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The Four Challenges of Recovery
What's it going to take to get better? There are four challenges that
lie in front of you as you begin to face your obsessions and compulsions:
Challenge 1: Be determined to conquer this problem. This is a
tough problem to overcome. You really need to spend some time making
sure that you're ready and willing to go through short-term
suffering for long-term gain. You need determination because you
have to take the risk to experiment with behaviors that are totally
opposite of what you would tend to do in these situations. You're
going to have short-term doubts, and you have to be willing to
overcome those short-term doubts and have a kind of faith in this
approach.
The second challenge as you begin is to gain the perspective that
your worries are excessive, or irrational. The symptoms that your
worries produce are so powerful and so disturbing that you get
distracted by them and believe they represent true concerns. I am
asking you to begin to practice a new belief, and it is this: when
these obsessions occur, the content of the obsessions is irrelevant.
It is meaningless, it is purposeless. Your obsessions represent an
anxiety problem. The topic of your anxiety is not the issue, even
though your anxiety leads you to believe that it is.
This is not an easy task to accomplish when you are dreading that
you might pass on deadly germs, kill your own child or cause a
terrible accident. Nonetheless, I am asking you to step away from
those thoughts, to get perspective on them, and say, "Wait a
minute, I have an anxiety disorder. What is an anxiety disorder all
about? It's about anxiety, not about this content."
Try not to get into a battle of logic in your head. If you try to
convince yourself of how illogical your worries are, you may
become very frustrated, because you'll have a hard time being
certain about anything. You'll always find a thread of doubt you can
follow. So don't get caught in this trap of logic. Instead, keep
stepping back mentally and saying, "I need to be addressing my anxiety,
not this specific topic".
Your OCD is going to encourage you to do just the opposite. It's
going to push you to think this is all about whether you really
locked the door. Or it will get you to try to reassure yourself that
you did actually make the appropriate decision. Or that you have not
contaminated something. You'll work hard to get the right
reassurance. And it's totally the wrong thing to be doing... You are
falling right into the clutches of OCD. So this is a very important
challenge to meet: address your symptoms of anxiety, not your
fearful thoughts. Don't be fooled!
The third challenge as you begin: consider that ritualizing is
not the only way to reduce your anxiety. Most people with this
problem believe that if they don't ritualize, they will remain
distressed forever. If you share this belief, you must be willing to
challenge it in order to discover that there are other ways to
reduce your distress. It will be extremely difficult to give up your
compulsions unless you are willing to experiment with new behaviors.
You need to be willing to explore options to ritualizing.
Do you remember the old joke of the guy who every morning gets up
at 6:00 and stomps around the outside of his house. His neighbor
finally comes out and says, "What in the world are you doing?
Every morning, I look out my window when I'm fixing my breakfast,
and there you are in your bathrobe stomping around the house."
The guy says, "Oh, well, I'm keeping the elephants away."
"Elephants? There are no elephants in this
neighborhood."
And the first man says, "See how well it works!"
So, he never challenges his belief. That's what people do. They
say: "The ritual was the only way I could possibly have shaken
loose of my terrible distress, and I need to keep using it."
To resist your compulsion is really a courageous thing to do.
Because you are having to resist this powerful belief that something
terrible is going to happen if you do.
The fourth and last challenge is: decide to accept your
obsessions instead of resist them. This is the toughest of all four,
and it is the most important. This one is the basis of all the
self-help interventions we'll talk about. Because the more you
resist your obsessions, the stronger they become. It's as though
your solution to the problem actually increases the problem. You
resist the symptom, and it persists.
So you need a new inner voice that says, "It's OK that I'm
obsessing right now." This is not saying, "it's OK in the
next 20 minutes to do it"; it's not saying, "I'm going to
continue to do it." But I am asking you to say, "It's OK
that I just had that thought." I know that sounds like a crazy
thing to say. You are trying desperately to rid yourself of these
terrible thoughts, and I instructing you to accept them! Accepting
the obsession generally looks like a bad idea to people.
But what's the other choice? The other choice is to say,
"It's terrible that I had that thought." And what's
the reaction that you're going to have physiologically when you make
that statement? That statement's going to produce more anxiety.
I agree, of course, that the end result is to get rid of that
obsession. That's everyone's objective. But the technique that you
use and the end result are different. That's why it's called paradox,
which means opposite of logic. And that's why you have to have
faith. First, you're going to accept this obsession, and then you're
going to manipulate it. Why are you going to do it in that order?
Because that's how it works best. So there's a big, big leap of
faith here when you accept your obsession. But if you will really
dedicate yourself to experimenting with this approach for several
weeks, I think you will discover its benefits.
Let's review these four challenges again, first with how people
generally think about this problem, and then with how I am
encouraging you to think as you begin your self-help program.
The first challenge: People say, "I'll always be controlled
by this problem." You want to shift it over to, "I'm now
determined to conquer this problem."
The second position is: "I believe my obsessional concerns
are accurate." I want to shift that one over to: "My
obsessions are exaggerated and unrealistic." The third one:
"Rituals are the only way to reduce my distress." Shift
that to, "there are other options to reduce my distress."
The fourth one: "I must stop these obsessions" is the
problem stance. Shift this to, "I accept these
obsessions."
How would you apply this fourth challenge? When you begin
obsessing and worrying, you typically react emotionally to those
thoughts and images, by becoming anxious and afraid. That compels
you to ritualize. The first place to start practicing is anytime you
begin to obsess. Take that opportunity to focus on the idea of
permitting the obsession to exist in that moment. Work on not being
afraid of the obsession and not being mad at yourself that you just
had the thought. Wouldn't that be great, to not get distressed at
those momentary worries, to not think that they mean anything.
Let me tell you a story. When my children were infants, I would
carry them in my arms as I walked around the deck of our home. Every
once in a while, I'd stand at the railing, looking at the beautiful
scenery out in the woods, and then I'd have this flash: I'd see
myself accidentally dropping my child two stories down from the
deck, and there she'd lie on the ground, dead. And then I'd see
myself jump over the edge to kill myself out of my shame that I'd
just killed my child. But I'd break my neck instead, and end up
being humiliated and shamed for what I just did to my son or
daughter.
And then I'd step away from the edge of the deck.
It was the same with my kids as toddlers. I'd be reading in the
living room while one of my kids was playing in another room. Then
I'd notice that all was quiet. On a number of occasions I would then
think, "Oh, my God, he's swallowed a penny and he can't
breathe, and he's passed out..." And I'd get up and quickly
move to the other room to check on my child. There he'd be, quietly
and safely drawing on the wall with crayons. Now, I'm sure I've have
had those kinds of fantasies over 40 times. Each one took about two
or three seconds, with slight variations.
What is the difference between what I experienced and what
someone with OCD experiences? There are many similarities. The
difference is not about the thoughts that we have but in how we interpret
those thoughts and images. I would say, "I know what that's
about, and that's no big deal." I'd say, "That's because
I'm a new parent. It's my mind's way of reminding me that I need to
protect these fragile children. I know I'm not really about to
accidentally drop my kid."
People with OCD might say, "Oh, my God, I had the thought of
killing my daughter? Why did I think that? I'm not sure I can trust
myself. I might accidentally do that." They decide to doubt
their ability to stay in control.
So this is where you begin in your self-help program. Confront
your interpretation that the content of your obsessive
thought means something terrible about you. I want you to downgrade
each obsession to a kind of momentary glitch in your thinking. The
thought doesn't mean anything. You had a fearful thought, and you
got scared by it. That's all. When I saw in my mind the image of my
child lying on the floor not breathing, I became momentarily scared,
and my heart raced. That's an expected reaction. It's like sticking
your finger in the wall socket and getting shocked. That's all it
is. And that perspective is what you should work toward.
When you notice your obsessions, choose to have them. As soon as
you choose to have your obsessions, they're no longer involuntary.
Remember that the definition of an obsession includes that it is
involuntary. So as you begin to accept your obsession, as soon as
you choose to have it then that involuntary thought is now
voluntary. And you've begun to change the nature of the problem.
This is the direction I am going to take in this self-help
program. I am not asking you to stop obsessing right now, or to stop
ritualizing. I am asking you to change some smaller components of
the pattern. You're going to disrupt the pattern by various means.
You're going to modify your obsession in little ways. You're going
to add things to your ritual. In this way you can gradually learn
about your ability to control your symptoms
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