Content Warning: This article discusses mental health and mentions childhood sexual abuse.
Emily Jordan
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder: Defined by Professionals
“There are hundreds of coinciding experiences with OCD and each individual’s experience is unique”
The Lived Experience
- Contamination OCD: This is likely what you think of if someone describes their experience with OCD. Stereotyped by the debilitating need for cleanliness, sufferers have even been reported to bathe in bleach to rid themselves of the contaminants. This can be linked to germs, but also bad smells or calories.
- Paedophilia OCD: Individuals suffering from P-OCD experience deeply distressing sexual thoughts around children, but it is incredibly important to recognise that this is “a disorder of anxiety and uncertainty, not sexual urges and behaviors”. P-OCD and paedophilia are two completely different things. People with P-OCD have no desire to harm children and are disgusted by the idea that they could ever do anything that could even be falsely perceived as untoward.
- Religious OCD: This label represents those who have obsessions around sin. As a result, this often affects how they perceive their morality. People who have these behaviours often seek reassurance from their religious leaders, pray excessively and seek purification rituals.
There are hundreds of coinciding experiences with OCD and each individual’s experience is unique. David Adam writes about his obsessive thoughts about AIDs, which involved checking symptoms, avoiding certain places and constantly getting blood tests. On the other hand, Bryony Gordon worried about being a ‘serial killing paedophile’ from early childhood and long into adulthood. There are also some people who only have obsessions, no compulsions (a variation sometimes called ‘Pure O’).
If someone does choose to share their experience with you, listen respectfully and learn how to best support them.
https://www.tiktok.com/@bodaliadj/video/7227443638576450842?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc&web_id=7363970585355290145
OCD Stereotypes Are Normalised
“It’s impossible to tell who has OCD”
What Should We Do?
READ NEXT:
Featured image courtesy of Mélissa Jeanty on Unsplash. No changes made to this image. Image licence found here.