- Date posted
- 1y
Suicidal ocd
Do you think my suicidal ocd could change my beliefs? I don’t want to die. Do you think it could change that? I just don’t want ocd to change my beliefs, I think that’s what we all fear.
Do you think my suicidal ocd could change my beliefs? I don’t want to die. Do you think it could change that? I just don’t want ocd to change my beliefs, I think that’s what we all fear.
Thoughts do not have the power to make you do anything. We act in accordance to how we really feel deep down, rather than because of our thoughts, and there is a lot of neuroscience to back this up. The thing is, the more you fight and argue with these intrusive thoughts, the longer they will stick around. Try to remember that they don't require arguing. They don't need to be disproven. They are only sticky because you feel like they're really important.
@djflorio Any advice on how to make them not feel as important? Really struggling with that
@Macyy3937493939494 - Of course. That's the hardest part! When thoughts comes up that we don't like, our natural instinct seems to be to try to use logic to dispute them. The problem is, the processes involved in producing these thoughts are NOT logical. These processes are developed in early childhood, and are largely based in emotion and feelings. In a way, when the mind is producing intrusive thoughts, it's like a toddler throwing a tantrum. Trying to logically argue with these thoughts is like trying to get through to that toddler. It just doesn't work. The same goes with general resistance. Getting frustrated and angry with these thoughts is like yelling at the crying toddler to shut up; another thing that will make things worse. When you try to logically argue or actively push these thoughts away, you signal to the brain that they are important. That's what keeps them coming back. It's a vicious cycle that feeds itself: a thought bothers you, you naturally try to get rid of it, that increases its perceived "importance," the mind produces it more often, and so on. The way to escape this cycle is to do something that seems incredibly illogical: don't resist the thoughts. Don't argue with them. Allow your body to feel the anxiety that results from them, over and over again. In OCD treatment, the gold-standard method is ERP (exposure response prevention), in which you do just that. You very slowly and methodically expose yourself to a trigger (in your case it would be something that triggers thoughts about suicide), and you prevent yourself from doing ANY compulsions (such as rumination, reassurance seeking, etc). You then feel the anxiety that arises, and allow it to run its course as much as possible. The purpose of this exercise is to SHOW yourself that these thoughts are not dangerous or important. That's the important difference: you aren't TELLING yourself that they aren't important, you're SHOWING yourself. It all really comes down to how much we try to avoid feeling anxiety. It's an uncomfortable emotion, but that's all it is: an emotion. It's ok for a thought to make you feel anxious. That anxiety will come and go on its own. Over time, due to your non-reaction to these thoughts, they will naturally occur less often. You will have effectively removed their importance. Going back to the toddler analogy, practicing this is like being the parent that remains calm, validates the child's emotions, and soothes them. Crying children generally just want to be seen by their parents, regardless of what they're crying about. If the parents are calm and validating, they know that everything is okay. So my advice (aside from speaking to an OCD specialist who practices ERP) is to experiment with accepting the uncertainty of these thoughts, and FEELING what happens in your body. When a thought like "maybe I want to kill myself" arises, instead of engaging in it, try responding with, "maybe I will, maybe I won't." Then just notice how you feel. What happens in your chest? Your stomach? Do you clench your jaw? Do you breathe faster? You don't have to do anything but observe without judgement. Once you notice the markers of anxiety, you can start to adjust yourself to ease those markers. Maybe you unclench your jaw, soften the belly, and put a hand over your heart to feel the warmth. Your mind will be shouting all kinds of thoughts and stories at you as you do this, and that's okay. Just acknowledge the thoughts, and focus on the feelings, which is how you can truly communicate with your "inner child." Sorry I know a lot of this sounds pretty fluffy, but it's a viewpoint that has helped me tremendously over the years. Hope this helps and I'm happy to answer more questions.
@djflorio I really appreciate you taking the time to type this out. Just copied and pasted into my notes! It is very helpful. It’s a much slower process than I think all of us would like it to be. You do such a good job at explaining this. You’re awesome!
@camkkkkkk Glad to hear it and glad I can help 😊
It didn’t change mine when I felt it severely, and I doubt it will change yours. Actually, the a big part of why it discomforts you is probably because it conflicts with your beliefs and who you really are as a person! I need to remind myself of that too.
@andyman738 Did you recover from suicidal ocd?
@Macyy3937493939494 It isn’t flaring up for me right now! I had a horrible depressive episode start last month and then I was having terrible suicidal intrusive thoughts at night. Thankfully those have subsided quite a bit
@andyman738 I’m sorry. I haven’t dealt with real suicidal thoughts before, that I can recall, but I’m sure that is scary.
@Macyy3937493939494 Yes I apologize I may have gotten suicidal ideation mixed up with suicidal ocd… this whole OCD thing just sucks in general. :/ I hope yours improves and I do not think your core beliefs will be affected
@andyman738 Hoping for the best for you as well
so i have ocd but this is the main theme ive been dealing with for the last few months, im obsessed with my mortality and i feel trapped by the reality of death. i dont really believe in an afterlife which makes it scarier, not that i dont wanna my brain literally just wont let me. but i have daily panic attacks thinking about death all day, its honestly the toughest thing ive ever dealt with. does anybody have any tips on how they manage this if they have ever dealt with it? not looking for reassurance, just some non compulsive ways to kind of lessen the grip of the fear.
I’ve recently been struggling a lot with OCD. I have had OCD for a long time I just didn’t realize it until more recently. About seven months ago I developed panic attacks one day randomly at work. I thought I was having a heart attack and went to the hospital where they told me it was just a panic attack and I assumed I would snap out and be better within a few days. However it didn’t. Here’s where it gets scary, I was staying at my then boyfriends house while dealing with blurry vision, anxiety attacks everyday, and more (unsure of what was going on). But at some point I saw my bfs (pew pew 🔫) on his table and it sent me into an anxiety attack after sudden thoughts that I was going to hurt myself with it. I begged him to put it away when I’m not looking so I didn’t know where he put it. He did. These thoughts lasted for about four days but began to go away. (I thought that was it and I would be back to normal). Unfortunately though I ended up moving back in with my family when we couldn’t get my panic attacks under control in time for me to get back to work and pay bills. However, coming home brought up a lot of trauma from when I was kid. My anxiety got worse but I didn’t have those thoughts again. About two and half months ago though, I got sick and went to the hospital where they gave me steroid pills and a steroid shot but sent me into some kind of psychiatric event. Ever since then though, I have been suffering from harm OCD, I have had moments of intense anger that I usually have to completely walk away and go on my own because of how intense they are, and it feels like it’s getting worse. Today I felt fine until about and hour and half ago where I started to dwell on the fact that my suicidal thought was influenced by my OCD and at the moment my OCD is at the worst it’s been. This caused me to get suddenly really depressed and I started crying thinking about how I can’t handle this. I then saw a post talking about how suicide rates are high for people with this form of OCD and it made me question if I am mentally strong enough to pull through this. I fear that at times I’m getting worse. I have good days but I have a lot of bad days. Unfortunately this sent me into such a bad panic attack I went over to my nanas crying about how I can’t deal with this. I took a 0.25 mg Xanax which helped calm down the panic attack portion of it but my brain is still uncomfortably active. I guess I just need hope. I’m so saddened by this. It’s like my life took a total 360 in 10 months and got even worse since the steroid shot. Idk what to do about it. I can’t stop the spiral. I talk to two different therapist weekly and start more next week, making it 5 times a week. I feel no improvements…
Hey y’all. I have suicidal OCD and I feel that it manifests in a strange way. I feel like my brain often encourages me to kill myself. Like my most dominant thought isn’t ’what if you kill yourself’, it’s ’you should kill yourself.’ It tends to amp up every time I make some mistake, even if it’s small. And it definitely gets worse during times of stress. I don’t want to kill myself and I wouldn’t consider myself depressed. But if these thoughts are OCD, and are my brain trying to keep me safe from killing myself, why would it tell me to? I’d appreciate any insight.
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