I canât pinpoint the time it happened. Iâm not sure if it was a gradual process or abrupt, but itâs likely it was building before I fully registered what was happening.
My grandpa passed away, alone, in a veteran nursing home. He was the light of my life, the anchor of my family.
I was laid off from my work and found myself with abundant time to process the increasingly volatile news cycle. Stripped of the intellectual stimulation and the routine, my obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) spiraling, I slipped into a state I hadnât seen in some time. The most repugnant of my intrusive thoughts were resurfacing. Themes I had for years âconqueredâ (or so I thought) were back. The very thoughts I had been able to easily dismiss as nonsense, after many years of therapy and exploration into self-help.
To add insult to injury, the world I knew prior seems distant and unlikely to return. Topics once easily characterized into the overt Pure O OCD themes of harm and scrupulosity are being debated in main stream discourse. My compass is having trouble finding due north. My mind is in duress and every piece of news and social content shared only exacerbates the frenzy. Everything is politicized. Everything is polarized. My instinct is to retreat, but to unplug would be ignorant and imprudent as this moment in time demands we pay attention, we participate and we engage. Or is that demand to participate one that my guilt and shame spiral is legitimizing? Would it actually be OK to protect my inner peace, so I can better engage in society when the dust in my inner tornado settles?
The intrusive thoughts and what-ifs abound. Could I harm someone? Is harm ever justified? Where do I stand on religion? What role does God play in my life? Does my short temper and low tolerance for interaction connote that I donât love the people who are trying desperately to show up for me? Are my relationships irreparable? Am I worthless without a job? Should I have done more in my life by this time? Maybe I shouldnât be a mother. Perhaps Iâm not equipped. What is good? What is evil? There are too many others Iâm too ashamed to relay.
These have typically been episodes I could traverse with ease. But today Iâm presented with the perfect storm of global unrest, the imminent threat of COVID-19, the real grief of losing a loved one who was integral to my life and my sense of worth and esteem, the purchase of a new home concurrent with the loss of nearly all my income, and the loss of intellectual stimuli that at the very least distracted me from my fears and channeled my anxiety into something productive.
So what is it. Is it OCD? Is it me? Do I have to be certain, and if so how do I get to the certainty? Given all the books Iâve read and experiences Iâve lived, I know this mere reasoning around meta thoughts, thinking about my thoughts, is a clear indicator of an OCD episode. The urgency to be sure enough. The what-if dilemma of not knowing. The fear and sticky mind. I know, or at least Iâm sure enough, that OCD intrusive thoughts always behave the same way, content aside. They feel awful and induce shame, guilt, disgust and even sorrow. And they are stuck, meaning there is no productive trajectory from thought to action, how legitimate thoughts behave.
Iâve navigated depressive episodes that Iâve never experienced in the last four months. And Iâve been angrier than I have ever been. I know the grief journey includes these stops. Iâve tried to make peace with this peculiar moment in my life. And honor it as a critically important time for me to grow, stripped of so many of the things I thought I needed to survive: financial security, an even and calm demeanor, a career, a nation that is harmonious and a hero like my grandpa.
Iâm sure enough I am not a monster, no matter how egregious my intrusive thoughts may be. And while Iâm not certain of a lot, Iâm certain that Iâm stronger than my fear.
source https://www.programage.com/news/How_2020_Brought_Back_the_Worst_of_My_Intrusive_Thoughts_and_OCD_1597755622439109.html

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