- Date posted
- 18w
Christian’s with OCD
What has helped you? What have you learned? Biggest success? How’s your OCD now?
What has helped you? What have you learned? Biggest success? How’s your OCD now?
I grew up religious and with undiagnosed OCD. I was always told that my thoughts meant just as much or even more than my actions. Something that I wished someone would have actually told me was that thoughts do not define you. God knows you, loves you, and does not judge you for your intrusive thoughts. I feel like if someone guided me that way my spiritual journey could have been very different.
@KaraClouds Absolutely! The word of God is sharper than any two edged sword. It’s capable of discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart! Mine is the same story. I grew up thinking bad thoughts=bad Christian. As an adult I was able to look deeper into the Bible and see that that’s wrong.
@Robyn🪴🧘🏻♀️🧠 I resonate with both of your stories.❤️🩹 You both are so strong! I was taught that bad thoughts were from demons taking over my mind. So when I started battling Harm OCD as a mom, I pretty much thought I was possessed. And it made me soooo sick. When I started treating it as OCD, it got much better. I have recovered for the most part.
One thing that has certainly helped me is a guy on YouTube named Mark DeJesus. He is a former pastor who has dealt with OCD. Listening to him has helped open my understanding in a lot of ways. I also bought his book called the OCD healing journey.
Mark DeJesus is AMAZING. I find it healing to just listen to him speak on his podcast. He always points us to the love of God. Once we get how much He loves us, we are on the right track to making major progress over OCD.
@phyrcracker93 I LOVE Mark Dejesus 💛💛💛
Listen to You Make all Things New by Big Daddy Weave. Reflect on God's love for you and imagine yourself giving Him everything you can, even the shameful ones.
@Anonymous Amen!! That is a beautiful song 💛 thank you for sharing!!
God has taught me so much about to fight this disorder....I wrote a book about all I learned - you can see more at WagingWarAgainstOCD.com If I had to sum it all up - our hearts have to grasp the GRACE of God. OCD condemns us constantly and we are very used to it, and we have to learn that our relationship with God is exactly the opposite of being based on condemnation - it's full based on grace.
@Waging War Against OCD Thank you so much for sharing!! ❤️ I will definitely look into your book! How’s your OCD now if you don’t mind me asking?
I wish I knew I can’t get over these thoughts and I’m so scared all the time
@Tulip1234 I understand and have been there! I know how hard it is. Take a baby step and start labeling those scary thoughts as OCD not you, and try your best to focus on something else. I promise the more you do this, the easier it will get.
What helped me is a variety of things, but one of the major ones was learning there were other atonement theories besides penal substitutionary atonement.
@julianofnorwich Thank you for sharing! Do you care to explain more on this? I’m intrigued to learn more!
@cexienl_10 My pastor here does a good job of explaining this a little. He holds to a different atonement theory. Basically he doesn't think teaching that we deserve to die for our sins but Jesus took the punishment instead tells the story correctly. More that Jesus came to show us he could deliver us from sin and death by resurrecting. Its a but more complex than that but this video is a start. https://bsky.app/profile/pastortrey05.com/post/3lu66jipwxk2z
Can anyone share any success stories regarding Pure/Real Event OCD? I think I just want some uplifting news more than anything, though this may read as reassurance seeking… not sure what counts and what doesn’t. So any education on that may be helpful too. Many thanks!!
Can you share a time you’ve seen God use your story with ocd for good? I don’t mean your experience with it was good in itself, but has there been times your life story has helped others open up, you’ve learned something about God’s grace in the process, or something like that? It’s one of the hardest parts of my own story, but there have also been so many times I’ve seen good come out of the hard stuff. I just would love to connect with others who have also seen this!
My experience with OCD has historically been frightening, degrading and ultimately robbed me of any kind of quality of life. That is until I tried cognitive behavioral therapy or CBT. CBT is training to help you look at the way you experience thoughts and emotions, reexamine them and to come up with a more reasonable and rational cognitive process. This will hopefully allow you to live a more positive fulfilling life. I realise that I was very lucky to get a CBT therapist with plenty of practical experience of OCD, since CBT can be used to treat a variety of conditions, each requiring a very specific discipline of CBT. The first thing I remember saying when I met my therapist is “I’m having intrusive thoughts, I don’t like them and I want to get rid of them”. Well, she immediately replied ” we can’t do that, you can’t stop thoughts, only control how much attention you can pay to them”. As you can imagine, this was not what I wanted to hear, I wanted a miracle cure, a pill that could take these thoughts away or a therapy that would make me some kind of superhero! But what I got instead was a dose of truth. That everyone has intrusive thoughts, most people can put them in their proper context as simple random thoughts of no consequence, us folk’s with OCD however will spend hours ruminating over them, churning these thoughts over and over in our minds, slowly tormenting ourselves and unable to let go. “The good news is”, says she, with a gleeful smile, ” that you can train your brain to view these thoughts as what they really are, random, meaningless thoughts”. Things were starting to look up. Could this really be that easy? Could Exposure and Response Prevention really be as simple as how it sounded? I remained dubious, unable to accept that I wasn’t damaged goods or a ‘headcase’, I was simply looking at my thoughts from an unhealthy perspective. But I decided to go with it! What the hell! At least it is an option that I didn’t have before! And I worked at it, gave it my all, and guess what! Things started to improve, I began to exercise control over my mind, entertained my intrusive thoughts less and less, and the amount of times these thoughts started to pop up! My brain was finally getting the message, these thoughts are not important, they are just random idea with no meaning! With this new found freedom I started to grow complacent, I felt like I was cured and could now stop the treatment and stop practicing the techniques I had learned. But my therapist was quick to shatter this illusion too! She told me in no uncertain terms that this is a lifelong journey, I need to continually exercise control over my mind or I will relapse years later and get overwhelmed by my thoughts again. I started to incorporate other ways to use these skills, things that I do every day, like mindfulness, and being mindful when I wash the dishes, allowing any distracting thoughts to just sit there while I get back to cleaning and housework or whatever I was engaged in doing at the time. This is continually sending my brain the message that I’m in control. So here I am some years later. I have had no relapses. This by no means makes me an expert of OCD, but because I constantly use my CBT skills on a day to day basis, I have been able to remain symptom free. So that’s my message to all those in the same boat, go with the CBT, and don’t grow complacent, you can have an amazing life but remember, the CBT isn’t just for Christmas, it’s for life!
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