Obsessive compulsive disorder - OCD treatment and therapy from NOCD

Living with OCD

We're creating resources to help people learn about OCD in the many ways it impacts their own lives—not just what it looks like on paper. You can search our resources to determine when your intrusive thoughts may be related to OCD.

7 min read
What are OCD rituals?

Rituals are repetitive actions done in a specific manner or order, like checking and re-checking that you’ve locked your doors, or engaging in a specific

By Jill Webb

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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8 min read
OCD and Sleep: Strategies for managing nighttime symptoms

If you’re living with OCD and have trouble sleeping, you’re not alone—research shows that over 42% of people with OCD experience insomnia and sleep

By Yusra Shah

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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8 min read
Why you can trust us with your information at NOCD

NOCD is dedicated to building a product and treatment experience that you can completely trust. We are committed to protecting all your information, so

By Fi Lowenstein

Reviewed by Diana Matthiessen, LMSW

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5 min read
OCD Rumination: How to recognize and treat it 

Rumination is a common symptom of OCD. It involves persistently mentally engaging with intrusive thoughts, worries, or doubts in an effort to analyze

By Fjolla Arifi

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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8 min read
OCD Mental Compulsions: When OCD is hidden 

Mental compulsions are repetitive, intrusive thoughts or mental actions that people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) perform in an attempt to

By Fjolla Arifi

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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3 min read
Coping and finding community: Stress-management advice for LGBTQIA+ folks with OCD

NOCD Therapists are committed to fostering resilience for our LGBTQIA+ members, through tools like radical acceptance and learning to resist compulsive

By Tabitha Vidaurri

Reviewed by Diana Matthiessen, LMSW

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6 min read
3 Steps for Letting Go of Shame When You Have OCD

Shame is a powerful emotion. It’s difficult for anyone to experience, but OCD can take shame even further, making it feel all-encompassing. OCD-related

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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5 min read
4 OCD symptoms that often go undetected

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has a funny way of sneaking into our lives unnoticed, especially when symptoms mimic everyday activities like constant

By Jill Webb

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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2 min read
8 relatable videos about OCD (that are actually accurate)

We’ve rounded up 8 refreshing, authentic, and informative videos about OCD that we think you’ll love. Whether you’re looking for content that makes you

By Yusra Shah

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8 min read
Coping with the aftermath of the wildfires: Advice from an LA-based OCD specialist 

Kimberley Quinlan, LMFT, is an Los Angeles-based OCD specialist helping clients navigate the tragedy caused by the recent fires. She shares thoughts on

By Fi Lowenstein

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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10 min read
How having OCD helped me help others

These incidents continued to happen throughout my fifth-grade school year. I felt compelled to do many things, many seeming completely random, but they stuck and made day-to-day tasks almost impossible. “Write directly on the line, if you write over it you will fail the test” resulted in papers with holes in them from erasing so frequently. “Wash your hands every time you see a sink, or you will get yourself and others sick” meant I was developing eczema on my hands. “When you are in the car you have to say ‘That’s a cool car,’ or that car will hit you,” this meant I stopped leaving the house. “Count your steps. Make sure that you get somewhere in 4 steps or a multiple of 4 steps, or you will die” made me cry walking room to room in our house. I was only eleven years old.

By Emily

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10 min read
The story behind the struggle

The Struggling Warrior is a 26-year-old Electrical and Electronics engineer with OCD. Throughout his experience with this detrimental disease, he found himself and his passion, to raise awareness of OCD and help people who suffer from it on a daily basis. He believes that through knowledge, education, and understanding of the sheer nature of the disease, people will jumpstart their recovery process and reclaim what OCD took away from them.

By The Struggling Warrior

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7 min read
I’m a mom living with POCD

The biggest thing I’ve learned with therapy is that you cannot unlearn all that you have already learned. OCD will always come up with one more “What if?”, “You HAVE to”, “I demand you do this or XYZ will happen”. You will have the tools in your toolbox to know how to deal with it. You will know how to be one step ahead of it. If it trips you up, it's not a failure. A lapse is not a relapse and recovery isn’t linear. You are not a terrible person and even thinking about wanting to get better shows how strong and courageous you really are. OCD will always want to keep you stuck. ERP is how you become unstuck.

By Michelle

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10 min read
Looking fear in the face and not running

I feel like people living with this disorder are the most resilient, strong, and compassionate of people. That makes me happy and hopeful. The biggest lesson I have learned so far from this journey, and this is something I have to give all the credit to my therapist Tara for, is that I can truly deal with all these difficult emotions. I don't have to run away, I never needed to run away.

By Sebastian Valdiviezo

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7 min read
Idiosyncrasies: Navigating an Obsessive-Compulsive Mind

My mind, like many others with OCD, works like a sticky fly trap: it catches every little thing that floats by, even when (especially when) it’s not beneficial to my mental well-being. This means that every insult from a classmate growing up, every melancholy tale I accidentally read, and every scary movie I sneak-watched as a preteen has clung to the walls of my brain until this very day. But what makes the disorder so unbearable at times are cycles of severe intrusive thoughts that bring up those memories, presenting themselves as words, phrases, or images that play in my head.

By Morgan Eastwood

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8 min read
OCD is just radio static in the background

I recently became a NOCD community Alumni Member. I volunteer and help others who are struggling with OCD to regain control of their lives. I am spreading education and advocacy about this disorder. I am realizing that so many others struggle with similar problems. I am not alone. I am surprised by how quickly I was able to recover. I attribute this to allowing myself to truly give ERP a chance and throwing myself into treatment wholeheartedly. I want others to know that OCD can play the worst head games with you. I try and help friends and family understand what OCD is really like and how much of an impact it has had on my life. OCD is chronic and I want to spread awareness. Even though it is often chronic that doesn’t mean that you will always suffer or be debilitated by it. There is hope. There is help.

By Christian M.

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6 min read
Distressing the Distress

Slowly, more and more parts of my life became affected to the point where I was weary about what I was doing and avoiding those parts of my life to the best of my abilities to avoid this distressing feeling in my chest. As my life became more and more engulfed in this, I knew I needed help. This led to a diagnosis of OCD and eventually ERP.

By David Kedeme

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6 min read
OCD felt like a death sentence

At first, OCD started as a way to provide relief, a means to control things that were out of my control. But then it morphed into something that took over my life and does the opposite of soothing me. I was stuck on my compulsions for 15 minutes, then 30, then an hour. It just kept growing and growing into something bigger and far worse.

By Kelsey

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6 min read
My journey with ERP and Santa Claus

I spent my childhood thinking that everything needed to be perfect. This manifested in a variety of areas in my life, but the largest, most debilitating area by far was education; straight A’s were my ticket to perfection.The importance of A’s had been drilled into me from a young age – not from my parents or teachers, but from my OCD. I worked tirelessly to be a stand-out student. Anything lower than 93% would send me into a full panic and meltdown.

By Jessie B.

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8 min read
Putting OCD in the backseat

For the longest time, I thought that OCD was this ‘big and bad’ thing that couldn’t be stopped. But now I know how to break the cycles and fight back. I have a lot of support and I am thankful for that. ERP no longer seems as daunting to me. It became easier with time, practice, and commitment.

By Christofer

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