- Date posted
- 22d
Real event OCD
Anyone who struggles with real event, rumination, and guilt. Please please please tell me your tips and tricks and maybe some words of encouragement.❤️
Anyone who struggles with real event, rumination, and guilt. Please please please tell me your tips and tricks and maybe some words of encouragement.❤️
I used to suffer from this a lot. It's been a long time but what I would tell myself when it would spike is - I can't trust my memory. Memories aren't perfect. Maybe it happened, maybe it didn't. Just because I can "remember" something doesn't necessarily mean it's real. - Everyone makes mistakes. Some people do horrible things, on purpose or on accident and they still live on. - I used to come back to this thing someone wrote about how life is like you're driving a car and guilt is the little check engine light telling you to pull over. If you can't reasonably do anything to make it right, you get back in your car and drive on. - Remembering the difference between guilt and shame. Guilt is you feeling bad about what you did, and shame is "I'm a bad person". You can make it right with the other person and fix guilt, but shame is different. No one deserves shame. Its unproductive and cruel. Shame is what OCD deals in. Hopefully this isn't reassurance but it's what helped me get through that theme and onto other fun themes 🥲
I was always remembering all these little details or trying to remember exactly how I felt at that moment but you can never know for sure. Your brain is not infallible.
@F-U- OCD Also "fixing" guilt doesn't mean fixing the feeling of guilt that you are experiencing, just making it right in the other person's book.
@F-U- OCD Thank you very much. Dealing with the shame is so incredibly difficult, but i will keep pushing!
Oh, I’m in the same boat! I constantly feel like I’ve failed so many people and said the worst stuff. My tips are to get in touch with your senses to bring you back to the present, and try to center your exhaustion with your OCD when you’re especially wound up. If you lean into exhaustion, I think you have a better chance of accessing the part of you that is in so much pain and can’t do this anymore. When that doesn’t work, sit through and take a melatonin to help knock you out at night. You’ve got this!
@chaitea Thank you so much for this!!!!
Thank you for asking this question. I am in the same boat and have so many real-events... But there are about three that I feel like I can't handle. I am currently working trough my fears/ feelings of guilt by trying to do the following: - I try to allow the feelings and the pain that arise, which is extremely hard and has repeatedly led to breakdowns. Meds help somewhat by reducing the intensity of the feelings. Sometimes I am able to say to myself: "Yes, it hurts. Yes, that would be very bad and sad if that's what happened." - An extremely difficult exposure also seems to be allowing good things to happen to me in life despite everything. Compared to about a year ago, my health is a little better. Before that I was partially bed-bound due to my anxiety, guilt and hopelessness.
@>paralysed< Thank you for taking the time to write this and im so sorry for the ways that ocd has effected you. I have let the feelings pass before but sometimes I just can’t help but try to work it out in my head (even though I know it just repeats the cycle). I’m gonna continue to try and separate my past actions and my ocd mind from who I actually am and live my life fully and I hope you can forgive yourself and do the same🩷
just wanted to see if others struggle with real event ocd really kicking their a**. i feel like my mind is a constant battleground of every mistake ive made and they feel so huge and life altering to me that it’s hard to continue going on in their wake. just wondering if anyone else feels this way too.
I've been doing well the past month in cutting down on compulsions and have been feeling better however, last night I had a set back that carried on into today. I had gotten very poor sleep (4ish hours) and then something triggered my memory. I think with the sudden anxiety spike and lack of sleep I didn't have the strength to ignore my compulsions. Last night and today I've realised I've gone back into rumination and mentally reviewing the event excessively again and comparing my situation to other people's, but most of the times that I start going down these rabbit holes I don't even realise I'm doing it? Also been fixating a bit on the fear that I've ruined my progress and that I will fall back into the deep end of it all again, that I have done so much work getting myself out of, although trying my best to not be too discouraged. Does anyone have any advice on how to deal with rumination more specifically?
Hey everyone — I just want to say upfront that as someone who actively deals with real events OCD, most of the posts I share here are going to come straight from my personal experience. Just real & lived reality. Because I know how lonely this type of OCD can feel, and if there’s even one person out there who reads my words and feels less alone — then it’s worth sharing every piece of it. Now… let’s talk about the kind of OCD that doesn’t get enough attention. The kind that doesn’t just whisper scary things — it reminds you of real ones. Real Events OCD. This isn’t about bizarre or outta nowhere intrusive thoughts. This is the kind that takes real things you’ve done — whether it was a genuine mistake, a cringey moment, a bad decision, or even something you already made peace with — and it replays them on a loop like a horror film in your head. It’s the constant questioning: “Am I actually a good person?” “Was that actually wrong and I just didn’t realize it?” “What if I’ve hurt someone and don’t deserve to be okay?” And it’s exhausting. I’ve had moments where I can’t focus, can’t sleep, can’t breathe because my brain pulls up something from years ago and convinces me I’m evil, dangerous, unforgivable. I can be having a good day, laughing with people I love, and boom — my mind hits me with “Remember this? You should feel horrible about it forever.” Even if I’ve apologized. Even if I’ve changed. Even if I’ve done the work. Real Events OCD doesn’t care. It thrives off your guilt. It uses your conscience against you. And when you’re young — still figuring out who you are, still healing — it makes you question whether you even deserve to move forward. That’s what’s so cruel about it. It doesn’t just make you anxious. It makes you feel like you’re a danger to the people you love. That you’re secretly the villain in your own story. But let me tell you something I’ve been learning — slowly, painfully, but honestly.. You are not your past. You are not your worst mistake. And you are not the voice in your head trying to punish you forever. You’re a person with a heart. A person who cares. And that’s exactly why OCD picked this flavor to mess with you. ERP is SOO helping. So is community. But the biggest help? Giving myself permission to stop chasing reassurance and start living again. I do not have to confess, over and over, for the rest of my life. I do not have to torture myself to prove I’m good. I can grow — and growing is enough. So if you’re reading this and you know exactly what I’m talking about… I see you. I am you. Let’s keep showing up. Let’s keep living. Let’s keep healing — even when OCD tells us we don’t deserve to. You do. I do. We all do.
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