This game will satisfy your OCD...
Vložit
- čas přidán 11. 03. 2022
- I haven't been kind to the OCD community, the thumbnail for this video may have triggered some of you too... but today I am making amends as we play A Little To The Left, a game all about satisfying your obsessive compulsive disorder!
LINKS!
PATREON: / realcivilengineer
MERCH: www.realcivilengineer.com
MEMBERSHIP: / @realcivilengineergaming
REDDIT: / realcivilengineer
TWITCH: / realcivilengineer
PADDY (MY DOG): / @paddytheapprentice
STREAM ARCHIVE: / @realcivilengineerarchive
PLAYLISTS!
MINI MOTORWAYS: • Mini Motorways
INFRA: • INFRA!
DORFROMANTIK: • Dorfromantik
CITIES SKYLINES - ENGITOPIA: • Cities Skylines - Engi...
KERBAL SPACE PROGRAM: • KSP
POLY BRIDGE 2: • Poly Bridge 2
HYDRONEER: • Hydroneer
VARIETY PLAYLIST: • VARIETY PLAYLIST
Epic Game Store Support-A-Creator Code: RCE
(In connection with Epic Games’ Support-A-Creator Program, I may receive a commission from certain in-game purchases)
About A Little to the Left:
Sort, stack, and organize things into just the right spot in A Little To The Left, a tidy puzzle game with a mischievous cat who likes to make a mess!
Solve puzzles by arranging objects into curious patterns.
Multiple solutions make for intuitive and satisfying puzzle design.
Perfect for casual puzzle game fans and those who get a jolt of satisfaction from a well organized space.
Which way should the clock hands point? How to arrange the eggs? Come to understand the motivation behind the whimsy of an individual by arranging their home as they intended. With charming illustrations and surprising scenarios, A Little To The Left is a satisfying and mysterious world with 75+ delightful puzzles to discover. Keep your eye out for a mischievous cat who has an inclination for chaos!
FEATURES:
Over 75+ unique logical puzzles
Quick-to-solve puzzles make for satisfying game-play
Intuitive drag and drop controls
Multiple solutions
Environmental storytelling
Charming illustration
Atmospheric sound design
A mischievous (but very cute) cat
Funny and playful, great for all ages!
store.steampowered.com/app/16...
#realcivilengineer #ALittleToTheLeft #OCDCompliant - Hry
Matt is doing video to satisfy people with OCD. But he instantly triggers them by not getting perfect scores.
I was watching the video and had to stop to read the comments. I'm so glad I wasn't the only one who noticed!
Right
Haven't played it, but I'd guess there are multiple solutions, rather than a single multi-star solution.
@@ReverendTed I downloaded and finished it after my comment, and yea, that’s it. The key one is particularly crazy.
@@luisleongaming1776 I was thinking by material then by size?
Edit: autocorrect.
Doing good things for people's Off Center Dissatisfaction, but Obsessive Compulsive Disorder is a whole other ballgame
yup
there is actually ocpd, obsessive compulsive personality disorder, which is not really a disorder but is basically a personality quirk for the "it has to be perfect" people.
@@DarthZ01 No, OCPD is indeed a disorder, and it has implications beyond just wanting things to be neat. I’m not a mental health professional, nor do I have OCPD, so I can’t speak much to it, but I can link a resource to it if you like. OCD can actually involve the “it has to be perfect” thing, or at least something similar to it, by the way; for some, things have to be “just right”- turning lights on and off an arbitrary number of times, opening and shutting a door, double, triple checking a door is locked, etc. Less a desire for perfection, more that an arbitrary set of conditions must be perfectly met, but I at least think that still falls under a reasonable interpretation of “it has to be perfect”
Anyway, sorry if I seem correct-y or annoying about this, I just happen to quite care, due to a variety of personal factors. Take care!
@@Vulcan.
Hey
@@Jig_up yes right on the money. My OCD mostly manifests as needing to have very clean hands, but I also go through many rituals while washing my hands that, if not done properly, still make my hands feel dirty, despite literally just washing them lol
Hello, Matt! CZcams is being cancelled in Russia soon. So i wanted to say bye! You somehow could always make my day! I've been on your channel scince 50k subs! I wish you further channel growth and Goodbye!
I am really sorry that Russia is returning to the Soviet Era, but I hope things get better or you move somewhere safer. With all social media getting banned or restricted and tech companies leaving the country, the future looks bleak...
Can you use a VPN or something there? Not suggesting you should have to, of course.
@@LHyoutube the Russian state hasn’t been very clear on what the consequences of breaking online bans are. If it results in jail it will not be worth it, so most people won’t risk it.
Why do the people have to get the punishment.😥
@@rosah697 They better start building more jails, then. They're about to have millions of criminals guilty of the crime of actually loving freedom like any real human would.
I wish we could popularize another word to describe what RCE calls OCD and leave the term OCD for the actual medical disorder.
Edit : Just to clarify, there are other words like perfectionism that others have mentioned. However what I wish for, is that one of them becomes the popular standard. That it triumphs over the usage of OCD in popular language.
there is a word for it, its called perfectionism. Wish more people used it :/
It has one already; OCPD - Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder. It can sometimes have a little overlap with actual OCD, but it is a different thing and largely what people actually mean when they say things like "my OCD".
@@B0nd07 it's closer, but still not the same. Most people who say something "satisfies their ocd" do not have any disorder, ocd or ocpd. Being a bit bothered by unneatness does not constitute a disorder.
I agree. I feel like calling it OCD is reinforcing misconceptions about the actual diagnosis. Unfortunately I haven't found a good expression to use in its place, but for "This satisfies my OCD" in particular, people should just call it satisfying. The inverse is a bit harder, can't think of a quick way to cummunicate that you are frustrated or bothered by something being slightly off 🤔
@@mo0niee301 i wish people used fastidious more instead of perfectionism. bc perfectionism suggests that there is a standard to follow to be recognized as perfect while being fastidious just means you want things to be neat and/or accurate which could be mostly subjective.
I love that games abt ocd are like hehe order the books and not intrusive thought about hurting a stranger on the bus. They’ve got to start making true ocd games imo
From what I noticed, it looks like there’s more solutions to each level hence the stars.
Ex. In the book ordering level you ordered by height. If you order by width you’d probably get a different star.
YES! for the keys you could organize them by the amount of holes they had at the top!
The thing about OCD is that everyone experiences it differently. For the books, I would have gone small to big. For the papers and receipts, i would have stacked them on top of eachother with the biggest at the bottom and smallest on the top. I can't tell you how many times I've gone to the store to pick out, say, a box of noodles or loaf of bread and I have to pick the one that my brain tells me to. Often times I spend more time picking out the "correct" item of each than I do actually moving to the next item.
Edit: I always start going up or down a staircase with my right foot, and if I dont end on my right foot I have to do a little shuffle in order to make sure I do. I step over cracks right-foot-first. I open doors with 2 twists of the nob and I triple-quadruple check my door locks every night. There's an entire list of little things I do. Dishes are an obstacle for me because I have to rinse them 5 times before I'm satisfied that all the soap and gunk is off.
The dishes is a big thing for me. Im a germophobe. I keep track of what things have been touched by whom and what they touched before, that could be harmful. Even in a bigger, quite populated room. So I know the perfect time to wash my hands and I don't touch things that can't be washed easily after I wash my hands. For example my jacket when i come home and i leaned against a window in a tram...
When i was a kid, i always had to drink from a glass from a side, that hasn't been used before. I feared the lip marks. And as you say, there are so many more things.
Funny thing is this video has nothing to do with ocd
It can be possible to be OCD but only sometimes or on specific things??
Because I don't really order things in my room/I leave mess around but at the supermarket or in any other place If I see something that isn't right (not straight line or object at the supermarket untidy) they really annoy me!
Yea, for a lot of people it doesn't involve orderliness at all. A lot of people with ocd have to face intrusive thoughts of them hurting people around them or people they love, but people always treat it like it's this quirky thing where you're an over the top perfectionist
@@valecasini OCD isn't just perfectionism, that's just what people without it believe it is. OCD comes in different "clusters" of obsessions, (different types of intrusive thoughts that trigger your anxiety) a few of the more common ones being Harm OCD (having intrusive thoughts and anxiety about hurting people), Contamination OCD (anxiety about and intrusive thoughts involving contracting diseases, being around germs, etc.), Religious OCD (Having intrusive thoughts that are blasphemous to your religion), Sexuality OCD (intrusive thoughts about having a different sexuality [this does not mean that a person is homophobic, it can and does happen to anybody of any sexuality with this type of ocd]) just to name a few. A lot of people fall in multiple clusters. Most people with ocd also have compulsions that serve to alleiviate the anxiety from intrusive thoughts for a short period of time i.e. washing your hands repeatedly, flipping on and off light switches a certain number of times when you enter a room, checking and rechecking things like whethrr you turned off the stove or locked the door, or looking up the symptoms of a disease to see if you have to go to the hospital.
OCD also affects people in other ways than visual satisfaction. Such as: The amount of times you knock on a door. Which foot steps through a doorway. Checking the light switch exactly three times to make sure it’s off. Lining up items completely straight/level. For me. It also affects my dermatillomania (skin picking). I have OCD in that I must pick at anything that’s visually different on my skin: bumps, blisters, scabs, acne, etc. my mind wants it to be smooth and gone so it forces me to pick. But picking of course only makes it worse. A ironic circle.
It can affect others differentLy and can be so bad for some that it becomes debilitating to their daily life.
Ok?
Ok cool but nobody actually gives a crap enjoy the video
-A person with OCD
@@vineboom6825 exactly
@@vineboom6825 then ignore my comment. This clearly isn’t for you. This is for the people who are interested. 👍
@@splitfire3114 ok?
As a person with OCD I'm quite organized, but not overwhelmingly. My main symptoms are constant intrusive thoughts and feelings of danger for my life and health, what is quite common for OCD. Until I started therapy, I sometimes would cry because of neverending stream of harassing thought about my soon death or accident, that's how exhausting they were. Please don't use this term when you're speaking about perfectionism, love to all 💜
My brother experiences it roughly the same way. Hope you're handling it well, and hope the confusion clears up eventually 🙂. OCD can be a horrible disorder, and it makes me a bit uneasy whenever people use it to describe a mostly unrelated thing.
Stay strong! OCD sucks, glad you're getting therapy!
@@anninfifi thanks, it's really helping me to struggle!
A bit late to be commenting this, but perhaps the title could be edited to include '(Off Centre dissatisfaction)' beside 'OCD' so that it's differentiated from the condition(s) that are so much more serious with many more underlaying elements than, as others have called it, someone just being fastidious (and as they mentioned, 'fastidious' instead of 'perfectionist' or 'perfectionism' as that implies a standard being strived for, not someone being excessively pedantic).
This comment was inspired by several other comments that go into detail about the lives of some who suffer with OCD and/or similar conditions.
This redeems Matt for the countless times his actions have brought me to the verge of frustration xD
Thanks for the seeds!
Yes agreed
I think he made people more mad lol
Just so you know (although I’m sure you’ve heard this before) a desire for “neatness,” perfectly straight lines, etc, is far more associated with OCPD, Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder, than it is OCD, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Plenty of people with OCD may not even care about neatness in the slightest- as someone with OCD, I’m actually quite disorganized. However, I understand that the phrase “being OCD” about something, or things like that has entered the common vernacular, and I don’t mean to be “blame-y” about it- in particular, if you’ve had no reason to research, I wouldn’t expect you to know, and (as I said) the phrase’s common use has been effectively entirely separated from the disorder itself. I just figured, given you’ve titled/themed a video around it, you ought to know. That being said, I wouldn’t necessarily recommend you change it to “This game will satisfy your OCPD” or anything like that- it would definitely feel weird, as it would feel less like you were referencing a common cultural phrase, itself rooted in a misconception about a disorder, and more like you were directly referencing a mental illness, which would definitely feel weird.
Anyway, take care!
Also even if everyone swapped from saying OCD to OCPD, it would still be wrong most of the time. It'd be more into the right direction, but most people don't have a disorder even if they like things neat. A disorder is something debilitating, not a minor annoyance.
Yeah, I agree. As someone with OCD I don’t mind really, people might not know as they won’t have had reason to do research (as they might not have anyone in their life with it) and as long as they know that it is an actual disorder for a lot of people that doesn’t necessarily include neatness, I don’t really mind if they use it to describes being neat, as long as they realise that it is not just neatness and affects a lot of people seriously, but that is my opinion and others might not like it when people say it
@@ocirMZ OCPD does sound like a very organized police unit, "OCPD open up, your car is parked slightly off angle to the curb"
Ironically as someone with OCPD I am also quite disorganized. In general a desire to be neat and orderly has never been a consistent trait for either disorder. Seems it was just an easy one to fall on when portraying it as an archetype in media.
Humans like patterns. None of the frustration felt by the wider community have anything to do with any form of mental illness. This obsession with self diagnosing ocd needs to go away.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is a common, chronic, and long-lasting disorder in which a person has uncontrollable, reoccurring thoughts (obsessions) and/or behaviors (compulsions) that they feel the urge to repeat over and over
WTH ocd means???
Thats what google uncle told me
*they
@@CloveBunny wdym??
Yeah it's not at all what he's talking about.
@@zohaibtariq7351 instead of saying he or she, you should just say they
This is not OCD. This disorder is already so misunderstood
7:20 - That mystery thing is a sewing stitch unpicker or seam ripper. For breaking the thread on something that has already been sewn.
Fondue fork.
I don't have OCD myself but if my experience with autism is anything to go by, neurological disorders like this can manifest in a lot of different ways for different people. Perhaps that's what the multiple stars are for, different interpretations of how things should be ordered?
What is OCD?
6:35 - Aah yes, the fabled desk drawer organiser which perfectly predicts the extent to which you will burn down various candles in the future! 😂
Matt with Time Story is one of my favorite segments!
i'm diagnosed with OCD and i actually get bothered by things being _too_ perfect... the complete opposite of what people expect 😭
Even though I don't have ocd myself, I wish we'd use a different word for perfectionism.
@@SephirothSuperKool Yeah, I feel like Matt is deliberately insulting real OCD suffers at this point, judging by the even more ignorant description in this video. This game does NOT represent OCD for most OCD sufferers.
@@Ironically-Sarcastic I'm autistic and I've had (and used admittedly) ocd used as a general term for certain habits I've had, like, I know it's not using the r-word, but it doesn't feel great either.
"Today I'm going to appeal OCD people"
*Proceeds to torture viewers.*
The fact he calles ocd a disease explains his knowledge of ocd
I really like your videos RCE, but one of the reasons I watch you play is to distract me when I'm really suffering with actual OCD symptoms... I know its just a bit of fun/common phrase, but things being neat isn't what OCD is. Please consider looking into the horrible reality of this disorder to understand why representing it like this is harmful. While this video doesn't offend me personally at all, the disorder makes my life hell, almost killed me, and I didn't even know I had OCD for years because of its misrepresentation as a 'love for perfect alignment'. Thanks for entertaining us, but please reconsider this content
Who's going to see this video and think "Wow matt said OCD now I'm going to use it all the time to make fun of them". Nobody is
@@splitfire3114 It's about the fact that people use the term OCD in a way, that makes it seem like a fun quirky personality trait, while it is in fact a horrible mental illness. In my opinion saying things like "Haha this bothers my OCD" as if an "OCD" was a little guy in your brain complaining about things not being aligned perfectly is very unfair to people have terrible intrusive thoughts about hurting someone they love and things like those. I understand that the people who use OCD in the wrong way don't do it to hurt anyone, but that's exactly we should spread more awareness about it
💜
@@splitfire3114 That's not the thought process people get. What a lot of people think is "Oh wow, I really love things being perfect, lol I'm sooo ocd, I totes need my books in alphabetical order, lol so quirky of me XD"
My OCD is a tad different. I hate it when everything is perfectly in line, symmetrical. I have to have something that is slightly off, without it being too obvious and ruining the order of things, just a tad.
It is a joke (or myth) that OCD means extremely focus on tidyness. They are quite different though.
I am in love with the considerateness of Matts comment section and all the people politely and gently talking about the misuse of the term OCD relating to a desire for neatness. Love your content Matt!
my beloved funny haha engineer man ocd is a debilitating neurological disorder not perfectionism
who asked
@@DenerWitt ???
I knew immediately that the second hollow star meant there's multiple ways to solve it and each star is for each solution
1:10 and Matt doesn’t know what a parsnip is XD
As someone with OCD, the way you organized the cat toys made me want to scream.
While I understand there may be confusion around what OCD is I would like to clarify. OCD is not just a general term for people who enjoy neatness and organisation, OCD can be very distressing for people suffering from it and you can’t just describe yourself as “OCD” as an adjective just for perfectionism. The disease consists of feeling a distressing need and compulsion to perform rituals and constantly check things out of an irrational fear of what happens if you don’t. Please use the term perfectionism when you’re referring to this context and leave the term OCD for cases where you refer to the medical disorder.
Neurotypical people do be weird sometimes
I agree with this so much. It can actually be so upsetting people making light out of something that cripples me and others
yes yes yes. as someone with ocd, i get so tired of trying to explain this to people.
90% of people who complain about being ocd... Are in fact not ocd
Amennnn I have ocd that causes me to pick at my skin till I bleed and gouge little chunks of flesh out of myself
I love your videos Matt. I may not have OCD but I'm a mild perfectionist, so seeing these things in order makes the happy chemicals flow.
Yes, and the correct term for what Matt calls OCD is perfectionism. Matt continues to play ignorant and misuses the term OCD yet again.
OCD is a debilitating mental illness and not just perfectionism.
Who?
@@splitfire3114 joe
3:41 This one looks more like Krupp than illuminati IMO
2:00 LOL!! in my house, we have a small compost bin inside, that we bring to the bigger compost bin outside.
well the fruit stickers go on the lid of the little bin.
that "broken screwdriver" is a fondue fork
I love the “Matt with Time Story” segments. 10/10
I wish other chore simulators like Animal Crossing and House Flipper had more things like this.
So close to 1 million Subs. Keep pushing and you will achieve this great milestone
lol when you were putting things in the basket I kept saying, organize by color ...
07:21 It's a Swiss fondue fork. You put a cube of bread on it, dunk it in molten cheese and voilà. An alternative is a variety of meat cuttings submerged in boiling bouillon or wine brew.
Watching him sort is more stessful to me than the stuff out of order.
Baha so true! 😂
matt: I'm an engineer
me: *mashes X to doubt
I love how he says "is this OCD compliant" like it's a government guideline
Lol
"Matt with Time Story" I love it!
I love Matt with time story. Best part
@3:50
That technically exists, actually. In the form of SCP-005.
1:09 that would be a parsnip, a close cousin of the carrot.
I am so going to talk that last sentence out of context 😂
Behold, the third key from the left is the strongest key! 4:00 😂😂
Organization isn't ocd. It's more about repetitively flicking switches for no reason or pulling your hair out or repeating movements, also the whole intrusive thoughts thing.
My friend had OCD he has to turn on the lights at 3 am and a certain amount of time or he’s family would die
How disturbing it is depends on the level of OCD. For example I sometimes wash my hands 3 times in a minute because I barely touched the dirty table or the edge of a trash can, but I wouldn't consider this OCD. For real OCD people I imagine everything is painfully disturbing until it gets perfectly balanced/arranged/placed ecc.
It sounds more like you’re germaphobic
Usually it's not just arranging everything so it's neat, it's arranging certain things because of what your mind tells you. There's some things that people with OCD arrange over and over and some things are just ignored. Sometimes they even hoard things to the point where it's messy, but as long as it's arranged in the way they want it, they'll do it over and over. It's about the overwhelming anxiety that takes over when you don't do it, not the satisfaction you get that leaves after a few minutes. One compulsion I can think of is the need to walk through every single aisle in order at the supermarket even if the thing you need is in the last aisle or in the aisle right beside you, or walking through a door until it feels just right. For me, if I feel something on one side of my body, I feel the need to make the other side feel the same thing. Lots of this time the feeling is pain, leading me to bruise myself all to get rid of the thoughts.
Obsessive compulsive disorder is different from the human instinct that makes you want things to be perfect.
broooo congrats on 1mill was here at 300 when u started with polibridge
Wow I absolutely can’t believe you’ve grown this big is such a short time it feels like just a month ago I was watching your early Polly bridge content 😅
3:50 “Now I will tell you a story about a young woman who was sealed in a small room. In the room was a furnace and (seven) keys. She was told that each of the (seven) keys would unlock one of (seven) doors outside her room. Inside each room was a child that she could take with her as she fled the building. But she was only allowed to leave her own room with one key, not all (seven). Desperate to find a way to save all (seven) children, the woman melted the (seven) keys together in the furnace to create a single key, hoping it would unlock all (seven) doors. But, of course, it did not work that way. Now her key opened none of the doors. Rather than leaving her room with a key to one life, she had taken with her the key to (seven) deaths.”
*airhorn blaring*
Jesus Christ, how (relatively) long is the delay between completing the level and the confirmation coming up? That would just shit the hell out of me! 😲
Crawling feeling all over my body looking at that sticker laden pear.
the key puzzle could probably also go based on number of holes in the handle part of the key, seemed to count up from 1
Matt actually so close to 1million congrats!
I like how it said "recommend for you"
Great video. You are the best RCE!
Stickers on pears are the worst! Their skins are so thin you end up skinning them. My OCD with these is that I’ve been sticking them on a cabinet edge to collect them as a reminder to buy and eat more fruits in the future.
4:54 He said my name
**sign of superiority**
Welp, time to play this game to satisfy my perfectionism
Matt "In our house, like many houses, we have a fruit bowl in our kitchen..."
Me "Yes?"
Matt "often filled with fruit."
Me "No!"
I love Matt with time story
I thought the keys puzzle was the amount of holes of the key holder side
Matt has clearly never heard of OCD... Or a parsnip, apparently
Some people have their cutlery 'the wrong way around' because they're left handed or just like it better that way
9:43 definitely do not take that out of context XD
7:22 - thats a crab fork..my grandma has those
You don’t know what OCD means, do you?
Does it matter?
@@splitfire3114 I mean, considering how many people clearly have no idea how OCD affects people, it kinda does.
I could make like an hour plus video of things Matt said out of context lol
I love this channel, but it really rubs me the wrong way when people reduce OCD to just "being neat and tidy" or a perfectionist. A lot of people, myself included, have spent their lives struggling with this disorder and reducing it to people being quirky and perfectionistic does damage to us as a community.
Hello there fellow A
I don't have ocd, but with these things it is very difficult because there are so many ways of interpreting. For me there is also a diffrence between ocd-joke and ocd- diagnoses. Or any joke and diagnoses.
A diagnoses means you suffer. And a joke doesn't really have anything to do with that.
But what your comment made me think about, and I don't know if it is an accurate thought, but the game won't let you move on unless you do it 'right' that might be one paralel.
@@rodepet The game isn't the issue so much as it is the reductive jokes and comments that RCE makes and has made in other videos about OCD. Spreading a destructive stereotype needs to be addressed.
@@apta9931 how is it destructive? Just curious.
@@apta9931 I feel like people on the Internet can tell between a mistake, a joke or an actual attack tbh.
From big book to small book.. not the other way around! Damn my OCD is rising.. oh my
the sticker story same goes to me, but i stick it on my mug
When you procrastinate to play this game, instead of cleaning your actual house..
I actually have one of those pineapple carrot things for my cats.
The plate one made me laugh cos I use my knife in my left hand so that's perfect for me!
As far as your "broken screwdriver" it looks like its likely a seam ripper used in sewing.
About the dinner setting:
Yes, actually a lot.
You very much satisfied me in that way with this video
FINALLY!!! THE RETURN OF STORY WITH MATT!!!
1:05 Fun Fact of the day wild carrots, before they became the orange cultivar we know today, were actually white, there are even ancient lineages of purple variants still found in the middle east and central asia
"broken screwdriver". It's a cheese dipping stick
"I leave that last bit of fruit for my gf because I cba to peel off all the stickers" YOU PUT THEM THERE 😂
4:42 funniest ever
I always fix dinner settings when I sit. Move fork to right hand. Done it for the past 30 years, and will probably do it for the rest of my life.
This game is incredibly triggers my OCD actually.
I’m following along with the game and mine looks different especially the drawer one
I am mildly infuriated by the fact he called OCD a disease and I don’t know why
It kinda is, it's a disorder that makes our lives much harder. I have it, and it kinda does feel like a disease.
I think disease has a negative connotation. When most people think disease I believe they think of something that can infect others, a thing to be sheltered from, something unclean. Mental disorders are NOT spread like that which is why it’s probably so infuriating.
this ought to be fun
OCD is not a "community." It is a debilitating condition and incredibly hard to live with.
Exactly
Although the definition does say "...or having a particular characteristic in common."
Not debating the debilitating condition though, severe cases are indescribably difficult in daily life.
I have a issue where if i touch something and im conscious i want to wash my hands. If i stamp something i pray. If i touch something cold with my right hand i have to touch it with my left hand. I get triggered a bit when RCE does the stupid parallel roads. But.... im unorganized. I refuse to make my bed as soon as i wake up don't care about where i put my stuff. Im not sure where i lie at. Ocd or no ocd.
@@bowxfire5275 I suffer from it fairly heavily and the way I think about it is that OCD only makes sense in an internal context. You may seem disorganized from the outside, but in your head every one of your actions make sense and follow your logic.
@@gatito.Fantasma i also have a thing where if i see a unread message somewhere i have to read it and mark it as read. See a button somewhere? I really want to click it.
The stickers goes in the orange so you can peel it later and throw them away at the same time.
My guy just called OCD a disease
The fact he wondered what an fondue fork is for.... (7:21)
Rce i really recomend you the game the odyssey of the mammoth its really fun ;)
polska
Ja też
Play the full version!
That was a pickle fork Matt.
It triggers me when not all of my books are the same height lol.