Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
If you have severe OCD it will ruin your life. Really.
It may lead you to irrational phobias like
Trypophobia (fear of clustered holes.)
You can't handle knives or guns , getting intrusive thoughts to hurt yourself or your loved ones.
You get Depressed.
You get Mood-Swngs
Everything has to be symmetrical.
You become illogical.
You become a different person
I shot myself with a hot glue gun.
I turned off the emergency stop for the escalator button causing the police to come.
I turned off the main power supply of a building causing the whole place to black-out and the people there scolded me thinking im misbehaving.
i stick knives in my neck , scissors into my tounge to satisfy these compulsions.
Due to the intrusions in my head , i can't sleep at night or listen in class. I got a 1.71 GPA during my first year in college.
I have compulsions to scratch paper when doing homework or during class
I bite walls.
I recheck everything again and again.
I make weird eye movements.
( I have OCD , i see the psychiatrist , psychologist , i take fluoxetine. People may laugh at this disease , but it's not funny if you have it. You are lucky not to have this. )
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An anxiety disorder that is characterized by recurrent, unwanted thoughts, or obsessions, and possible repetitive behaviors, or compulsions. Performing these so-called "rituals," provides only temporary relief, and not performing them leaves a person feeling bothered and anxious.
Every time someone touches me, I have to itch that spot. Yes, my rear too. Gets awkward. But I can control it to extents. Like loving embrace, I can deal with. But when someone deliberately pokes me, or taps me to get my attention, I've got to itch it.
When I'm on the computer, nobody can be standing on my right side. I don't know why, that's just the way it is.
I need to wear a blanket over my shoulders around one of my older brothers. It's only with him too, and I absolutely cannot stand to be around him without something covering my shoulders. I've been told that's OCD, at least.
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obsessive compulsive disorder.
People with the mental illness appear to be daydreaming, distracted, noncompliant, disinterested , lazy , mischevious.
the truth is :
lazy - because we are mentally tired of everything.
ocd is bad , it really tires your mind , you get depressed and sometimes , you feel like doing nothing , at all.
mischevious - because we have to act on these compulsions or it will linger in your mind until it gets so stressful that you get panics attacks that may even caused seizures and even death.However, The compulsions to do things are mostly evil. So you get fked no matter what.
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Imagine that your mind got stuck
on a certain thought or image…
Then this thought or image got replayed in your mind
over and
over again
no matter what you did…
You don’t want these thoughts — it feels like an avalanche…
Along with the thoughts come intense feelings of anxiety…
Anxiety is your brain’s alarm system. When you feel anxious, it feels like you are in danger. Anxiety is an emotion that tells you to respond, react, protect yourself, DO SOMETHING!
On the one hand, you might recognize that the fear doesn’t make sense, doesn’t seem reasonable, yet it still feels very real, intense, and true…
Why would your brain lie?
Why would you have these feelings if they weren’t true? Feelings don’t lie… Do they?
Unfortunately, if you have OCD, they do lie. If you have OCD, the warning system in your brain is not working correctly. Your brain is telling you that you are in danger when you are not.
When scientists compare pictures of the brains of groups of people with OCD, they can see that some areas of the brain are different than the brains of people who don’t have OCD.
Those tortured with OCD are desperately trying to get away from paralyzing, unending anxiety…
Obsessions are thoughts, images or impulses that occur over and over again and feel outside of the person’s control. Individuals with OCD do not want to have these thoughts and find them disturbing. In most cases, people with OCD realize that these thoughts don’t make any sense. Obsessions are typically accompanied by intense and uncomfortable feelings such as fear, disgust, doubt, or a feeling that things have to be done in a way that is “just right.” In the context of OCD, obsessions are time consuming and get in the way of important activities the person values. This last part is extremely important to keep in mind as it, in part, determines whether someone has OCD — a psychological disorder — rather than an obsessive personality trait.
Compulsions are the second part of obsessive compulsive disorder. These are repetitive behaviors or thoughts that a person uses with the intention of neutralizing, counteracting, or making their obsessions go away. People with OCD realize this is only a temporary solution but without a better way to cope they rely on the compulsion as a temporary escape. Compulsions can also include avoiding situations that trigger obsessions. Compulsions are time consuming and get in the way of important activities the person values.
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Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a stressful mental disorder characterized by rituals and irrational fears.
A person with OCD may be unable to leave their house without checking to make sure every door is locked 12 times or be unable to turn on a light switch without flicking it multiple times until it feels right.
There are many different types of OCD; however, liking your things to be orderly and not being messy does not mean you have OCD.
Person 1: "Oh my God I'm soooo OCD. I always keep my room clean."
Person 2: "I actually have OCD and I can't leave my house or even open the door without having to bleach my entire house to avoid death by harmful bacteria."
Person 1 "I'm so OCD, I order my pencils on my desk to make them look pretty."
Person 3: "I've actually been diagnosed with OCD and it took me ten minutes to walk into this classroom because I had to step on all of the lines perfectly and walk around the desks in a specific order just to be able to sit down without having a panic attack."
Person 1: "Ew, that M&M is a different color than the other M&M's. I'm so OCD, I'm going to take it out."
Person 4: "I actually have OCD and I have to organize every item in my house perfectly all of the time because of the irrational fear that my family and friends will die or leave me."
A problem that can be commonly over looked. Causes certain thoughts and fears that someone without OCD might not have. The older a person is who has never been treated will most likely have worse problems, then a 14 teen year old being diagnosed.
The girl refused to eat anything that was made by someone that did not came out of packages, because her ocd caused super sensory toward germs.
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Short for Obsseive Compulsive Disorder
OCD Is a disorder that cause Obessive thoughts and/or compulsive actions resulting from a shortage of a chemical inside the frontal lobe of the brain. There are many ways to take care of OCD. The two best ways are behavior therapy and medication (what I use). Unlike most other mental disorders people with OCD lead mostly normal lives and are aware of their disorder. The disorder can be extremely stressful on it's victims. In fact is a stress so bad that most people without the disorder have probably ever experienced.
Because of OCD George kept checking to see if the toilet was flushed even though he knew it was.
Because of OCD Jeff constantly washed his hands for germs until they became blistered and raw.
Because of OCD Andrew couldn't handle a gun because he was afraid he would harm someone he cared about with it.
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