- Date posted
- 1y
How does it feel when you’re resisting compulsion?
I’ve got Pure O and my compulsions are tricky to identify sometimes. But how should I feel when I’ve successfully resisted them? Trying to sit with the anxiety and the dread!
I’ve got Pure O and my compulsions are tricky to identify sometimes. But how should I feel when I’ve successfully resisted them? Trying to sit with the anxiety and the dread!
I like a recent analogy I heard of not ‘clicking ‘ on the thought. Sort of like not opening up a folder with the ocd story inside and examining it. When you’re doing an exposure, you’re sort of opening up the folder deliberately, and agreeing with the ocd fears instead of trying to disprove or solve them. Ideally, you would feel some level of anxiety, and resist the urge to compulse/solve. Sometimes for me the anxiety and dread is so strong that doing an exposure is unnecessary. In those moments, you can (and this is really challenging) treat them like really big exposures. The amount of learning your fear system will undergo in these moments when you resist compulsing is massive. Generally when I resist compulsions I feel anxious, but fulfilled, knowing I’ve used courage and will power to do something good for my ocd that I will benefit from in the long term. In the short term though, it might feel worse. Hope this helps.
@Simon Also, plan A would be agreeing with the fear and ‘not clicking’ and focusing attention on something else. Since that’s sometimes (usually)too difficult for me, Plan B is deliberately facing the dreaded ocd story without compulsing.
@Simon Thanks Simon, appreciate this response. Okay totally makes sense. Also cool to see another filmmaker out there with OCD. I’m a DOP.
@Matt93 Awesome! I’m a big fan of cinematography
Heya! I was diagnosed with Pure O (although I recon I have more compulsive tendencies than first realised with my diagnosis) and I’m not sure if this will help but here are some of the compulsions that took me a long time to realise were compulsions, by identifying it may be easier to intentionally resist them. -confessing, having to tell somebody else what you’re thinking about -mentally replaying, after having an intrusive thought intentionally rethinking it over and over to try and figure out what ur means, if it’s true, if it was really an intrusive thought —reassurance-seeking, googling questions about your intrusive thoughts, asking others ‘do you actually like me? ‘Do you think I’m a bad person?’ I found it really helpful to do meditations where I mentally watch my thoughts fly by, not interacting with them or allowing them to mean anything, watching them pass like clouds
@obsessivequeer Thanks so much. I recently realised confessing is one of mine also. It’s so hard cos you want to be able to talk about it but I also don’t want to do compulsions.
I’ve noticed that I’m somewhat happier also ignoring my thoughts than I am instead of doing compulsions (I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired atp) but I’ve heard you’re technically supposed to do erp rather than pushing under the rug. But idk if I have a thought I just refuse to think about it again and im fine even if I want to do compulsions
I’m having a big OCD relapse and would like to hear anyone’s tips on how to be present and healthily deal with these intrusive thoughts and the “need” to preform compulsions. Thank you!!
I cannot for the life of me stop ruminating or checking how I feel about thoughts or focusing on thoughts or creating more thoughts. I feel like I’m losing my mind. I want to scream. I try not to ruminate about the thoughts, but trying not to just makes me think about them more. I try not to check, but somehow, I still check. I want to let a thought sit in the background, but the more I try not to focus on it, the more I end up focusing on it. I don’t want the thought to expand because that feels like engaging with it, but I can’t just stop it from expanding. It feels impossible. People keep saying I’m in control of my compulsions, and maybe that’s true for the physical ones. But when it comes to the mental compulsions, I swear I have no control. It feels like I’m missing something that everyone else seems to have, like there’s some tool they’re using that I don’t have. Controlling mental compulsions has never felt possible for me. I’m starting to fear them. And every time someone says I’m in control and can just choose not to do them, I end up beating myself up even more when they happen. Or when I *choose* I guess. I don’t know anymore. If this is my fault, if I’m responsible for this, then what does that make me? I feel like a monster. I am at my wits’ end. How am I supposed to control mental compulsions when it feels like they control me? I freak out when they happen. They don’t bring me relief, they just make me panic. I want it to stop so bad.
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