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
A Guide to Handling OCD During the Holidays

The holiday season is often painted as a time of joy, togetherness, and celebration—and for many people, it is. Yet for many others, particularly those

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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10 min read
How to stop being a people pleaser

Routinely appeasing other people is a tough habit to break, but it’s possible to learn to stop with the right tools and support.  Whether it’s saying

By Fjolla Arifi

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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6 min read
How to Stay One Step Ahead of OCD During the Holiday Season

It’s probably fair to say that many of us can relate to the holidays being both a time of joy—and stress.  We pin so much on this multi-week period

By NOCD Staff

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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8 min read
What are cognitive distortions in OCD?: Common examples and treatment

Our thoughts shape how we experience the world, but sometimes they can trick us into seeing things in a way that feels distorted or overwhelming. This

By Yusra Shah

Reviewed by Michaela McCloud

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7 min read
How we hold NOCD Therapists to a world-class standard through rigorous evaluation

Five years ago, it was extremely difficult for people managing obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) to find specialized treatment—particularly exposure and

By Taneia Surles, MPH

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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7 min read
Compulsive staring and staring OCD: Understand what’s happening—and how to cope

Do you feel constantly aware of where you’re looking? Are you worried you look at people too often, or at inappropriate times? Does staring make you feel

By Patrick McGrath, PhD

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7 min read
OCD and Procrastination

Procrastination can make you feel like you're caught in a never-ending cycle of stress, overwhelm, guilt, and frustration. You might find yourself feeling

By Fjolla Arifi

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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8 min read
Catastrophic thinking in OCD: Why it happens and how to stop

Imagine you’re leaving for work when a thought strikes: “Did I turn off the stove?” This small worry spirals into fears of the stove catching fire,

By Yusra Shah

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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7 min read
Reading OCD: How OCD impacts reading habits

For many people, there’s nothing more relaxing than curling up with a good book. But for those of us with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), the

By Jill Webb

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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6 min read
The Truth About Handling Discomfort (It’s Not What OCD Wants You To Think)

It’s safe to say that most people prefer to avoid feeling uncomfortable—but for those of us with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), discomfort can throw

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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9 min read
Consumed by OCD until I found hope with ERP

I think that it is so important to have a community around you. Having people who are readily available to talk to you and not provide reassurance, to let me know that I am not alone has been a tremendous help. I feel like that is what has helped me from going off the deep end. The community of people brings me hope. I am learning that the more you apply yourself to ERP, the more it works.

By Allison F.

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6 min read
Healthy control of my life and happiness

I was a very creative young black girl inspired by everything I consumed from cartoons, music, and television. As I grew older I was belittled for certain things that I loved due to generational trauma and societal norms. One thing I found truly essential and true to my core being was how much I valued my attraction to the opposite sex.

By Anonymous

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9 min read
Learning to thrive: Getting off and on the struggle bus with OCD, MDD, PTS

I grew up in a culture where you were supposed to “save face” and where you didn’t go outside of the family to ask for help. I also didn’t know how to ask for help within my own family. Living with perfectionism, I could not admit when I made a mistake or when I struggled. I compared myself to my peers and even more crucially, to my siblings. My thoughts were about my failures. Other times, I just avoided my thoughts in maladaptive ways.

By Lisa de Guzman, LCSW, PPSC

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10 min read
Harm OCD, sexual orientation OCD, model, influencer, and OCD advocate

My name is Shaun Flores. I have OCD. OCD changed my life. It was the worst thing to ever happen to me, but I continue to be the worst thing to happen to OCD. Looking back at life, I took my mental health for granted. I was chasing every single opportunity provided to me. I was raised on the bedrock of ideas that I must succeed regardless of the cost. 

By Shaun Flores

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9 min read
An imperfect journey

I have learned how important it is to let thoughts be there. Let them be there and I don’t need to respond, I don’t need to do anything with them. For me, medication paired with ERP has been beneficial. ERP has helped me learn so much. One of the most helpful things, for me, has been finding balance. At first, everything was black and white, all or nothing. I needed to learn not how to not go from one extreme to another, to live in the in-between. I had to learn that nothing is certain.

By Victoria Aukland

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22 min read
Trapped: Like a bird in a cage

OCD tries to make you think that you don’t get to choose what you want to do with your life, that instead, your life will just “happen” to you unless you fight for certainty and control. Recovering from OCD allows you to recognize that YOU get to choose to live life according to your values. YOU get to choose to be true to yourself, instead of true to your OCD fears. I get to choose how to live my life and stay true to the things that are important to me personally, like my marriage, family, and faith. OCD can’t take those things away from me.

By Erica Richardson

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7 min read
Misunderstood

I went to therapy to get help. Within the first few minutes of my session, my therapist knew I had severe Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). This was the very first time I had ever been diagnosed. After so many years of suffering, it finally had been given a name. Prior to my diagnosis of OCD, I had been misdiagnosed with Panic Disorder, lactose intolerance, hormone issues,  and Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD). I had no idea how to convey my symptoms to the numerous doctors I had seen, school personnel, or even my family. I couldn’t put into words what I was experiencing.

By Sommer G.

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7 min read
Hope is the true voice…OCD lies

OCD will attack what you value and fear the most. Don’t be ashamed or afraid to ask for help. Anyone who judges you is not worth your time. Surround yourself with people who make you happy and want the best for you. This matters so much. You need to know that you are not alone in your fight.

By Melissa

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11 min read
Finding my voice through trauma and OCD

I felt completely trapped and lost in my own mind. I barely slept that night. I couldn’t stop ruminating over the idea that, not only wasn’t my life orderly and perfect anymore, but even my own thoughts weren’t perfect. I became convinced that my thoughts were making me sick and was petrified by the fact that I could not control them.

By Amy LeClair

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9 min read
Knowledge is Power: Thank You NOCD

I had just wrapped up the completion of my Ph.D. in history, a subject that I loved. I crammed what should have been 7 years of work into 4. It was a time of high stress in my life. I wasn’t eating or sleeping well. I started to have dark thoughts. I thought about hurting myself and others. I knew I didn’t actually “want” to do these things and yet I was tormented by the thoughts. 

By Dr. Benjamin Hruska

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