Science of How OCD Works (Dealing with Brain Lock)

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  • čas přidán 21. 02. 2017
  • Explanation of how an OCD afflicted brain causes irrational and unhealthy behaviors & A method for treating it.
    ▲Patreon: / wilearned
    ▲Twitter: / jeverettlearned
    ▲IG: / jeverett.whativelearned
    The content in this video primarily comes from Dr. Jeffrey Schwartz's book "Brain Lock." It was very refreshing to come across a clear explanation of how a mental illness works in terms of physiology rather than psychology. Then I thought it quite remarkable that, as illustrated in the book, by simply changing their mindset and behavior, people can physically change their brain for the better. (As is evidenced by brain scans taken after Dr. Schwartz's treatment)
    OCD is a complex disease and this video doesn't intend to be an exhaustive explanation of it. If you do have OCD it would definitely be worth your time to check out the Brain Lock book: ( amzn.to/2m8g7z3 )
    For those without OCD, I recommend checking out Dr. Schwartz's book "You are not Your Brain" which presents a unique approach for stopping bad habits based on understanding how the brain works ( amzn.to/2lvXDpa )
    Also mentioned in the video is Norman Doidge's "The Brain that Changes Itself" which is all about the brain's impressive ability to drastically modify itself via neuroplasticity. While it doesn't introduce a specific method or techniques, it's an interesting read with a lot of useful information: ( amzn.to/2m8BPmL )

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @abhisheksarkar7408
    @abhisheksarkar7408 Před 5 lety +2536

    Suffering from OCD for 12 years.
    It's like you have two brains, a rational brain and an irrational brain and they're fighting constantly.

  • @zp1167
    @zp1167 Před 6 lety +1346

    Sometimes compulsions are not visible physically, instead it is internally in the mind...

    • @elpablo3728
      @elpablo3728 Před 6 lety +107

      That's how my OCD works

    • @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns
      @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns Před 6 lety +147

      Z P ... that's called Pure O. It's hell... hell in your mind.

    • @ciaran6309
      @ciaran6309 Před 5 lety +19

      i have it this way . driving me nuts

    • @cradlecap123
      @cradlecap123 Před 4 lety +18

      When you have intense pain regarding a decision involving someone who you perceive to be manipulatory or a bully then the war in your head starts. High status people damage you - as the war is before and after whatever decision you make as they pick up on your vulnerability. 50/50 is every decision.

    • @JooOonathaaan
      @JooOonathaaan Před 4 lety +2

      @@elpablo3728 it's Pure- O

  • @daiujin
    @daiujin Před 5 lety +923

    Stay strong fellow OCD havers.
    We're in this together.

    • @speed90005
      @speed90005 Před 5 lety +4

      ty man

    • @tennyelbenny3694
      @tennyelbenny3694 Před 4 lety +13

      Casual two-sentence youtube comment about OCD: shown as (edited). Telltale sign right there. I feel your pain, friend, even in writing and re-writing this reply.

    • @noahduring7962
      @noahduring7962 Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks

    • @sash0047
      @sash0047 Před 4 lety +9

      Just clicked the like button 50 times to make sure i did it.

    • @non-binaryeugene733
      @non-binaryeugene733 Před 4 lety

      Tenny Elbenny I want him to delete it and rewrite it without the “edit” being there because it looks imperfect to me. His ocd is triggering my ocd.

  • @sleep2483
    @sleep2483 Před 6 lety +1373

    All these videos "explaining" OCD never address the obsession part. Intrusive, obsessive thoughts is what causes the compulsions.

    • @cryptolambo4502
      @cryptolambo4502 Před 5 lety +144

      @nickys34 Are you actually for real?

    • @IanBpa
      @IanBpa Před 5 lety +72

      @nickys34 As someone with OCD I can attest that changing diets can help relieve stress, but I don't think that it is purely due to the lack of carbs. Ketosis for instance does help me feeling more energized and generally less stressed, but I think a big part of that is that I have to practice a degree of self discipline to do it, providing me with a sense of control over my life.

    • @rosegrace9151
      @rosegrace9151 Před 4 lety +8

      Exactly and also CBT usually cure the behaviours better than the thoughts.

    • @Vincisomething
      @Vincisomething Před 4 lety +22

      @nickys34 Do you want to share to the class what you think OCD is? Because whatever you think it is... isn't it.

    • @PasscodeAdvance
      @PasscodeAdvance Před 4 lety +1

      @nickys34 what do you mean?

  • @csc1641
    @csc1641 Před 6 lety +1490

    My Note to Mothers Out There: My mother caused my OCD as she was verbally and mentally abusive. The anxiety in our house was hell and most of us siblings suffer from terrible anxiety/ocd/depression. Please don't have children if you are stressed out or incapable of love. Your children will suffer their whole lives from YOU and your poor decisions.

    • @laurenpaterson3475
      @laurenpaterson3475 Před 5 lety +43

      Cheryl Smith yes so true what u have kids should be free from abuse

    • @acelguevarra4331
      @acelguevarra4331 Před 5 lety +18

      yeah. same :---(

    • @Ed-tc2pg
      @Ed-tc2pg Před 5 lety +90

      This message will fall on deaf ears. Abusive people will not take responsibility for their actions or care. You have to take steps to put your past behind you. People will justify anything to be able to believe they are a hero or right.

    • @peggysullivan5396
      @peggysullivan5396 Před 5 lety +4

      Cheryl Smith is too ! Same in our family

    • @peggysullivan5396
      @peggysullivan5396 Před 5 lety +47

      nickys34 wtf?!

  • @CyPsyGuy
    @CyPsyGuy Před 4 lety +304

    I have OCD, social anxiety, depression. All of these are linked. Existence becomes nightmarish.

    • @visualjottings5626
      @visualjottings5626 Před 4 lety +17

      That's absolutely correctly brother.i do have all of these.

    • @e-towncuber5522
      @e-towncuber5522 Před 4 lety +22

      It feels as if my anxiety, depression, and OCD all back each other up reinforcing themselves.

    • @whereismyweave9738
      @whereismyweave9738 Před 4 lety +7

      same. i wish i can afford therapy or medications at least but it seems like only the rich can afford them in my country.

    • @monicak6296
      @monicak6296 Před 4 lety +10

      I think I kinda understand you...I really want to die, because there are times that I feel so dead inside of me. But if I did this, it would cause a lot of pain and I also want to fight, but sometimes it's just so hard to motivate yourself

    • @monicak6296
      @monicak6296 Před 4 lety +5

      Stay strong, we're in this together

  • @VallAWE
    @VallAWE Před 4 lety +122

    I got OCD symptoms after a very stressful period in my life. Though they were light compared to your what many other OCD sufferers go through it was absolutely hellish. I spent about half a year thinking the same thoughts every single day. Luckily, I'm a lot better now. My heart goes out to all OCD sufferers.

    • @gabrielacolumna1830
      @gabrielacolumna1830 Před 2 lety

      How did you get better?

    • @the46show
      @the46show Před rokem

      Hoping that it’s the same for me. Currently doing better, but the OCD has just made my life a living hell

  • @Max-bh8tg
    @Max-bh8tg Před 7 lety +597

    I have OCD, it is horrible, but I have started fighting back. It is mostly a factor of your environment. When you don't have control over your life OCD is a way to fill that void. When I was in a toxic environment my OCD was unbearable, i recently left this toxic environment and it has gotten a lot better since then.

    • @lorenzoe.leonard4160
      @lorenzoe.leonard4160 Před 7 lety +12

      undefined Try to meditate, it may help you man

    • @Ultracity6060
      @Ultracity6060 Před 7 lety +11

      Intentionally refraining from giving in to the compulsions is one of the few proven ways to curb them. A personal example, for whatever it's worth, is that I'm compelled to eat things in an even number of bites. If things naturally work out to an odd number, I'll intentionally leave it at that, and refuse to break the last bite into two.
      Edit: just finished watching the video, and this comment is redundant. Derp.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 7 lety +14

      What the video suggests worked for me. But, you have to be prepared to accept the possibility that your fears come true.
      OCD has a lot in common with addiction. Every time you engage in one of the behaviors, it just gets worse and if you allow yourself to indulge in them, you'll find yourself starting over again.
      Medication and dietary changes may also make the process easier.

    • @CzechRiot
      @CzechRiot Před 7 lety +27

      You're all missing the point that the original poster focused upon. There are different types and levels of OCD. Some people are aware that there are real logical reasons behind the "disorder", while others may be even unaware they actually have a disorder. OCD is a matter of conditioning, and a lot of this conditioning happens ever since one's birth, so it is always the environment that creates the illness, even though some people are genetically prone to it, while others are not. The compulsions are ways to "vent", since the person is powerless to actually fix the actual problem. The concept of "irrational fear" is not a synonym to "unreal fear". Whenever someone fears something, is because they went through some traumatic event where this "something" was involved. What happens is that, many times, the "learned behavior" or the "acquired knowledge" becomes mostly inefficient or useless to the rest of the person's life. Like, for example, if you see someone get run over by a red Ford truck, then you get triggered every time you see a red truck, as if only red trucks are a potential danger. The person may know that all cars have the same potential danger, but the brain has a vivid registered memory of the red truck ripping someone apart, and even though you consciously know other red trucks will not present any more danger than black trucks or whatever, your brain sets you in the ultra-defensive mode, and if you can release the tension this created in your organism in some non-hazardous way, it is actually BETTER if you do it. So, what the original commenter means is that certain people will "develop" OCD because they're trapped in circumstances that makes their brain prompt them to get out or get away from, but they cannot, so they have to find alternative _useless_ actions that sort of "_tricks the brain_" into believing you're acting in your own interest and getting away from the threatening situation.

    • @lorenzoe.leonard4160
      @lorenzoe.leonard4160 Před 7 lety +10

      I just want to help because I've been in the same situation, change the environment and meditate can help you.
      I'm not trying to be a doctor or something but if a person watched this video maybe he wants to know something more about this topic

  • @knath5095
    @knath5095 Před 5 lety +245

    Ocd is painful

    • @jadenhernandez5109
      @jadenhernandez5109 Před 4 lety +11

      Mavis ocd is a nightmare and a unbearable unending curse

    • @dhruvrawat430
      @dhruvrawat430 Před 4 lety +2

      Hope this video helped.

    • @paula_morton912
      @paula_morton912 Před 4 lety

      Of course it is!! Mine is Profound and Refractory contamination OCD. How about others?

    • @TheMJKnight
      @TheMJKnight Před 4 lety

      Yes. Yes it is

    • @midnightmoon3230
      @midnightmoon3230 Před 4 lety

      @@paula_morton912 I constantly think I've dropped important papers while I'm out and constantly looking back to make sure I didn't. I also have to check locked doors and I have to always make sure all lights on the inside of my vehicle are off

  • @REINERX99
    @REINERX99 Před 5 lety +43

    I have OCD and be glad if you dont have it, its a nightmare! 😭

    • @lilyjr.1384
      @lilyjr.1384 Před 3 lety

      Psalm 55:22 22Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous be shaken.

  • @UIAL570
    @UIAL570 Před 4 lety +17

    OCD is horrific. I once spent an hour (and that’s low on the scale) re-adjusting a hairbrush on a countertop. I was screaming and crying uncontrollably and my mother got me help then. It just wasn’t “right” to me for some reason. I got three steps to the kitchen door before I went back again and again and again a and again. I’ll never forget it. So when people say OCD they really don’t see the destruction of lives!

  • @micheljurgens
    @micheljurgens Před 7 lety +311

    Keep it up! your one of the best educational channels on youtube!

    • @WhatIveLearned
      @WhatIveLearned  Před 7 lety +10

      Thanks mate!

    • @karathompson2242
      @karathompson2242 Před 7 lety +12

      *you're

    • @libraryofthemind
      @libraryofthemind Před 7 lety +17

      he's only the best because he is so OCD about making his videos great!

    • @tulllguy
      @tulllguy Před 7 lety +3

      screw you

    • @33Crazydude
      @33Crazydude Před 6 lety

      It would be great if you could do a video regarding tourettes.
      I think the brain abnormalities in OCD and tourettes are similar, but slightly different too.

  • @BullyMaguire22222
    @BullyMaguire22222 Před 4 lety +13

    I’ve had it my whole life. I was diagnosed at 14. People misunderstood it, thinking it’s a “quirky little ritual” but it’s hard to deal with. Feelings of guilt, obsession, and worry begin to control your life.

  • @akufromthefuture7159
    @akufromthefuture7159 Před 4 lety +53

    SO many people say they have ocd when they don't realize the hell it is for some.
    these comment sections are insane.

    • @golden.fire.princess9653
      @golden.fire.princess9653 Před 4 lety +7

      Aku From the future yeah people are saying they’re cured lol there is no cure

    • @lilyjr.1384
      @lilyjr.1384 Před 3 lety +7

      Psalm 55:22 Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous be shaken.

    • @nurse580
      @nurse580 Před 3 lety

      TOTALLY TRUE! Even the few movies made with a theme of OCD make a joke of this nightmarish hell on earth. On top of that is the fact there are different degrees of this illness, most ‘average normal’ people often have mild symptoms at some stage of their life which then resolves.
      These ones have no idea of the REAL disease.
      My sons life was taken away from him literally from the age of 12 and there is no word in the English language to begin describe the nightmare for him and myself as a single parent which never ends. The only reason I’m alive is that I have a very strong faith based on accurate knowledge and not credulity or emotion.
      There’s is nothing worse for a parent to see a child suffering terribly for decades pandemic being helpless to help.
      The OCD support groups offered very little, even some of these ones make a joke of it as though it’s something funny. In Australia there’s only the usual anti-depressant and anti-anxiety medications. In the USA you are much more fortunate as there is much more help there but probably only if you mortgage most of your entire life to pay for it,

  • @bajanteen212
    @bajanteen212 Před 7 lety +53

    I also have OCD and I've been coping with it for just over 9 years. I think it's important to be aware of an OCD event (action, thought etc.), ignore it and MOVE ON. The more you ignore it the better you cope in the long run. Further, I find that positive stress (e.g intense exercise), and struggling in the pursuit of success helps take my mind away from ocd thoughts and brings me to a different reality and to focus instead on getting closer to my own success.

    • @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns
      @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns Před 6 lety +4

      Darien Birkett.. ive had ocd since I was 17 years old. It kinda went away when I was about 23 years old. But now it's back with a vengeance and wayyy worse than before. I had two breakdowns yesterday and today. I have to go to work tomorrow and I'm afraid that I'll have to quit my job of 12 years. I feel like I'm literally... losing it to the point of no return.

    • @haajjabbaajaj768
      @haajjabbaajaj768 Před 6 lety

      Darien Birkett schenpranzia

    • @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns
      @ElizabethGonzalez-jt7ns Před 5 lety +2

      G4nst4Ch33se ... I’m doing so much better after a year and 2 months of my first ocd episode. The anxiety is still there but I don’t let it get the best of me. How are you?

    • @nikkig3799
      @nikkig3799 Před 5 lety

      @@haajjabbaajaj768 no lmao research

    • @kristymarie6065
      @kristymarie6065 Před 2 lety

      You got it

  • @gregap8282
    @gregap8282 Před 4 lety +20

    Having OCD is always living in doubt. You check the door, you see the gate from a far and you rationally know it is close, but there's something telling you "No, the door is possibly open and someone is gonna enter your house" and you imagine every possible negative scenario (most of those thoughts are intrusive). That's when you develop patterns to feel safe, in my case I have to check the door 21 times, before I leave or else I'll go crazy with my negative thoughts.

  • @VariusHD
    @VariusHD Před 7 lety +705

    I have OCD and it really disturbs me. Every time I know that what I'm doing is completely illogical, but it just feels weird if I don't satisfy this "feeling" of doing something over and over again. The biggest issues I have are closing the door, checking if I forgot my key, wipe my ass (yeah really) and even look around (for no reason). But now I know what's going on in my brain and I will definitely try this behavior therapy out. Thank you! (Sorry for bad English, I'm German)

    • @vincewarren1271
      @vincewarren1271 Před 6 lety +29

      Adi Buschu mine is counting letters in every word and putting on socks. It made college hell, but I made it to grad school.

    • @sgky2k
      @sgky2k Před 6 lety +14

      Looking back or around for no reason. We both have it in common. ;) the worst part is, My brain already figured out all of these he mentioned in the video. But it's just so hard to actually stay with that. But I will ;)

    • @Erin-ho8qu
      @Erin-ho8qu Před 6 lety +21

      Wiping to the point of bleeding sometimes? 😐

    • @InnerRise
      @InnerRise Před 6 lety +6

      Vince Warren yes! I play with letters in words in my head too!
      I use to have to watch t.v. with subtitles just to see the words to play with them.

    • @scarletpeoni9347
      @scarletpeoni9347 Před 6 lety

      Adi Buschu how is your OCD now?
      I know it's not funny ( I have OCD too although comes in phases to some extent thankfully ) but the last two I thought were cute and funny.

  • @shantahsieh4833
    @shantahsieh4833 Před 3 lety +25

    Have you tried treating yourself with Weedborn CBD products?

  • @grrrohmy665
    @grrrohmy665 Před 4 lety +9

    THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR MAKING THIS IM LIKE CRYING, SOMEONE UNDERSTANDS ME 😭😭 i’m 17 and i swear this disorder is fuckinf killing me i can’t. i’ve had this since i was 11 and i wish i could exolain, i can’t even begin to explain what it’s like to never be satisfied with yourself everyrhing i do is weonf because it’s not perfect i do it over and over and over and over again until it’s finally just OK and then i obsess over something else, then havinf ptsd too as a result of abuse sucks, i say sorry several times in a row for tiny mistakes. logically i know i know so much i do is irrational but it’s like the fear is so intense i can’t help but do a compulsion. also internal compulsions are by far the worse.

  • @tabaxi
    @tabaxi Před 6 lety +136

    you're using 'obsessions' and 'compulsions' interchangeably, but the 'obsession' part of OCD refers to intrusive thoughts, which this video didn't really touch on...

    • @lucybello2995
      @lucybello2995 Před 4 lety +4

      Very well said, at least one person on here knows what there talking about he's just a stereotype.

  • @TheTrivek42
    @TheTrivek42 Před 7 lety +286

    My tactic to remembering if I locked the door is to pull the knob as many times as the day of the week, so twice for Tuesday. This way I remember locking the door and I also remember it was today, and I'm not just remembering locking the door yesterday.

    • @SteelBlueVision
      @SteelBlueVision Před 7 lety +19

      It's easier to be just mindful of it and paying attention. The urge to go and check results from not paying attention when locking it. If you pay attention, you can visualize yourself doing it when you get the urge and move on...

    • @levprotter1231
      @levprotter1231 Před 7 lety +5

      I just hum a tune or sing a little song about locking the door.

    • @_thechosen
      @_thechosen Před 7 lety +2

      What you are describing is forgetfulness that many do have but this is not OCD since OCD person is already aware. Just can't shift his gear.

    • @Ultracity6060
      @Ultracity6060 Před 7 lety +3

      Yep, this is a good tactic. Another is just doing *anything* odd while locking the door. That way it's not part of a forgettable routine. You'll remember locking the door because of the unusual thing you did while locking it.

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před 7 lety +2

      @thechosen, I've got OCD, well, I've gotten enough treatment and done enough work that it's probably OCPD.
      But, it's a failure to register, not forgetfulness. I've adopted the strategy with dimmer switches that are impossible to visually check to over turn them until my hand starts to slip. Then they're turned off. I have to accept the possibility that the condo will have a fire because if I let myself slip and do the checks, then I'm going to backslide.
      Similarly for the locks, I have to do it once really well, and then accept the possibility that it hasn't been locked at all or that the deadbolt only hasn't been locked.
      That being said, if TheTrivek42 isn't getting intense discomfort and anxiety from the unlocked door, then you're right about it being just forgetfulness.

  • @CS-jp4ue
    @CS-jp4ue Před 5 lety +132

    I used to have OCD thoughts (intrusive thoughts). Stop trying to control your thoughts. We're all imperfect and you're not the only one with horrible thoughts. Recognize intrusive thoughts as OCD thoughts rather than feeling guilty for having them. Just watch your mind instead of believing you are youre thoughts because you aren't.

    • @emmahemsworth9718
      @emmahemsworth9718 Před 5 lety +1

      has it gotten better?

    • @carlosmendez3221
      @carlosmendez3221 Před 4 lety +1

      That’s powerful.

    • @monicak6296
      @monicak6296 Před 4 lety +5

      I'm trying to tell myself that these are just thoughts and for about 5 minutes I can breathe again, I can feel a small sample of freedom...but then...it starts all over again...

    • @lilyjr.1384
      @lilyjr.1384 Před 3 lety +2

      Monica K Psalm 55:22 Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous be shaken.

    • @Thegooob95
      @Thegooob95 Před 3 lety +1

      To the degree that the thoughts are happening, you are them. You’re biological organism isn’t those thoughts, but thinking can’t say it’s not the accumulation of thoughts. I have ocd too, watching thinking happening seems to be the only sane way out, but recognizing that I as the thinker am deceiving myself to say I’m not the total process of (desired and undesired) thinking. I am. I’m also the biological organism and environment. There’s a duality to thinking and an impulse to separate the thinker from the thoughts the thinker doesn’t like. But we are the total process of thinking and I believe to literally perceive that by the rest of your mind is what “frees” us from that process. By perception, not thinking. Otherwise, ocd will go on tricking itself that it’s not itself forever. Looping.

  • @bobmalibaliyahmarley1551
    @bobmalibaliyahmarley1551 Před 2 lety +10

    As someone who have struggled with OCD for about 20 years and had experienced alot of different OCD related issues and habits to various degrees, I can say it's like being constantly haunted by your own mind, thoughts and voices (inner voice/inner dialogue) in your head. In basic terms, OCD is your brain lying to yourself, and people without it have no idea how tiresome and straining it is to have to repeat sentences over and over again in your head just to try convince yourself. I've had everything from obsessive need to shower/wash myself for exsessive amounts of time to horrible intrusive thoughts in my mind about things that I didn't want to think about. It's like your mind is stuck on something, and even if you try to move on and focus/think about something else, it will be stuck in the back of your mind, constantly torturing and terrorizing yourself.

    • @DonRoyalX
      @DonRoyalX Před rokem +1

      Yeah, exactly right. Mine is music. The same 10-15 seconds of whatever song my mind has gripped to, repeating over and over for literally my ENTIRE. WAKING. EXISTENCE. Sometimes for days, the same segment of a song, the same piece, over and over, it’s torture man. My life and mind have become pretty dull and uneventful these past couple years, as I can’t think about things. It’s just basic survival, working and eating and paying the bills. I can’t imagine and structure a plan for a higher self, it’s like thinking through the thickest most evil fog.

    • @arhoosier1058
      @arhoosier1058 Před rokem +1

      for me everytime i forget it and i could be having no thoughts and it comes right back. and when i do music to help, the thoughts slowly creep into my things to get away from it and ruin that, when my brain goes wait, you don’t care ab this thing anymore? ok let’s worry ab this, it makes me not want to even have thoughts and it’s so debilitating in social situations where i have to mentally argue with my brain, try to listen to people, and think what i am trying to say at the same time

  • @zz55jf
    @zz55jf Před 7 lety +259

    I can check the door multiple times and still be afraid I forgot. media does a terrible job of portraying ocd. it isn't only the need to clean. it can show its self in many ways. one symptom I had was a constant need to remove imperfections from my body; this lead to sores and scars. it is exhausting to be stuck in thoughts and actions especially when it hurts you.

    • @priyameenakshidance
      @priyameenakshidance Před 6 lety

      +ma lama really like what do you mean?

    • @supermegaterageek
      @supermegaterageek Před 6 lety +6

      I know that I'm late to respond to this, but that sounds a lot like dermatillomania. It's a relatively "new found" disorder and it can sometimes be grouped together with OCD. I have dermatillomania and also cleaning OCD and the thought-process feels similar but the OCD felt more like terror if i didnt perform the behaviour, whilst derma felt like it was building a stronger urge and frustration.

    • @tofujelly
      @tofujelly Před 6 lety +1

      OCA Obsessive compulsive anonymous. Helps me.

    • @xO_oxDK
      @xO_oxDK Před 6 lety +5

      Oh yeah... that imperfection thing :/ biggest challenge for me as well... loose skin and that stuff on the inside of ones cheeks. Can sometimes put me into a cycle of rinse repeat...

    • @Itchy__
      @Itchy__ Před 6 lety +1

      Same here

  • @jtfromsomewhere
    @jtfromsomewhere Před 7 lety +20

    your channel is growing quickly. congrats!

  • @ocdhelp
    @ocdhelp Před 6 lety +5

    Thank you for sharing this. OCD is not talked about nearly enough and most people don't understand what it is really about. Thank you for bringing more attention to it.

  • @ummati3765
    @ummati3765 Před 3 lety +89

    To me OCD is the world's most toughest disorder, who agrees with me

    • @michaeldeglory777
      @michaeldeglory777 Před 2 lety +7

      I agree with you. Its a real torment.

    • @floweryunicorn8888
      @floweryunicorn8888 Před 2 lety +5

      It's pure hell, your mind becomes the enemy that tortures you until it sees you break to tiny pieces.

    • @Potato-mb2wg
      @Potato-mb2wg Před 2 lety

      @@floweryunicorn8888 try exposure im wa y calmer now

    • @Potato-mb2wg
      @Potato-mb2wg Před 2 lety

      @@floweryunicorn8888 i wouldn't say hell id say annoying

    • @butterflyphoenix6902
      @butterflyphoenix6902 Před 2 lety +1

      Nah I would say it is In an extreme battle with severe ADHD but certainly hell is having both wondering if you locked the door both out of OCD compulsion and ADHD forget fullness can leave you going back and forth a hundred times literally I have both ADHD and OCD

  • @JakeYoloxD
    @JakeYoloxD Před 7 lety +149

    Had OCD since I was maybe 6 probably earlier but I only remember that far back. I took SSRI's, ended up having violent nightmares, hallucinations and self destructive thoughts. I decided to stop getting treated and now use the hyperactive error detection in my job as an architectural draftsman, being able to focus on nitpicky details for hours and fixing problems others would overlook or give up on. I still have negative side effects such as washing my hands in boiling hot water and opening doors with my elbows etc, but I think it's a good trade off. Side note: My room is messy and it annoys me when people think neatness and order is all OCD is.

    • @JakeYoloxD
      @JakeYoloxD Před 7 lety +7

      Laura Croft Mine usually gets worse when I am stressed out for the most part, so having days where you don't do anything will help, works for me anyway, just chill out at home and do something you enjoy =)

    • @GurpreetSingh-eo5ky
      @GurpreetSingh-eo5ky Před 6 lety +6

      Jake Dew have you ever washed the knob with soap , and fear that the water will splash on my hands from the wash basin. Its so horriblr

    • @cassandrakasper2973
      @cassandrakasper2973 Před 6 lety +4

      Jake Dew That last part though!!! Couldn't have said it any damn better myself. Thank you so much!

    • @girlinthesouth850
      @girlinthesouth850 Před 6 lety +3

      Jake Dew I thought I was the only one who opened the door with my elbow... or a part of my shirt.... or my butt... or... lmao

    • @mrspumpkin6756
      @mrspumpkin6756 Před 5 lety +1

      Hey Jake,
      You are right OCD is a broad disorder, you can have people who hoard belongings, people who do rituals to decrease their anxiety to people who are clean. My therapist confided to me that Cleaning is one of the less common ocd disorders.
      I have only experienced it 8 months and it is horrible.

  • @christinas.3461
    @christinas.3461 Před 5 lety +35

    Yes it is very important that people know that no, not everyone has OCD. Most people have traits of ocd, but that is EXTREMELY different than actually having it. OCD is hellish, especially the intrusive thoughts. If people can casually say “oh I’m so ocd” with a little giggle, they most likely are simply experiencing a similar trait and definitely don’t know what real obsessive compulsions are.

    • @MrJayjase
      @MrJayjase Před 2 lety +1

      I agree

    • @danko5866
      @danko5866 Před 2 lety

      What do you mean by "traits" here?

    • @christinas.3461
      @christinas.3461 Před 2 lety

      @@danko5866 for example someone without ocd could need something to be symmetrical or positioned in an exact way or else they feel uneasy. My psychology professor demonstrated this by writing something “out of place” on the white board and it bothered
      most of the class. Although this is an experience that some ocd sufferers have (including myself) I was annoyed at the fact that this was his way of explaining the disorder in general, which is obviously inaccurate, not to mention that people with this subtype of ocd experience it constantly in a way that causes actual distress and can be disabling. Most people at some point in their life also experience intrusive thoughts from time to time but these are often just a result of being human and aren’t clinical ocd, however they may mirror the experiences of someone who does have clinical ocd. Because of this overlap non-ocd sufferers might confuse their experiences with the experiences of those with the actual mental illness.

  • @CleaningTherapy
    @CleaningTherapy Před 4 lety +7

    My OCD actually makes me unable to clean. Instead of contamination OCD, I have ordering/symmetry OCD, so cleaning actually “messes up” all my perfect angles and positioning of objects.
    So I started a cleaning channel on CZcams to keep myself accountable. It’s very therapeutic for me and I love helping people.
    Fight against the thoughts. OCD is essentially a bully. Don’t let the bully have the last word.

  • @tinychapter.
    @tinychapter. Před 3 lety +52

    OCD recovery is about accepting the possibility that everything you fear - especially your deepest fears which drive your OCD obsessions and compulsions - may well come true. It is about accepting that you can never be certain of this. OCD is about an intolerance of uncertainty and to recover you’re going to have to accept that you will never ever know with 100% certainty whether the things you fear will happen or not. Only then can you begin to liberate yourself. This indeed feels uncomfortable at first, but in doing this (through ERP, exposure scripts etc) you actually get at the core mechanism of the condition. Once you accept the uncertainty through ERP (exposure - response prevention), and pair that with a commitment to mindfulness practice as well as a commitment to understanding the nature of the mind and therefore the condition itself, you have a powerful cocktail in liberating yourself from the powerful shackles of this condition.

  • @TheGerogero
    @TheGerogero Před 7 lety +20

    Editing level: poetic.

  • @alexspander7798
    @alexspander7798 Před 5 lety +7

    i dont have OCD but when i feel like im stuck in a loop or brain lock when im checking things, i take a picture of them.. helps big time

  • @holdencaustic
    @holdencaustic Před 6 lety +5

    OCD is often misrepresented, and the notion that it is untreatable is long debunked- this vid is an excellent one.

  • @_That_Dude
    @_That_Dude Před 7 lety +1

    I love your curiosity and the videos that address your questions. Keep questioning, keep learning, you the man

  • @larnacodsc
    @larnacodsc Před 7 lety +1

    I discovered your channel 2 days ago and I just finished watching all of your videos. You've become my current favorite channel on Yt. Thank you for your content! Here's hoping you'll keep at it for long.

  • @sikyist
    @sikyist Před 7 lety +5

    love your videos. great information, finely edited and packaged. audio is great. clips are always relative, as randomly picked some may appear.

  • @warble3675
    @warble3675 Před 7 lety +191

    I'm 3 months into ocd therapy I'm almost "cured" if your reading this you can do it
    edit: it’s been 2 years now jesus. My ocd ended up getting so much worse after that. But now it is completely gone. I had to go through absolute hell so reach where I am now. For any of you out there struggling IT IS ALL IN YOUR HEAD CONTROL YOUR MIND. I had a lot of traumatic experiences happen to me and i gave up on my ocd because I didn’t care if I was dead or alive. I also smoked weed a lot during that time. Just push through the anxiety is what I’m trying to say nothing will happen. You just need to drop it cold turkey, the panic attacks and break downs will go away. And once you break the ocd you will have a very strong and appreciative mind I promise you. I believe in all of you

  • @timothyjones762
    @timothyjones762 Před 6 lety

    This is the best description I have ever heard...I send this to friends to explain what is going on with me...brilliant...thank you

  • @pedalstomper78
    @pedalstomper78 Před 6 lety +1

    A great video! As someone diagnosed with OCD, it's helpful knowing the what/how. Thanks for putting this together!

  • @michaelsheridandigital8135
    @michaelsheridandigital8135 Před 7 lety +521

    You're only referring to one type of OCD! There's thousands of different types. I was diagnosed with OCD and have suffered with it for years, but I'm the messiest person you'll meet! Please do a video about other types because you're making it seem as though we're all obsessed with cleaning.
    I'm sure you had the best of intentions, but OCD is a spectrum, and perpetuating the stereotype that we're all 'neat freaks' is damaging.
    Thank you for taking the time to read my comment

    • @bookishartist2033
      @bookishartist2033 Před 6 lety +5

      Michael Sheridan May I ask, what are your symptoms? I hope I'm not imposing, but I really wanna understand OCD as much as possible!

    • @beyzasonmez9164
      @beyzasonmez9164 Před 6 lety +50

      Your comment is so on point! I have also OCD but I don't have an obsession about cleaning etc.

    • @MelissaPerez24
      @MelissaPerez24 Před 6 lety +51

      THANK YOU. I have pure-O and I hate it when people think OCD is just about obsessive cleaning..

    • @arete7884
      @arete7884 Před 6 lety +8

      Yeah im very messy aswell got pure 0,counting ocd and touch ocd

    • @ThePeruviangirl11
      @ThePeruviangirl11 Před 6 lety +2

      Ahhh i love you 😭

  • @Koda_Grey
    @Koda_Grey Před 4 lety +7

    I’ve always called my OCD breakdowns “loops”. I would get anxious about a thing that needs changing and get stuck repeating the action over and over again. It would be aweful because sometimes it is as if I have no control of myself. In my head I am screaming that I need to stop, yet I can’t. It’s actually a relief when someone helps interrupt the behaviour for me. Even just talking to me can interrupt the cycle. I just get so caught up in what I am doing unconsciously that I can’t stop it on my own.

  • @ricardojacinto6947
    @ricardojacinto6947 Před 7 lety

    I've applied some concepts that I've learned through coding in my daily routines and they match so well with the behaviour techniques that you mention in your videos.
    I like how you make sense on all of it and the way you justify your arguments with great literature and solid evidence.
    Definitely one of the best channels on youtube. You are making a great service to the community and a huge difference in people's lifes; You definitely are making a huge difference in mine, can't thank you enough. All the best

  • @adencold5738
    @adencold5738 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you so much for taking this subject seriously and sharing genuinely helpful information about it.

  • @gymdogs2564
    @gymdogs2564 Před 7 lety +20

    please upload more often
    this is the best educational channel on YT

    • @johnibambohni
      @johnibambohni Před 7 lety +13

      please do not upload more often and keep the quality high instead. 😉
      (it is indeed a really, really good educational channel! 👌 thanks for that! 😎)

  • @suelovegren5314
    @suelovegren5314 Před 7 lety +5

    LOL! I loved the 5 second Obama clip. In general, what I love about these videos is that they're not only educational but entertaining as well. The choice of the scene with the bus driver unable to unstick his gears in that Jim Carrey movie kind of cements an image in your memory of the underlying problem of OCD. Very effective!

    • @WhatIveLearned
      @WhatIveLearned  Před 7 lety

      Thanks Sue! It took a while to find that specific Obama clip B-)

  • @reubenkane8993
    @reubenkane8993 Před 4 lety +1

    One of the best explanations of what OCD is like and how it works- past OCD sufferer

  • @Cinirakan
    @Cinirakan Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you for this video. I have OCD and I never really understood what even cause OCD in the brain. It’s nice to get a better understanding of it.

  • @VikashGupta-xx9mk
    @VikashGupta-xx9mk Před 3 lety +4

    Suffering from ocd for 14 years. It has ruined my life.

  • @thursdva1i
    @thursdva1i Před 5 lety +4

    I really appreciate that you said that OCD is a term that is used lightheartedly. As someone with OCD, it really annoys me when people use it as an adjective for being neat. I am also a generally tidy person, but I can always clearly distinguish between my OCD behaviours and my type-A personality. It really means a lot when people who don’t have OCD show an understanding of how horrific it is for us.

    • @mentalhelp8474
      @mentalhelp8474 Před 2 lety +1

      You comment really made me think about my struggles, so similar. I have actually just done a video on this as its close to my heart. Keep Strong

  • @bestintentions6089
    @bestintentions6089 Před 7 lety

    best channel shows complex nature of topics with facts. tackling complex topics in such clear way.

  • @whiterabit09
    @whiterabit09 Před 7 lety

    Thanks so much for digging this valuable info up! It has really helped me.

  • @laghibli9127
    @laghibli9127 Před 6 lety +3

    I am so happy I found your channel I need to try quitting sugar and some other bad habits that I want to change ...thank you very much for your information that you provide us

  • @miylaam
    @miylaam Před 4 lety +6

    My boyfriend has SEVERE OCD. It’s a daily struggle. I hope one day we can get him help. I hate seeing him go through it.

  • @jay1070
    @jay1070 Před 7 lety

    Great video as always! One of my favorite channels! Thanks!

  • @saikrishna5278
    @saikrishna5278 Před 7 lety

    nice work u really gathered all the relevant information with no BS and explained amazing things in a class manner.... one of the simply best presentations on OCD in CZcams

  • @gsilcoful
    @gsilcoful Před 7 lety +4

    Nice work.

  • @danieljan9344
    @danieljan9344 Před 7 lety +31

    I love your english, it's so clear :3 keep it up man i love your channel.

    • @danieljan9344
      @danieljan9344 Před 7 lety +7

      Btw, my brothers typ 1 diabetes starts to get better and better everyday, since we quit sugar and carbohydrates :) *big thank you*

    • @WhatIveLearned
      @WhatIveLearned  Před 7 lety +11

      Wow that's fantastic, glad to hear that!

    • @toekneelorenzo2942
      @toekneelorenzo2942 Před 6 lety

      +Daniel Janetzke could ocd cone from being diabetic

  • @chenlevi493
    @chenlevi493 Před 6 lety +2

    Dude, I don't know who you are or what did you study until now or even what is your background, but it doesn't matter. I will say this - I read and listened to "Brain Lock" several times and didn't quit understand it fully until...YOU EXPLAINED IT. Well Done, wherever you are whoever you are and THANK YOU!

  • @homebrandrules
    @homebrandrules Před 6 lety +1

    THANKYOU, YOUR INSIGHT IS A GODSEND!
    may the universe continue to favour you

  • @woonko3300
    @woonko3300 Před 7 lety +140

    but what about pure o the intrusive thoughts?

    • @MrTmenzo
      @MrTmenzo Před 6 lety +55

      Hate it. It's like my brain trying to control me instead if me controlling "it".

    • @shannonbear8807
      @shannonbear8807 Před 6 lety +8

      Intrusive thoughts are included in obssessions , but yeah he did focus mostly on compulsions.

    • @claire_mancmanc3800
      @claire_mancmanc3800 Před 6 lety +29

      i have pure O. im sick of the media portrayal in germs!

    • @mickey1271
      @mickey1271 Před 6 lety +23

      Right, I'm pure o and it's hell.

    • @saabirchaudhry2545
      @saabirchaudhry2545 Před 5 lety +5

      Me same

  • @catsareetuc7022
    @catsareetuc7022 Před 3 lety +10

    1. When you have nearly all the common behaviors of OCD. (Mentally, physically)
    2. When OCD has nearly affected you every on single second/minute, and you feel like it’s occupied almost your whole life.
    3. When you’re in the middle of gradually getting better from your symptoms, and it suddenly becomes severe again.🙂

  • @sugarxcookie27
    @sugarxcookie27 Před 7 lety

    Thanks for sharing! Looking forward to your videos every day ever since I discovered your channel

  • @Renasense
    @Renasense Před 7 lety +1

    This video came up at the perfect time for me, thank you.

  • @menace2societies
    @menace2societies Před 4 lety +8

    I recommend watching Katie d’Ath OCD on CZcams, she is an OCD Psychiatrist that helps and explain what, why, and how is OCD. We are all in the same boat guys! There is always light in the end of the longest tunnel.

  • @mfbias4048
    @mfbias4048 Před 4 lety +3

    Beating Pure-O (or atleast getting on top of it) I consider the best and hardest achievement of my life. I didn’t know what it was for nearly a year but the first step was realising was it was a conditional rather than me being a ‘monster’. There were lots of steps but some major steps were taken by finding the 4 step technique in the book ‘brain lock’ (I still use this when it comes back) and exposure therapy as taught by a psychotherapist.
    I feel deep compassion for anyone suffering, I know the deep blunt and sharp pain, the isolation, fear and terror. The sickening feeling in the stomach as a spike hits and wishing it away until you have no more energy all whist pretending to everyone you encounter nothing is happening. You can repair, you just have to confront it and open up to people (I know this is hard)

  • @asheelu
    @asheelu Před 5 lety +1

    The Book really helped me to understand the disease and to recover.

  • @mattgloss8580
    @mattgloss8580 Před 6 lety

    Lovely stuff! Excellent video.

  • @madisheppard9190
    @madisheppard9190 Před 4 lety +12

    People who say “I’m so ocd tehe!” Are my least favorite people. Like, thanks so much for belittling my condition which literally pushes me to the point of physical and mental exhaustion every waking moment of my life, just so you can make an overused and downright idiotic joke just because you saw a book or something out of place. SMH

    • @michaeldeglory777
      @michaeldeglory777 Před 2 lety

      I understand you Maddi. You are not alone. Even I am going through the same thing. You are not alone.

  •  Před 7 lety +3

    great video!
    Also, your videos helped me stop eating (non natural)sugar!! tanks alot! Lost 5kg since i started.

  • @Callaxes
    @Callaxes Před 7 lety

    Hi WIL
    Your videos have been immensely helpful for me and because of them I've managed to make some big life changes. Although I already knew about the things you talked about so far, your videos have really helped me to visualize what happens in body and more importantly in my mind when I do something detrimental.
    This visualization is perhaps the most important thing I got from your videos and it's what has helped me the most.
    I would love to see you do a video about stress and anxiety and how to respond to stressful triggers, since I feel that having a analytical view of what goes on inside me when I'm stressed could really help me and others detach ourselves from the emotion of the moment and develop a response to it.
    Thank you again for doing these videos, I cant tell you how much they've helped me!

  • @cemkilicci9400
    @cemkilicci9400 Před 7 lety

    you're the man. keep it coming

  • @TheDutchPhysicist
    @TheDutchPhysicist Před 7 lety +181

    Can you do this for social anxiety / awkwardness?

    • @TwentySeventhLetter
      @TwentySeventhLetter Před 7 lety +3

      My guess is that you could hypothetically use the power of habit for altering any long-term behavior. If you take a look at Mel Robbins's _5 Second Rule_ (or just search her name on CZcams), you can see this sort of thing applied specifically to anxiety.

    • @thebodyimagetherapistyyc
      @thebodyimagetherapistyyc Před 7 lety +1

      there are various therapies and tools for both of these, i talk a bit about tips for anxiety and social anxiety on my channel but yes in theory you could do some behavioural stuff like this :)

    • @mikasakistler6249
      @mikasakistler6249 Před 7 lety

      +

    • @charlesblyou5621
      @charlesblyou5621 Před 7 lety

      Trinitro phenylnitra
      mine

    • @charlesblyou5621
      @charlesblyou5621 Před 7 lety +1

      Trinitro phenylnitramine

  • @shitxlminersuser71
    @shitxlminersuser71 Před 5 lety +10

    I have OCD and I'm suffering from it from last 11 years
    I lost most of my childhood and whole teenage in washing my hands, spiting and doing other compulsive rituals
    But now I've recovered my brain a lot than before
    OCD wastes your time and energy in doing unnecessary things which further leads to mood swings , depression and anxiety
    OCD is a terrible disorder ! If you don't have it count it as your blessings

  • @davidgjeffroy7239
    @davidgjeffroy7239 Před 4 lety

    Well illustrated and totally honest with levels of consciences awareness.

  • @noumanhakeem589
    @noumanhakeem589 Před 6 lety +1

    I really liked how you got to the actual neuro-biology behind it

  • @lelrica6883
    @lelrica6883 Před 6 lety +4

    Lmao, I have obsessive thoughts and I just learned after months of experiencing these thoughts that it was just OCD. I fit perfectly into this singular category of OCD. It made me so relieved to know it was just OCD.

  • @davidcopperfield2278
    @davidcopperfield2278 Před 7 lety +9

    Hmmmm, Cingulate Gyrus, responsible for Anxiety, now I know what part of my brain is defect ! I was always wondering how it comes that I never feel shy ! Now I know it ! Thank you !

    • @DrymouthCWW
      @DrymouthCWW Před 7 lety +2

      David Copperfield i reacted to that too..knowledge is the catalyst to change, but not without work!

  • @fathimafayha8691
    @fathimafayha8691 Před 6 lety

    Thank you very much for that beautiful explanation !! Looking forward for more of your videos.

  • @nicoarete8189
    @nicoarete8189 Před 7 lety

    Just as awesome as I've come to expect.

  • @Sidart_227
    @Sidart_227 Před 6 lety +89

    OCD action symptoms is fine..but when OCD strikes in thoughts...same thinking over and over...it kills

    • @abhiji9012
      @abhiji9012 Před 5 lety +1

      Siddharth Kashyap brother control it for 5 min in starting then increase the time ......thank me later

    • @th3137
      @th3137 Před 5 lety

      Help me

    • @MeenakshiDutta-cu5vi
      @MeenakshiDutta-cu5vi Před 5 lety +3

      Fight it, be brave. That's how I won.
      Mix of acute stress disorder and OCD, now almost absent.
      BTW I'm Indian too

    • @iyaneki4827
      @iyaneki4827 Před 5 lety

      @@MeenakshiDutta-cu5vi how u control it bro?

    • @MrMrAzad
      @MrMrAzad Před 5 lety +19

      Iyan Eki Stop fighting the thoughts, it’s a hopeless fight, you can’t win. The more you resist the harder the thoughts will come back. You want to learn to accept the thoughts. You don’t have to agree with it, but just accept that it can be here present in your mind and you don’t have to make it go away. After accepting it you want to redirect your focus on something else, focus on the colors of the objects around you, focus on your breathe. The point is not to give attention to the thought, treat it as something unimportant! This is truly the way my friend

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 Před 4 lety +3

    What has worked for me:
    -neurofeedback
    -photobiomodulation
    -transcranial electromagnetic simulation

  • @dimitricusnir5219
    @dimitricusnir5219 Před 7 lety

    Amazing videos... Great job. Just watched them all in one seating. Love them.. keep up the great work.😊

  • @sweetkatia19
    @sweetkatia19 Před 5 lety

    this is brilliantly explained!! thank you

  • @worldpeace5934
    @worldpeace5934 Před 5 lety +5

    I locked my car but it's definitely unlocked somehow in my mind. I need a new car again.

  • @HurdalkCini
    @HurdalkCini Před 7 lety +27

    when you check your phone pocket and it s empty, orbital cortex explodes.

  • @STEINYY
    @STEINYY Před 6 lety

    Cheers for the video bro. Really appreciate it

  • @qbb01
    @qbb01 Před 4 lety +1

    So that is why mindfulness meditation has helped me so much!

  • @ninjanerdstudent6937
    @ninjanerdstudent6937 Před 7 lety +7

    See, this is why all psychiatrists are fucking crazy. You don't need drugs to stop anxiety disorders. Just rational thought and CZcams videos.

  • @cooper197
    @cooper197 Před 4 lety +52

    “I’m so leukemia” 😂😂

  • @iraira2818
    @iraira2818 Před 4 lety

    Your videos are very informative, and sometimes funny; I luv the B-Roll footage.

  • @manubhatt3
    @manubhatt3 Před 7 lety

    I love it when you so marvelously match what you are teaching with the appropriate movie scenes! Its really funny.

  • @XGoken
    @XGoken Před 4 lety +3

    I think my OCD is more about when I try elaborating my thoughts or explaining something, especially when taking notes for school or trying to do homework assignments. But I do have problems with germs and cleanliness, but it’s mainly with sinks. I also can’t stand walking on the ground at water parks with my bare feet, as I feel the ground can be extremely disgusting and littered with odd marks or dark things I’m not sure of what they could be

  • @biggiesmalls794
    @biggiesmalls794 Před 7 lety +41

    can you do a video like this on ADHD

  • @tomot7249
    @tomot7249 Před 4 lety

    Cool video dude!

  • @NFSCfan
    @NFSCfan Před 7 lety

    Your videos are brilliant! Keep it up : )

  • @e-towncuber5522
    @e-towncuber5522 Před 4 lety +7

    5:58 that’s how i get new cumpulsions

  • @hteshcnub8075
    @hteshcnub8075 Před 7 lety +42

    I've had a dream were i had sex with my cat, Because of OCD ive had uncontrollable thoughts for 3 years straight, If my mom laughs i have to stomp or bang or make a mocking laugh that she can hear, If my mom leaves the bathroom door open i get mad and close it and even slam it, for me ocd is about sexual thoughts and things that annoy me even seeing children triggers my OCD so badly that i have the feeling that something is wrong and i cannot look at them or i might have sexual thoughts witch i hate but are uncontrollable.

    • @msl5131
      @msl5131 Před 6 lety +3

      HTES HCNUB Please seek help

    • @alfredocervantes8160
      @alfredocervantes8160 Před 5 lety +1

      Same

    • @cassanopiano5332
      @cassanopiano5332 Před 5 lety +7

      You are not your thoughts, listen to some Alan Watts and Terrence McKenna

    • @SuperHurra
      @SuperHurra Před 4 lety +6

      It's going to be okay. You're stronger than your thoughts, and you can survive one day at a time. Just survive.

    • @shahebmiah5262
      @shahebmiah5262 Před 4 lety +1

      I get you bro, just never let into the thoughts and ignore it. Think it in a way it's there but you remind urself it is not you.

  • @wolfbenson
    @wolfbenson Před 4 lety

    Really great synopsis of both books in a short video. Hope people read them!

  • @nickrohan2321
    @nickrohan2321 Před 7 lety

    Love your vids dude! Keep up the good work. :)