- Date posted
- 1y
OCD and things I said in the past
Hey guys have you ever said something you regret so much that it traumatizes you for the fact of even saying that, wondering what was going on in your mind?
Hey guys have you ever said something you regret so much that it traumatizes you for the fact of even saying that, wondering what was going on in your mind?
I think the "traumatization" part may just be the sudden intense surfacing of shame or embarrassment, or whatever emotion we feel best helps us cope with the sudden thought that we could have been so hurtful/ crass/ rude/ etc. But yes, I'm starting to believe my OCD first manifested itself around what/ how I spoke
@FloralEnvoy Me too, I used to ruminate at night on every interaction I had with other people, and would try and figure out if I had said something stupid, hurtful, too much, etc. So much unnecessary embarrassment for literally every word that did or did not leave my mouth
@Courage2Continue Yeah, sounds like my experience. I got bullied pretty badly growing up, and eventually I developed some habit of relying on safe-words to communicate my ideas. Bullies picked up on it, so I would focus so intently on what I was saying and if it was socially acceptable that I would silently word every sentence I said back to myself. Now I find myself constantly second guessing what I say in social situations, and it all stems from that same feeling. The worst of it is when I say something stupid or miscommunicate an idea. Then my brain will not let go of it.
@FloralEnvoy For reals, same! I grew up in a very religiously strict community, and I basically had to learn to alter my speech patterns to each individual, because they would each perceive certain words or phrasing as sinful/incorrect/bad. I remember saying “no problem” to someone who said thank you, and the dude lectured me for forever on how it was an inappropriate response, and then literally was told a week later that saying “your welcome” was lacking humility and that I needed to humble myself. I was so confused! It’s such a hard habit to break, to not nitpick or second guess everything you’re going to say because you don’t know if it will be taken wrong. I don’t know if you experience this too, but sometimes I can’t tell if someone is low key making fun of me, and so I’ll end up down a rabbit hole of figuring it out. Seriously took me several hours yesterday just to let ruminating about that go, and be okay with not knowing.
@Courage2Continue Yeah I'm constantly having thoughts if laughter or gestures in other conversations are in reference to me, or that I embarrassed myself in any conversation I didn't feel confident in. I would do my best to unpack all that trauma if possible, children shouldn't have that many expectations put on them especially not in the face of religious authority. That pressure is the same as the bullying I went through, conditions you to never feel safe when communicating. So some of us compulsively lie. Some always self-monitor, and some are hypervigilant of things they should have no reason to even think of in the moment. We are just damaged. Like everyone else, just in a way society hasn't accommodated as well.
@FloralEnvoy Yeah, I think for me it made me struggle with OCD more, especially with the self monitoring and hyper vigilance stuff. Although, I grew up in a strict setting where lying was punished severely and confession was expected, so I feel like I developed more so a compulsive need to tell people everything that was going on with me all the time because if I didn’t, then there was the accusations of lying and the punishments that followed. I think I also learned to take on other people’s mistakes because I was constantly accused for them, and at times it was easier to just accept the punishment than try to prove my innocence. It’s been well over a decade of unpacking it for sure, but it gets better and better!
Yeh I believe that too, it’s just the sudden feeling of guilt wondering how I could say that, wishing I didn’t, hoping that whoever you said too is ok, and feeling horrible
tw: slightly nsfw I don't mean something like "I made a sexual joke and a child was nearby " or "I was 19 and thought a 17 y.o. was attractive" Like something actually bad not the "I'm freaking over this because I have OCD" type of situation, but more like "I did something horrible and I happen to have OCD which makes it even worse" type of situation I did some really fucked up sexual stuff at 14-16 and they haunt me.
Currently feeling extremely shameful for something I did in the past. Any advice? I've had periods of coming to terms with it and understanding that it was just a mistake, as no one got hurt, but now it's resurfacing again.
TLDR; i'm terrified that my past confessions/need for reassurance to the wrong people will get back at me one day from them not knowing it was undiagnosed OCD/not understanding. back when i was 17/18 i began struggling severely with POCD. at the time, i wasn't diagnosed and had not much idea what OCD was, so naturally i just thought i was a terrible person. i needed reassurance from everyone - even coworkers, friends, anyone, some who barely knew me. i'd tell people about the thoughts i was struggling with and when i look back it upsets me because i know deep down they thought it was weird. i don't know why i felt the need to tell these people about my POCD. i even remember one of my supervisors looking at me with this horrified look on her face. the job i worked at back then, i sometimes had to do parties for children so naturally i refused because of my theme, i was (still am if i'm honest) scared of children. i ended up not being kept permanently at my job (i was seasonal) due to me not doing the parties. i ended up going back to that job a year (ish) later after being diagnosed. i made it clear i had OCD and wore lots of pin badges about it and made it my mission to spread awareness of what OCD really is. i was on meds (still am). some people had left naturally, so i know there's some people out there who never actually found out i had OCD and i am terrified they think of me as this dangerous, weird p*do because of my intrusive thoughts whenever they hear my name/think of that job. i'm terrified that my old coworkers talk about me and describe me as a bad person. i had someone come into my new job a few months back, and being in customer service, we were having a friendly chat and she mentioned she just started working at my old job. i said i used to work there, she then asked me if i was *my full name* and i said yes, she said she'd heard about how bad my manager was back then. she tried to follow me on instagram and i blocked her. i'm terrified on how she knows about me, what does she know? what was she told? it haunts me to this day. what if she thinks i'm a bad person, because my old colleagues have told her stories of my POCD? why was i even mentioned? but yeah - long story short i'm just mortified that i was so open about POCD and that there's people out there who know about it that probably shouldn't, some who i know didn't like me very much anyway, and that it might come back to me later in life and i'd lose everything, and just overall the thought of someone thinking of me as a bad person. anyone else relate?
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