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.

6 min read
Doubting if You Have OCD? A Message From Someone Who’s Been There

Doubt is a universal human experience. It can show up in a number of forms, including calling a "truth" into question, being uncertain, lacking trust in

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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6 min read
OCD in school: A guide for students, parents, and teachers

As the school year approaches, you might feel anxiety increasing, sadness encroaching in, and uncertainty taking over. The end of summer break brings up a

By Savannah Thorne

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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9 min read
Healthy ways to deal with election anxiety and political stress

As the 2024 election season kicks into full gear, there are probably a lot of different emotions you’re feeling: excitement, a sense of community,

By Yusra Shah

Reviewed by Diana Matthiessen, LMSW

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8 min read
Should I Take a Break From Social Media? A Guide For People With OCD

If you’re asking yourself if you should take a break from social media, chances are you’ve already noticed the way it’s affecting your mental health.

By Olivia Rockeman

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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8 min read
The Most Important Lessons I’m Teaching My Kids With OCD

As someone who has struggled with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) since I was a young child, I feel particularly compassionate for every kid with this

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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7 min read
Dating with OCD: 7 ways OCD can affect your dating life

Dating can be challenging for anyone. But when you have obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), it can be particularly daunting.  Whether it’s figuring

By Olivia Rockeman

Reviewed by Michaela McCloud

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7 min read
Can ROCD Affect Friendships?

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a treatable mental health disorder that can affect many parts of your life, including your relationships. When

By Taneia Surles, MPH

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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5 min read
Blink Twice: Zoë Kravitz Takes on Triggering Subjects the Right Way

Yesterday, I wanted to indulge in the comfy nostalgia of the movie theater and decided to watch Zoë Kravitz’s directorial debut, Blink Twice. I hadn’t

By Yusra Shah

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7 min read
5 Common Struggles for Parents of Children With OCD—and What To Do About Them

Sometimes, being the parent or caregiver of a child with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) can feel like navigating uncharted waters. You may find

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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7 min read
Tips for explaining OCD: How to tell friends and family

Sometimes, all you want is for the people closest to you to understand how your brain works, especially when it comes to obsessive compulsive disorder

By Yusra Shah

Reviewed by April Kilduff, MA, LCPC

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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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10 min read
From the Darkness to the Light

I call what I experience,  the darkness, like a superhero who has a dark reflection of himself that everyone is ashamed of. It’s something that manifests into shame. It is everything you don’t want. It is something that compels you that you want to expel.

By BAZ

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6 min read
OCD tried to outwit me

A friend of mine mentioned Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). I didn’t know what OCD was. When I was feeling at rock bottom, I decided to research it online. I typed in the words OCD and Christianity.  For the first time in my life, I felt like something clicked. This felt just like what I experienced. I felt heard and seen at last. I knew I had OCD.

By Mary Hinchliffe

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10 min read
The long road toward recovery

I still retained a stereotypical mindset of what OCD looked like and it couldn’t have been farther from what I struggled with. OCD was about being clean and about contamination, symmetry, and order, things that had never brought much distress to me. At least that is what I thought. I had a very narrow view of what OCD actually was. 

By David Guo

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7 min read
OCD is just hearsay

I realized I had been consumed with perfectionism my entire life. I had always had tendencies toward obsessive thinking but I never thought that it caused me to suffer. If anything, I thought it may have been helpful. 

By Mark Goldstein

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10 min read
Trusting Even When I Am Afraid

I was spending an excess of time on homework, striving to be the best, to be “perfect”. I made excuses to work on math and to go ahead in the textbook. The idea of a black-and-white world drew me in. Math felt straightforward. It was comfortable to have a correct answer because there was no guesswork involved. It was straightforward and I felt at ease. Other subjects did not afford me this comfort. There

By Summer Contreras

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6 min read
The Day the Switch Flipped

I had always had what I will call low-grade anxiety. I was a bit of an overthinker. I had a lot of superstition beliefs. I struggled with what I now know to be “magical thinking” OCD themes. However it was never something that negatively impacted my life, it was just something I incorporated into my life. Little did I know that OCD was there, lurking in the shadows.

By Brady

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10 min read
Cheering for Myself

The stigma surrounding mental health is still an issue that needs to be addressed. I struggled in silence for so long before sharing my story. I was not the typical “face” of someone who had a mental illness. Over time and through my experience I have learned that there is no typical “face” of mental illness. It is me, it is you, it is your neighbor, your brother, your friend, your pastor, your teacher…it can happen to anyone. Mental illness doesn’t discriminate.

By Allyson McAndrews Washo, M.Ed.

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5 min read
Out of the Darkness

OCD is a jerk of a disorder that goes after the things you value most: family, work, kids, safety, and responsibility. That is my list, but the list is different for everyone. I have learned that it attacks the things you value and hold dear to your heart.

By Danica

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8 min read
I Hate OCD

In spite of all the progress I have made throughout treatment, I still love to hate ERP. I still see ERP as scary. Even after all of these years, I do not like it. I look at it as if the rewards are worth it. I refuse to let any mental illness stop me from my future. I hope to continue to be an advocate and a voice in my community and field for anyone who experiences any form of mental health issues. The more I speak up and raise awareness, my hope is that more people will feel safe getting the help they need.

By Audrey

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