your OCD. The skills and techniques are focused on Exposure and Response Prevention Therapy which is one of the most successful treatment options for OCD. The Foundation's volunteers are veterans in this type of therapy and are setting up a system of progression in teaching you about this treatment option while also giving you more information on OCD itself.

As I mentioned above, this is a new support program in our area so space in for each meeting is limited to a max of 14 people. To make sure you have a spot or if you want to know more about this program here is their email address -  OCDalberta@gmail.com.

This month, the meeting will be on August 8th, from 7pm to 9pm.
Register at ocdalberta@gmail.com

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Why do our Obsessional Fears Continue?

Obsessions Part Three



We now know that Obsessions occur through various means and that it has been observed that most people also have the same triggers as we do, yet do not suffer from ruminations. Our Obsessions begin with that intrusive, unwanted thought and instead of dismissing the thought we dwell on it. We put a certain amount of significance and importance to the thought that makes it meaningful to us in one way or another. As that simple intrusive thought grows in our mind, our body is also starting to take notice of what our brain is telling us. That this thought is or will become dangerous, not just to ourselves but sometimes we will focus on the thought becoming a danger for our loved ones. So, that is why we begin the OCD cycle. We will truly start to believe in this thought and all the possible effects on our lives. Our body is led by our mind, so when we are obsessing in this thought, our body will automatically start to detect for danger and prepare itself to respond - usually that means the flight or fight response. 

This all happens because we misinterpret many of our intrusive thoughts and become threatened by them. The concept of harm or any other type of danger our brains can come up with become associated with the obsessional thoughts. Every one of us responds differently with our Obsessions and it is actually how we respond that makes these fears either continue or disappear. 

We can avoid. Most of us tend to do this one without even thinking. Remember, the intrusive thought can be anything: a place, object, image, person, situation, etc. The discomfort and anxiety that we endure when around, doing, or thinking about our new obsessions makes us want to run. Why must we put ourselves through the pain of feeling as if our life was in danger if we could just avoid it? No more heart pounding, hyperventilating, stomach pain, shakiness, or dizziness. All of this accomplished by simply avoiding the danger that the intrusive thought we had led us to understand as truth. But really, when we avoid and find ways around our obsession we are just reinforcing that there was, in fact, danger and we "saved" ourselves by avoiding it all. This builds the fear in our head because the connection between the obsessional fear and our avoidance strengthens it. The reason being that even though we are avoiding it, it still takes effort and thus brings more attention to this fear. Even if you are the most logical person on the planet or even the most rational - you will start to accept that it is, in fact, important and life-threatening. The fear that is often times a mistaken or highly irrational, we still fall for it thanks to our OCD.

Oh, OCD has a way of making your logic and rational thoughts shift so that you end up defending why you must avoid and be so hyper-aware of the obsessional fear at all times. It is as if our mind, which OCD has invaded has moved us into another reality where every possibility of danger is right around every corner. That we must control things even when it's actually our fear that is controlling us. Our lives are discarded as we slowly retreat, all the while believing that nothing is actually wrong because we are doing the right thing. The safe option. That we are protecting ourselves and our loved ones by making sure to be overly watchful, always on guard for more possible things that are to be avoided too. This all just makes our mental illness so much worse. We may have started with one intrusive thought that led to becoming an Obsessional Fear. Yet, now we are at this point where that first one has grown to encompass so much more, limiting us in life and allowing us to misinterpret more intrusive thoughts. All because we validated that Obsessional Fear by avoiding everything that caused us discomfort, anxiety, or to worry.

The other factor that makes our Obsessional Fears continue and grow is our Compulsions. Yes, the second letter in the acronym for OCD is Compulsive for it is the glue that keeps us in our OCD cycle of Obsession, anxiety, compulsion, and relief. Without our rituals and rules, we would then have to face down the Obsessional Fears and all the physical symptoms that it throws at us - the distress and anxiety that our bodies are forced to endure. So, when our Obsessional Fears are forming and gaining more ground in wearing our mind and body's reaction down...
For our Mind, OCD has made it so that instead of rationally analyzing this intrusive thought, OCD has slowly trained our mind to alter rationality and use logical responses into proof of the impact this Obsessional Fear will have if nothing is done.
For our Body, OCD has used our natural response to danger, fear, or any other feeling and action that triggers that flight or fight reaction to occur. But it didn't stop there, it twisted this reaction into more of an anxiety inducing response. When our natural flight or fight reaction occurs, it is true that our adrenaline will increase in order to give us all the energy we will need to respond to the danger. The thing is, adrenaline causes your heart to speed up and this is one of the main symptoms of anxiety and panic attacks. All OCD had to do was increase the pressure of the thought of danger and BOOM. We have converted the natural bodies reaction, into our own painful and scary (at times) anxiety and discomfort that we get by having that intrusive thought misinterpreted into an Obsessional Fear.
The Compulsions come in so sneakily in most cases. We will get triggered by the Obsessional Fear and, if we can't avoid or a compulsive behaviour is instantaneous, we look for relief. Now as I just mentioned compulsions can happen as soon as we are hit with the anxiety - a quick tapping, moving in a certain way, mental reassurances or mental rituals. Anything that brings our anxiety down almost as quickly as it arose is considered a compulsion. Some compulsions though take time and a lot of OCD prompting to form. For instance, the Obsessional Fear of intruders entering your house can lead to checking, not sleeping, performing a certain number of lock flicks, etc. And while that all might be about relief from these intrusive thoughts and anxiety, it is doing the same thing as avoidance does. Every time you do a compulsive behaviour to gain relief - I also refer to my compulsive behaviour as neutralizations (momentary numbing of the bad feelings) - is actually telling our brain that all its thoughts and hyper-focusing on this Obsessional Fear was justified. We made it through the danger, safe and sound.

That is why many people struggle with overcoming their OCD. Our natural responses that, on the surface, seem logical and can be argued make sense, is actually causing our Obsessional Fears to grow stronger and incorporate more and more into it. Avoidance and Compulsions are the reinforcing aspects that even I was unaware of until I researched the workings of OCD.

This may become overwhelming because you start to look at everything you do or don't do that was because of your OCD. Knowing this, you may try to stop it all but that is just impossible. Especially if your OCD has had years to train your mind and body to accept the altered reality in which danger could be anywhere and everywhere. There is no easy starting point in taking on this massive beast but that is why Exposure and Response Prevention Therapy was developed. It will take time, trial and error, and a lot of energy to go against your own instincts, yet it can be done.

If you want to know more right away about ERP - Exposure and Response Prevention Therapy then look on our resource page. There are links to articles, websites, and other information to start you off. Also if you are looking for treatment, click on the link to the Center for Cognitive Behaviour Therapy if you are in the Edmonton region for they specialize in ERP treatment, otherwise the International OCD Foundation page has a wonderful search feature that can point you in the right direction.

I am also going to be focusing our next blog post on ERP. So check back next week to learn more!

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@sharingocdexperiences
But if this is all new to you, explore the links I have on this site. Join my Facebook Page (Journal Entries of People with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) where you can ask questions, read tidbits of my story or post your own story. Because remember, we are a community - slowly growing - that is here to support and hopefully guide you to all the help, information, and outside supports you deserve to have in your fight with OCD. 

#OCD
#MentalHealthAwareness






What are Obsessions?

Obsessions Part Two



In order for us to fully understand why an Obsession can occur, we have to discuss those myths I mentioned previously...


  • Magical Thinking Myth: This is where a person with OCD will believe that just because they thought of something - anything - that it will happen. A lot of times our thoughts or behaviours will be considered illogical. It is because we tend to be separate or isolated from others and form our own reality in which many things that you know to be true and have logic to back it up - well your OCD will still tend to twist it around to make it where you still are forced into the cycle of OCD. 

Reminder - Obsessions ➡ Anxiety➡ Compulsions➡ Relief ➡ And Repeat!


So this myth is an illogical one, yet most of us still have to work on it to stop us from believing it to be true. Magical Thinking is exactly as it sounds, that there is a connection between your thought on an event and the likeliness of it actually happen. We all know that we can't predict the future and that our choices and actions determine what happens next. Not our thoughts. Our thoughts cannot just make something happen. How often does something you think about truly come to be? You think of having cancer - will it happen? Who knows. There is no way for us to predict these things yet we reinforce these predictions/thoughts by our feelings and the way our body reacts - anxious, worried, etc.  Eventually building into an obsession. We do not look at the valid evidence that suggests otherwise because we have already entered the OCD cycle and we are going to have to break it before we can stop this easy to fall for mistake from occurring again.
  • Having Control over your Thoughts : This one is the one I struggle with the most. It's where you think that in order to manage your OCD all you have to do it control your thoughts. For, if you don't have one of your intrusive thoughts then you won't have to feel the anxiety or perform the compulsion. It is the belief that, by controlling the thoughts in your head, your OCD is cured. This is seriously not true. Because for one, there is no possible way you can control every thought that flows through your mind. It has been proven, that we as humans are very poor at controlling our thoughts. Another fact is, we have millions of thoughts, ideas, images, etc. that our brain processes daily. How are we to find the source of where all these things come from to stop it - to control it? It really is not possible. The risk with this belief for people with OCD is something called Thought Suppression. It's where we find our Obsessional thoughts or a specific unwanted thought and try to stop ourselves from having them. This only increases the chance of us having to deal with this thought for even if we were to suppress it for awhile, we are actually still thinking about it in order to keep it back. So the result of this is that thought coming back but now we have made this connection to this specific thought with reason for not wanting to think about it. So our OCD will consider it a threat, making us more and more anxious - thus the OCD cycle will begin. 
  • It is BAD to have BAD thoughts : Now this myth is simply not true. As I have pointed out, we as humans have millions of thoughts go through our heads when we are both awake and sleeping. Now, if we believed that not even one of those thoughts we had was bad that would be simply miraculous. Yes, everyone has bad thoughts. It's what helped the creative sector - like books, films, artwork - grow. There are books and movies based on bad things happening. Artwork with the pain and suffering of the artist on display. The thing with bad thoughts is our ability to think it through. We are fortunate to be able to think about anything we want and decide on the course of action based on our thoughts. We are not forced into having to act on our  thoughts. So for us with OCD, these thoughts might become an obsessions because we see them as a threat and will be anxious having to deal with them. Yet, everyone has unpleasant thoughts about actions or objects that are considered bad and even with these thoughts most don't act on them or they are just random thoughts that were triggered in our heads by something around us. People with OCD will struggle a lot in this area because, yes, these thoughts could be a threat if acted on or even just having to be stuck on such a thought will make your body react. Anxiety, shame, guilt, and worry will be present in these moments but do not think that you alone suffer from these thoughts. We all have them, even me. Nobody is spared from having bad thoughts and just because we do have these thoughts does not mean it is bad. It is just normal. You are just a normal human dealing with thoughts the same as everyone else. The only difference is, that we will have to deal with the consequences our OCD does to us with these thoughts. 

What are Obsessions?

Obsessions Part One



The first letter in OCD stands for obsession.  It is the first step in our cycle that leads us to struggle with anxiety and forcing us to perform compulsions to gain relief. Obsessions can be anything and come in many different forms - intrusive thoughts, ideas, memories, or images. So, it is mostly anything that can filter through your head, even normal thoughts which OCD latches onto and gives a misinterpreted significance to that tends to be threatening. 

Our Obsessions usually always make us anxious, worried, or just over-all uncomfortable. The reason for this is because of the importance we put onto the thought our Obsession form around. We will become stuck on the idea and start to add in the possibility that it could be dangerous or harmful to ourselves. Or the opposite being that it could become a danger or bring harm to lose around us - like our families or friends.



Here's a basic model of how an Obsession could develop:

Normal intrusive thought  ➨  Misinterpret as significant or threatening  ➨   Anxiety 



So with this basic layout in mind, let's develop a bit of a better understanding of all the intricate parts that are in play for people with OCD for their Obsessions to form.

One of the most ironic and funny facts about how our Obsessions form is that it is from thoughts - yes intrusive thoughts - and yet everybody else also deals with this too. A myth surrounding this is that it is bad to have bad thoughts even though everyone will have them throughout a day. We are human and are able to think about anything we want because they are private from others unless we decide to share. It does not mean we will act on these thoughts or that they will come true. The difference for us is we become stuck on these thoughts - be it a bad thought or just a random thought - and our bodies will then react as if impending doom is lurking right around the corner. Our brains are always going and will filter through many bizarre or senseless scenarios - even when we are sleeping.



The issue that we face is that it seems that our brains are wired to be in hyper-analyze mode - always looking for something that has even the slightest possibility to become a threat right now or in the future. It's really just an intolerance to uncertainty and lack of control that affects us and makes the obsessions to occur. For there is nothing, absolutely nothing that is 100% safe or assured. Thus, even if we could predict what will become an obsession for those of us who suffer, making a cure for our illness easier to acquire due to only having that one trigger is impossible. Obsession are endless, making OCD a very huge and varied illness that takes over anything in our life that it can. As long as we can think it, our OCD can claim it. So really, any thought can lead us in starting our cycle of OCD.


  1. A thought of spiders before bedtime
  2. A thought a becoming sick when someone sneezes
  3. A thought of crashing while in the car
  4. A thought of sinning because you lied
  5. A thought of your relationship failing 
  6. A thought of losing all your money
  7. A thought that the chair is not straight

Everyone has these thoughts, yet we make them into obsessions. Based on the thoughts above we can have obsessions like...


  1. Contamination Obsession or Harm Obsession due to spider touching you or ingesting while sleeping
  2. Contamination Obsession - germs
  3. Harm Obsessions and it could also lead to a Checking/Repetitive Obsession
  4. Religious Obsession
  5. Relationship Obsession or Superstitious Obsession or even a Nonsensical Doubt Obsession
  6. Saving/Hoarding Obsession
  7. Symmetry Obsession 

There are so many different myths surrounding how our thoughts can turn into an Obsession that to explain all in depth will have to wait. Though, here are some of the main ones that I have yet to cover: magical thinking, control your thoughts, automatically act on their thoughts, etc. 

The amount of misinformation about mental health is immense and then to try to find information about a certain illness within the mental health sector is daunting. Well, you will be sifting through piles of theories, stereotypes, myths, one-sided stories and so much more. Even after being diagnosed with OCD, how many of you have been told you also suffer from other mental illness as well or could have traits of many more? Yet, I truly think that learning as much as possible is the way to make the road to mental health more accessible. If we all could try to explain what goes on in our brain to the people trying to help, who have no way to look inside our heads to fully understand, maybe one day there will be better treatments.

Until then, we plan to keep discussing and writing about things we DO understand in regards to OCD. So, if any of you need more information on something or can explain more on topics we post about, I again urge you to email it in or ask to become one of our writers. 

#MentalHealthAwareness
#OCD