Compulsive Thinking
~ An insight into OCD ~ Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder
My Thoughts
What kind of people get OCD? Are they weak, mentally unstable, weird?
- It's my personal opinion that the kind of people who seem to suffer with
OCD are very often caring, sensitive, intelligent, creative, and imaginative.
Very often perfectionists, analytical and deep thinking types of people suffer
from OCD.
And maybe that's part of the problem, maybe OCDers think TOO much. Our heads
are usually so full of stuff, constantly wondering, analyzing and thinking,
looking for reasons to things, wanting to do things well and properly that
something has to give! And BANG goes our wiring!
- I remember as a child being very aware of things going on in the world,
noticing things that friends wouldn't - maybe picking up on something I'd see
on TV and then spending time thinking about it when others had long forgotten
it. If I was doing a school project on a subject that really interested me, I'd
need to work on it constantly, getting it just right, making sure it was neat
and accurate.
- As an adult, I find my mind has to be thinking all the time. It's always
full and never seems to rest. Of course, for years it's been full of OCD stuff,
worrying and controlling all my thoughts.
- But at the moment, I'm trying my hardest to fill it with more productive
stuff. I feel that if I can shove and force the OCD to one side and then push
other things in it's place, then maybe, just maybe, the OCD will become
minimized, strangled, and suffocated by all the other more interesting
subjects.
- I try and keep busy by drawing, writing, researching other topics, and
the OCD that I DO allow in, like this Web Site, I try to make POSITIVE OCD
stuff rather than NEGATIVE - stuff that might actually help other people.
Negative OCD is NOT welcome in my head anymore. It's had it's way for years
and years, taking over valuable brain space, but now I'm mounting a TAKEOVER
bid and seizing back some control.
- I read somewhere that someone said of OCD, "at least it's not a
killer!" Well in a way that's wrong because OCD does kill. It kills
potential, and it does it slowly and painfully without mercy. It dominates the
space in our brain that creative, imaginative and enterprising stuff should
fill. It leaves hardly any room for potential.
- And if you don't fight back, it can win! OCD is a lifelong fight for
CONTROL.
Learn about the Signs and Symptoms of OCD here.
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