Stop trying to CONTROL your OCD thoughts. Switch to ACCEPTANCE.

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Publicado 2022-10-12
5 rules for stopping OCD thoughts and regaining control.

Full video - Psychologist Explains OCD: Real Symptoms & Debunking Stereotypes:    • OCD explained for beginners - how I w...  

Learn more:
- What is OCD? iocdf.org/about-ocd/
- OCD statistics: www.nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/obsessive-compu…
- How is OCD treated:    • First Line of Treatment for OCD by Jo...  
- Do I have OCD? instituteofliving.org/File%20Library/Assessment%20…
- A Psychological and Neuroanatomical Model of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4476073/

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For information purposes only. Does not constitute clinical advice. Consult your local medical authority for advice. The information in this video was accurate as of the upload date, October 11, 2022.

If you or someone you know needs help immediately, you should take one of the following actions:
- call 9-8-8 in the United States or your country's emergency number: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_emergency_telephone_…
- call the Lifeline at 1-800-273 TALK (8255) in the United States or a global crisis hotlines: findahelpline.com/i/iasp
- text START to 741-741 in the United States or visit www.crisistextline.org/
- go to your nearest hospital emergency room

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @wreckerthegoat
    bro i literally cant, i know that it's my ocd but the thoughts are SO horrible i just cant ignore them, they're so bad ive literally stopped eating for 2 months
  • @retro4266
    My OCD- do what I say or get bad luck
  • @kyze4979
    the most effective way to cure ocd is to ignore it altogether. the point is don't do something because of ocd and don't leave something because of it, think of him as a crazy person talking behind your back, and be like normal people in general, and believe that ocd won't harm you. do this continuously and be patient until you recover from it 😉😉
  • @vatsvlogs6110
    I'm trapped inside my thoughts and superstitions 😢😭 sometimes obsessed too much
  • @jetpond7904
    I never really thought of it this way genuinly thanks so much
  • @dahyunbunny9782
    Me: happily listens to the teacher of my favourite subject and takes notes My OCD: You are just going to insult the teacher out loud. Me: W-what? Why da heck would I do that!? My OCD: Because you will. Me: Shuts her mouth with her hand
  • @flymypg
    While I never had OCD, as a kid I used to have an array of "nervous behaviors", mainly forms fidgeting (without a fidget spinner) or moving side-to-side (like shaking my head, very similar to the "head bobble" used in India to indicate "yes" or agreement). My pediatrician assured my mother they would fade with age. Unfortunately, they persisted as I grew older, so I tried to reduce their visibility. While I could mask them easily enough while standing or walking, they were most visible while sitting. First, I consciously moved them to my legs, bouncing on the ball of my foot, like the seated "knee jiggle" some folks get from too much caffeine. As I entered adulthood, the jiggle also became disruptive, so I was able to further reduce it to rubbing my right big toe against the top of my shoe, making it totally invisible. But, boy, did I tear holes in lots of socks, and sometimes even the top of my shoe! Only when I reached my mid-50s did all such "nervous behaviors" finally fade. Not completely gone, but much less costly to my footwear. Sometimes, my shoes now wear out from the bottom! Looking back, I suspect they may have been responses to agitation, perhaps due to anxiety or emotional/social stress. Which may make them what today we'd call "self-soothing behaviors", rather than something in or related to my muscular nerves.
  • @jennicablack
    The "Ill do it later" used to work for me and now if i think that my brain makes me feel like i have to do it NOW so thats literally all i can think about.
  • @memehorse3658
    Guys, good or bad thoughts they're just thoughts. Treat them like an object.
  • @a.r.5731
    Postponing it kind of helps me, when I catch myself in a compulsion, I am able to stop and think of picking it up later and sometimes I forget to so I don't do it later
  • That’s a great tip to record myself because what I already do gets stale after a while.
  • @rhinoboy6603
    Sounds like ACT (Acceptance and Commitment Therapy) This approach can be a helpful adjunct to standard CBT.
  • @edward2364
    Well, my OCD is harm I cannot say it out loud 😂
  • Wouldn't this be dwelling more and more into the obsessions?? (Listening 45 minutes, singing it, writing it) wouldn't this mean to exacerbate it even more?
  • @izio1111
    ok i will try the writing down method the next time i get an unwanted compulsion 👍
  • I understand this and it makes sense but the part that gets me and I struggle with is being able to distinguish intuition from fear based OCD thoughts. Like my mind will come up with these thoughts of “what if” but it feels like fate sometimes and like a “sign” to do that thing and then I’ll do it and then have thoughts and fear of “oh crap did I do it again? What if this was the wrong choice? But it feels like the right choice…I think” So it feels like I constantly can’t really trust myself with anything and that eventually my OCD will ruin things for me again, like relationships, jobs, family matters, life choices, etc
  • @kenx9984
    Ignore / Delay the action when the thought come! Like asking you to press button or wash hand one more time you don't do that leave it and focus other things you will feel uneasy but its ok!