David Baxter PhD
Late Founder
anyone else feel this?
I'm totally in favor of whatever works for you. My hesitation about this as a general recommendation is that I think this type of "paradoxical intention" would be more likely to increase anxiety and therefore exacerbate the problem.stevel said:Indeed, I was talking about something else altogether. Sort of a reverse psychology type thing. From what I've read, there seems to be no reasoning with OCD. You could say to yourself "Oh thats just my way of worrying." Sometimes it works, other times not. Myself, I found this to work sometimes too. However, if you say to yourself indeed what I am worried about is true, it is almost a way to quiet the debate. and get on with things. To me the "what if" is worse than anything.
The way I see it is, if the OCD is playing tricks on you mind, you can also turn the tables it too. By "taking control of the agenda" regarding the obsessions, you are able to become the master, as opposed to the slave.