- Date posted
- 38w
How do you stop OCD before it starts
So maybe the title wasn't the best to to put it but when you guys start having obsessive thoughts how do you stop them before it turns into compulsions and anxiety?
So maybe the title wasn't the best to to put it but when you guys start having obsessive thoughts how do you stop them before it turns into compulsions and anxiety?
I am not sure if this will help but it has helped me recently :) I can't always stop the thoughts but I try to recognize that they are out of my control and redirect my actions/thoughts as best as I can by focusing on a separate activity or physical movement. I saw a post recently showing the difference in neural activity across psychiatric disorders, and OCD was full of various hills and valleys when compared to the other waves. In these "valleys", neural activity gets stuck, which to me represents the consuming feeling of obsessive thoughts. When I've felt thoughts coming on recently, I try to visualize the "ball" of neural activity in a valley, and then work on pushing the ball out and back on "track", which is also my way of pushing out the negative thoughts. I hope this helps you somehow!
It takes practice and trial & error, and over time you’ll find what works best for you. When you do feel the anxiety come in, you can address it before it worsens. I like to verbally say what my OCD wants me to do, then announce how I will address it instead. For example, I worked through driving OCD. It’s very manageable now, but there are moments where my OCD wants to sneak in. So I’ll say out loud, “ok OCD, you want me to ruminate over getting into a car accident. But I’m going to drive anyway, and not give in to the rumination. Maybe I’ll crash my car, maybe I won’t.” Sometimes I add humor, like “it would be so hilarious if I get into an accident. I hope I do. I would laugh and laugh.” It helps lessen the feeling that my thoughts are urgent. If I do end up doing a compulsion, I’ll acknowledge that I did and why (like what reassurance I was seeking by doing the compulsion), and resolving to not continue. When I’m stressed, I’ll re-direct by saying “ok OCD, you can hang out while I keep working, I’m going to ignore you but you can come along.” Overall what helps me is just grounding myself by understanding my OCD is coming up and what my plan is. I also work on not listening when my OCD tries to convince me that some made up scenario or intrusive thought is urgent. Follow your values and the OCD gets quieter 😊
Thank you for sharing this! I think I get it but could you expand on having a "plan" I may be over thinking it or just don't understand entirely but I'd really appreciate it!
@Anonymous Of course! So for me, my plan is how I want to face my thoughts and how I’ll continue going on with my day. Sometimes, that may be a plan of reminding myself that I will not ruminate, until the urge to do so lessens. Other times, the plan could be to do exactly what my OCD doesn’t want me to do. Yesterday I drove to San Francisco, and my ocd was coming up. So my plan was to drive anyway, and to not cancel my trip to be “safe” like my OCD wanted. And my plan was to remind myself that my values right now are to live my life. So it depends on how severe my OCD feels, but my plan is my personal reminder of how I’ll work against my OCD
@MichelleV Thank you!
So while you can't exactly stop your OCD -- it is, for better and for worse, a part of all of us at a cellular level -- you can treat it with Exposure and Response Prevention tools. There's really no way to stop or prevent the anxiety created by these intrusive thoughts, but you CAN prevent the compulsions. The anxiety is what triggers the compulsions so, if you sit with that anxiety (rather than running from it or trying to "fix it" by doing compulsions), and you face that anxiety and those troubling thoughts head on without do a compulsion, gradually you will start to experience relief and those thoughts, and that anxiety, and by proxy those compulsions, will all start to diminish... Hang in there and keep at it!
Dealing with obsessive thoughts before they escalate into compulsions and anxiety is a challenge many face. It makes sense to want to find a way to stop them in their tracks. While stopping the thoughts isn't usually the goal in OCD treatment, changing your relationship with them and resisting compulsions can significantly reduce their power and the distress they cause. Help is here at NOCD and we can assist you in finding outside help if needed too. Also here are some helpful resources: https://www.treatmyocd.com/blog/always-zoning-out/ https://www.treatmyocd.com/blog/ocd-and-adhd/ https://www.treatmyocd.com/blog/the-3-steps-you-can-take-to-regain-your-life-from-ocd/
Another way to describe it is a loss of ability to let uncomfortable thoughts flow through our minds. It's like a fire alarm going off in our heads and an urgency to work out what these thoughts mean and what we can do about them and it's the exact reason why going to talk therapy is the worst thing that someone with OCD can do.
Hello everyone! I have grown up with OCD and gotten quite the handle on it. However, it still comes back every now and then and this is one of those times. For some reason, it has to get pretty bad for me to do something about and I am noticing an interesting trend. It gradually gets worse, I finally decide to resist it when it gets bad, it goes away to almost nothing and I let my guard down. My OCD is not nearly as powerful at this stage, but it releases just enough doubt for me to do the compulsion “just this one time”, and it gets bad again. Any recommendations?
I still do not have an OFFICIAL diagnosis (I dont have the means to do so) but given my symptoms, past and present in my life hugely suggest OCD is what I am dealing with. I cannot be 100 percent certain but after searching for answers and researching for a long time now, I am fairly certain and confident this is what I am struggling with. Given this step forward, I am making more effort into giving up compulsions. at the current moment I believe to be dealing with ROCD, as I have been having several intrusive thoughts that conflict with my relationship. For starters, recently over the past month or 2, I have been struggling with intrusive thoughts like not being over my ex, being attracted to someone else, losing feelings for my partner and not being in love, etc. I can consciously identify that I dont believe these thoughts to be true but it causes me so much distress and anxiety. It gets extremely unbearable some days, and I have leaned into 2 main compulsions. I have relied on thought checking and googling as my source of relief. At first the googling was genuinely to start finding answers; hence why I have made some of the discoveries I have about OCD including this site. But it developed into every time I was anxious, I would whip my phone out and start googling strictly to find an answer that would reassure me or calm me down. As for thought checking, it acted as a way to reaffirm my love for my girlfriend in my head when I have had the thoughts that collide with my relationship and how I feel about my girlfriend. It worked at first but developed into a compulsion where every time a bad thought got me worked up id either do my normal googling or Id think about that in my head to calm myself down. Over time these compulsions have gotten less and less affective and now when I do them it only gets me more anxious and desperate for reassurance (strengthening the cycle or whatever it is lol). I did some more research and finally have accepted the very real fact that I am going to have to sit in heavy anxiety and not give into compulsions for a while in order to treat this. I have to sit in the thoughts that make me feel all this hightened anxiety and distress without giving into compulsion. to be honest I am scared, the thoughts are more rampant than ever, but I am ready to commit to this. I dont think I am gonna be able to go cold turkey on my compulsions so I am ready for the reality I might relapse on the compulsions sometimes, But am gonna keep going until I can break these shackles OCD has on my life right now. I wanna ask, what is everyones methods they use to avoid giving into compulsion when the thoughts get loud? any advice is welcome :)
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