health

"I've just been diagnosed with OCD - and I had absolutely no idea."

 

I do not wash my hands repeatedly. In fact, I should probably wash my hands more as I am one to get into a sandwich before washing my hands first. I do not press buttons repeatedly, or count things obsessively.

If my carrots are touching my meat then that doesn’t bother me. Hell, if my carrots are all across the plate then I don’t really care, it’ll all end up together as it mixes in my belly. Plus, my house definitely does not look like those houses on the TV shows about hoarders, even though whenever I watch those shows I always think their hallways like tunnels look like fun to play in.

So, imagine my surprise when a few weeks ago my psychologist introduced the notion that I had OCD. I was there to see her because my anxiety was beginning to spike again. Anxiety is something that I have struggled with since I can remember thanks to growing up in a violent household.

Watch: Mia Freedman talks about how she deals with her anxiety. (Post continues after video.)

But I feel like it isn’t the type of anxiety we most often hear about in the public. I rarely have panic attacks, but instead live in constant fear that I am in harm’s way, unbeknownst to most the people in my life. I repeat the same pattern – things are fine, then suddenly I start getting a bit antsy, then I start picturing bad things happening, then before I know it every day I think of different ways I’m going to die.

I always tell myself that I am fine and I can handle it, but then I get to the stage where it’s 3am and I am awake, crying, believing I’m going to get stabbed, in my apartment, by a robber, while my apartment in engulfed in flames because I left my hair straighteners on and the stress of it all causes me to have a heart attack. Then during my autopsy they find that I actually had a brain tumour the size of a soccer ball too. You get the picture.

I’ve never been a big fan of seeing a counsellor. Although I like the idea, whenever I’ve been in the past I’ve always left feeling incredibly underwhelmed. ‘Try to rationalise with the anxious thought’ has never worked for me.

Trust me, I can find you a million and one reasons why my bad thoughts can come true and I’m prepared to argue until death about it. During my peaks of anxiety I tried to rationalise while my mind screams ‘BUT WHAT IF YOUR ARTERIES ARE CLOGGED AND THIS ISN’T PANIC ATTACK? HOW DO YOU KNOW??!!!!’ So, one night as I was placing my boots by my bedroom window (so I could quickly pull them on to jump out the window in case of a fire), I realised I needed help again.

So, back to the doctors I went, and off to a new psychologist. She wanted to know my routine. I told her it was nothing special. She asked how many times I checked the front door to see if it was locked. Just at night, I told her. She wanted to know how many times. A few, I said. But that’s normal. Everyone does that. Same with the main building door downstairs that has to be manually locked. If anything, I was doing everyone in the apartment block a favour.

She kept pushing, and wanted to know every detail of my nighttime routine, including my thoughts. I didn’t think much of it, and to be honest I sat there with an air of arrogance as I already knew these sessions wouldn’t help me. She then told me for the next week I was to lock my apartment door, mindfully, and then I was only allowed to go back and look at it once. Not touch. ‘Sure thing,’ I shrugged, a bit baffled, and we moved on.

Which is why it surprised me that within 30 seconds my eyes filled up with tears and suddenly I was crying like a baby. I didn’t even know why I was crying, and it took me a while to realise that the thought of this terrified me. Going back to check the front door of wherever I lived is something I have always done. So much so, that I never thought twice about it.

She went to to explain that I had OCD which was fueling my anxiety, as I was constantly preparing for a danger that wasn’t imminent. She told me I was not to give in to the anxiety by going and checking, but ride the anxious wave, trusting it will end and each night my anxiety would lessen. But whatever happened, I was not allowed to go back to the door.

The following week I had some of the longest, most spectacular panic attacks of my life. It was pretty terrifying. I think I cried for 4 days straight. I had to take 2 days off work because my tears wouldn’t stop. But somehow I found the strength to not go back to check the door more than I was allowed. To my surprise she was right, by the time the week was over my anxiety around the door was calmer.

But that was not the end of it. Each week she adds in a new rule, no checking any plugs, no checking the apartment block door, and the hardest one, no going through my escape plan of jumping out of windows. It was up until this one that I had no idea that a repetitive thought could be a symptom of OCD.

I could stop myself physically touching something, but how do I stop going through a plan I have routinely gone over every night since a child? A plan I have always gone over because it was something I needed as a child, and I believe it would keep me safe?

I don’t yet have an answer to that one, and I am still challenged by it every night. But now, instead of indulging in my complex plan of how to get out of every window of my 3rd store apartment I try and take comfort in the words that my psychologist taught me to say – ‘thank you, little girl, for trying to protect me, but I don’t need you anymore. I am safe now.’

The author of this post is known to Mamamia but has chosen to remain anonymous. 

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Top Comments

Bobsy 8 years ago

As an OCD sufferer, it *really* annoys me when people make flippant remarks about their cleanliness or orderliness as being, "I'm so OCD!" No you're not. I even saw a cleaning company with 'OCD' in their business name. OCD isn't a cute quirk, it is debilitating and can make people suicidal.

My OCD doesn't affect me in the way of cleanliness, being orderly or fearing germs. My OCD manifests in health anxiety, checking, and intrusive thoughts. Let me give you some examples so you can understand what I regularly go through:

My legs were feeling weak one day. I immediately interpreted this as the beginning of Motor-Neuron Disease. To check this I would constantly do jump 'n jumps, squats and lunges to check for muscle strength. I would check my gait by walking on my heels and then my tippy toes - even in public. I would ask my parents and friends to check my muscle strength by pushing against my hands and legs. I'd be satisfied with this for a while. Then anxiety would creep up again and I'd ask them again... and again and again. I'd go on google and research for hours. I'd find relief that I didn't have MND... for a while, and then I'd think of another thing and the whole cycle would begin again. My mum was ready to take away my phone and laptop from me as I couldn't stop myself from checking.

I'd fear getting HIV from a simple manicure and would then go and check stats of HIV transmission online obsessively. I'd find the official stats but have to keep rechecking the site in case they had been changed, there had been a mistake, or I had missed something. I'd get constant blood tests even though I had a blood test that was clear 3 months before.

For a period of time I'd wake up, check every inch of my body for the tell-tale meningococcal rash and check if I could move my neck. I would then do this periodically throughout the day.

When I was 11 I watched The Exorcist at a sleepover and became convinced I would be possessed by the devil. As such I developed a routine of reciting the same prayer to God (despite not really being religious), and would then kiss my three teddies twice in a certain order. If I messed it up I would need to redo it otherwise, in my mind, I would become possessed.

I'd have intense compulsions to confess everything 'bad' I have ever done in my life otherwise I was a horrible person.

And don't even get me started on my pure-O OCD which unfortunately isn't widely understood by the community and so is very difficult to talk about. This side of OCD has almost led me to suicide. Here is a PDF that explains it quite well: http://www.ocduk.org/sites/...

It is horrible and debilitating. So when people say they're "So OCD!" with a flick of the hair, I wish I could transfer my OCD to them if they want it so damn badly.


Karen Cass 8 years ago

Most people will have passing obsessive thoughts or compulsive habits at some time in their Iives but the word DISORDER is the key here. Grouping your canned goods by category so that you can keep tabs on what needs replacing is not generally a disorder. OCD is an anxiety disorder and most of the behaviours we associate with it are 'safety behaviours' that MUST be done to avert some disaster.