Call the LionHeart Helpline

UK: 0800 009 2960 or +44 (0)121 289 3300

Request a callback

Close

Understanding OCD – and how therapy can help

shutterstock_2025295850
16-10-2024

How many times have you heard jokes or flippant remarks about OCD, or obsessive compulsive disorder? Despite there being much progress in how we describe and talk about common mental health conditions, this is one that’s still surrounded by misunderstanding and misconception.

In fact, living with OCD is much more complex than “quirky” habits like hand washing or arranging things in a certain order. It can be a really debilitating and sometimes crippling thing to live with, leaving people feeling anxious and isolated and - on the worst days - prevent them from leading anything like a normal life.

It can be hard to diagnose OCD because symptoms can often go hand-in-hand with other mental health and anxiety disorders. But it is thought as many as 2% of the population are affected by OCD, which can come in many guises.

Charities that specialise in the disorder and supporting people with it have worked hard to raise awareness of it, but it remains poorly understood.

Throughout my counselling career I have worked with many clients who live with OCD to varying degrees. Therapy can help massively although it is important to stress it’s not a magic cure - more that it can give clients the tools to bring their symptoms under control, rather than the symptoms controlling them.

OCD can take many forms but the most common type consists of thoughts, images or impulses that cause high anxiety or distress. It can be gradual or acute, and can come about as a response to difficult life events.

The impact on relationships, work and family life can be absolutely immense and it is not unusual that the person will be suffering with an anxiety disorder or depression alongside the OCD. It's estimated that 1 in 4 people with OCD are also compulsive hoarders.

The common repetitive thoughts can be very unpleasant to live with. They can lead to unnecessary actions that the person is simply unable to resist - repetitive checking of doors or windows, checking taps or switches, or repeatedly washing hands.

CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) can be very effective in treating OCD. You will learn different ways of thinking, reacting and behaving in response to the obsessions and compulsions. Some counsellors can also use something called ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention), which involves gradual exposure to the things that the person fears or the obsessions, and helping them stay with the anxiety that this provokes, while using tools and techniques to help manage that anxiety.

pexels-eye4dtail-792032

Using a combination of these techniques and counselling, I have worked with people that have gone from being terribly affected by OCD to being much more able to manage their compulsions.

I worked with one client who struggled to leave the house without checking all the doors and windows multiple times. His actions, which he simply couldn't help or control, would leave him exhausted and at times make him late for work.

If he was interrupted while carrying out these compulsive checks, he would have to start from the beginning all over again. This was having an extreme negative impact on his family members as well as himself, and he was left feeling quite depressed.

We worked together on gradually reducing the number of checks he made while using some relaxation and breathing techniques to help him manage the anxiety that this would provoke.

Eventually he was able to leave his home with minimal checking, and the confirmation that no one has come to harm as a result (some sufferers believe that something terrible will happen to them or their loved ones if they don’t carry out their rituals). This in turn had a positive impact on all the other areas of his life, and I'm pleased to say his mood gradually improved.

If you or a family member are affected by OCD, the LionHeart counselling team may be able to help. Call us free on 0800 009 2960 or find out more about the service here.

Bernadette Antoniou is a professional BACP registered and BABCP accredited counsellor and CBT therapist for LionHeart. She has worked for the charity for 12 years.

from

wgl


Our ambassador Wayne Grainger-Lloyd shares what it’s like to live with OCD.




Other useful links: 

Latest Posts

2024
December
3rd - Things I learnt about grief this year
November
4th - An 'ask' from the LionHeart chair
October
16th - Understanding OCD – and how therapy can help
10th - The conversations that can change lives
September
16th - Help! I'm a new graduate surveyor!
10th - Starting the conversation around suicide
August
23rd - Do you know your numbers?
July
31st - My dad, the alcoholic
May
24th - Introducing LionHeart's new CEO
9th - Moving more for your mental health
March
21st - Being a surveyor with ADHD
13th - Life after brain injury
February
5th - How youth counselling helped us
2023
November
22nd - Living with an invisible illness
9th - What makes a good trustee?
1st - Things you must do as a final year surveying student!
October
4th - Dyslexia in surveying
September
28th - Reflecting on 12 years at LionHeart
13th - New beginnings and how to embrace them
5th - Losing a sibling to suicide
July
5th - Celebrating one year alcohol-free
April
25th - Caring for someone with MS
20th - How to set boundaries at work
February
17th - 'Calling LionHeart was like being thrown a life jacket'
6th - Spotlight on winter fundraising
3rd - Facing cancer
2022
November
14th - Identifying and dealing with workplace bullying
October
13th - Why make a will?
12th - Living with OCD
3rd - Autism and my road of discovery
September
22nd - Frequently asked questions about LionHeart
August
25th - 25 years of LionHeart
11th - 'Stress caused me permanent disability'
July
18th - Diversifying our board, and why
May
18th - Coaching to unlock a new future
12th - How to help your lonely teen
9th - Asking for help - as the helper
April
28th - Why talking about dying is so important
7th - 9 simple ways to cut stress
March
23rd - Living & succeeding with ADHD
16th - 'I came to see how much of my life was run on adrenaline'
February
10th - "My daughter didn't want to be here any more"
4th - My life-changing cancer diagnosis
January
13th - Reassessing how you drink
4th - Looking to the future
2021
November
19th - How alcohol almost cost me everything
18th - Children's grief and how to help
16th - Alcohol, anxiety and how secrets keep you sick
4th - "I had no idea stress could cause a real physical pain"
October
22nd - 5 ways to get your teen talking
18th - The Positives of Menopause
13th - Baby loss and depression
12th - The pandemic's impact on children's mental health (and what we can do about it)
8th - Don't judge a book - a story of depression and change
5th - LionHeart Back to Work support
September
29th - Post APC submission
16th - How families feel youth mental health
June
24th - 6 top tips if you've been referred
May
20th - Coaching for change
12th - I'd hit absolute bottom - but it was the catalyst to seek help
April
22nd - Spring into action by fundraising for LionHeart
March
4th - Reflecting on university mental health
February
15th - My experiences of counselling
January
20th - Worry Time - and how it helps
18th - My furlough & redundancy journey
13th - Volunteering and LionHeart
2020
November
30th - A road to change
2nd - Trusteeship through lockdown and uncertainty
October
12th - The importance of legacies
10th - Overwhelm - and overcoming it
8th - Lockdown and my mental health
September
28th - Creativity at Work
July
20th - Video
June
24th - 'If I can do it, so can you'
22nd - How to ace your APC interview online
8th - Help! I've been referred... what now?
3rd - Your coronavirus concerns, and how we're helping
May
12th - How coronavirus might be affecting your mental health
12th - Managing health anxiety through Covid-19 - and how we helped Mike
March
31st - Rising to the coronavirus challenge
24th - Keep connecting - in a different way
13th - Demonstrating our impact
February
4th - "Cancer wasn't meant to happen to us"
4th - The Big C and grabbing life
January
30th - My journey as a charity trustee
7th - Top 10 tips for CVs and interviews
2019
December
9th - Grief and loss at Christmas
November
7th - Charity trusteeship
6th - How counselling can help manage stress
October
9th - Living with anxiety and depression
July
10th - How coaching can help
May
16th - Changing attitudes to mental health
15th - The vicious circle of body image & mental health
14th - Social Anxiety & how we can help
April
11th - Life with Parkinson's
March
29th - What is Bipolar?
29th - The one about the Bipolar surveyor...
12th - Memory tips from the training front line
January
22nd - Losing a parent
2018
December
7th - LionHeart's support was a game-changer when I failed APC
August
16th - When the reality of motherhood doesn't quite go to plan
July
10th - The story behind surveying's Sisterhood Summit
2nd - The rollercoaster of being a first-time dad
June
22nd - My father's suicide and what I've learnt
14th - Tips for your RICS APC final assessment interview
7th - Trust in the charity sector
May
21st - Is it really okay to not be okay?
April
17th - Building resilience through your APC
January
8th - 7 ways to get more active this year
2017
December
4th - Coping with loss and grief at Christmas
October
5th - "I was told I might not be cut out to be a surveyor"
September
26th - Resilience, and why we need it
August
21st - APC Revision Top Ten Tips
July
12th - LionHeart on new fundraising code of practice
June
19th - Living with 'invisible' illness
14th - How LionHeart helped us live life
13th - Men's Health Week 2017
May
22nd - Living with panic attacks
18th - Why we must care about work life balance
11th - The chicken-and-egg of mental health and shame
February
2nd - What I learnt from Dry January
January
31st - "My 19-year journey to MRICS is what made me"
5th - Ways to be kind to yourself in 2017
2016
September
7th - Suicide prevention
August
1st - Coping with APC stress
July
13th - "I constantly watch my husband for suicidal signs"
May
26th - Dealing with referral at APC Final Assessment
19th - How mindfulness can help your relationships
18th - "I live, and thrive, with depression"
17th - Men and mental health
16th - Mental health and your relationship
April
26th - Starting out in surveying
March
11th - A happy retirement
February
1st - My Dry(ish) January
January
21st - Spring clean your finances
6th - When to consider couples counselling
2015
December
4th - Having a (financially) healthier Christmas
November
18th - How to help a loved one with an addiction
June
15th - Reflections on the Lionheart Surveyors' Football League season
12th - Carers
10th - How LionHeart can support carers
9th - Desktop Relaxation techniques
May
29th - Techniques to help combat anxiety
20th - Helping a family member with depression
18th - Achievements that make a difference
16th - Five things that may indicate your colleague needs help
11th - Helping during a panic attack