Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is an anxiety disorder,
first and foremost. It is not a thought disorder. Although the thoughts
associated with OCD are bizarre, they are not at all the focal point of the
therapeutic objective. The essential features of OCD are recurrent obsessions
(thoughts) that create an awareness of alarm or threat. (e.g., "I might get AIDS
from the germs on that door knob;" "Since I had the thought of killing my baby,
I might be capable of doing it;" "If I don't pick up that Band-Aid someone else
might get sick from it, and I would hold myself culpable;" etc.). Persons
typically engage in some avoidance or escape response in reaction to the
obsessive threat (I typically refer to the obsessive threat as a "spike.").
Obsessions take the form of either a perceived threat of physical harm to
oneself or others or, in some cases, more of a metaphysical or spiritual threat
to oneself, others, or perhaps a deity. I conceptualize the overall syndrome of
OCD to consist of three primary branches. Within all three branches, in
approximately 80% of all cases, persons performing these rituals are painfully
aware that their behavior is unreasonable and irrational (see Speak of the
Devil). However this insight provides no relief. Therefore attempting to help
sufferers through reassurance has no long lasting positive effect.
It is not unusual for people to question whether they might qualify for a
diagnosis of OCD given that most of the following examples are not unlike what
most of us do to a limited degree on an everyday basis. Everyday examples of OCD
like behavior include using one's foot to flush a toilet, knocking on wood three
times to ward of a bad omen, throwing salt over one's shoulder for a positive
future, or feeling inspired to say "God forbid!" after mentioning the potential
death of a living person. Simplistic tests to determine whether these behaviors
cross the line into the OCD realm include asking yourself how much money it
would take for you not to perform the safe behavior. Persons operating in the
non-OCD realm would most likely accept between $10 to $100 to do something that
would make them feel uncomfortable. Persons with OCD typically would not accept
upwards in the neighborhood of $100,000 to face their feared concern. Another
criterion involves the degree to life's disruption. We all have quirks that take
up small bits of the day. Very often, people wrestling with OCD invest hours of
their day avoiding these concerns. All of us periodically hear a song (typically
a noxious one) repeat itself like a broken record, playing over and over again
in our mind. For the great majority of us the repetitiousness of this becomes
mildly annoying, for persons with OCD the intolerance and rejection of this
mental experience generates a tremendous amount of agitation and anxiety over
losing control of one's mind!
The most common and well-studied branch of OCD involves the OC where the undoing
response generally involves some overt behavior. The most commonly thought of
form of OCD involves contamination. Here an awareness of germs, disease, or the
mere presence of dirt evokes a sense of threat and an incredible inspiration to
reduce the presence of these contaminants. Most commonly the escape ritual
involves a cleaning response (e.g., hand washing, chronic cleaning). The next
most common form of OCD involves checking. Typically checking involves door
locks, light switches, faucets, stoves or items that left unchecked might pose a
risk to either one's well-being or the well-being of others. It is not at all
uncommon for persons with this manifestation to check items between 10 to 100
times. The overwhelming impulse to recheck remains until the person experiences
a reduction in tension despite the realization that the item is secure.
Less common forms of OCD include hoarding, which is the excessive saving of
typically worthless items such as junk mail, or excessive purchasing of certain
items (e.g., owning hundreds of pairs of shoes). Other typically hoarded items
include garbage, novelty items, or magazines and newspapers. A common rationale
given to justify obsessive-compulsive hoarding behavior is an overriding fear
that one day these items might come in handy or be of some value and therefore
must not be thrown away. Another subgroup of hoarders involves persons who
become emotionally attached to the items or feel that these items hold some
emotional significance that reflects a particular moment in time. The person
feels that relinquishing the item is in some way tantamount to releasing a past
experience or association with a significant other.
Ordering is a subcategory where persons feel compelled to place items in a
designated spot or order. This person fears a sense of being overwhelmed and
impending anarchy if items are not placed exactly as they are arbitrarily
determined. Persons with this condition typically line up items in parallel
locations, but the focus is on the concept that each item belongs in a
particular place. Another form of OCD is perfectionism, in which persons feel
compelled to habitually check for potential mistakes or errors that might reveal
their own faults or might jeopardize the person's stature at work.
The next branch discussed will be the purely obsessional OC (Pure-O, see
Thinking the Unthinkable ). The objective in this classification involves the
escape or avoidance (through excessive mental behavior) of noxious and unwanted
thoughts. In its most generic form, persons might have upsetting words or
phrases repeated in their head, not unlike what most experience when an
unpleasant song is played over and over in our mind without our active choice in
it being there. Persons with the Pure-O classification also can experience what
seems to them to be threatening ideation involving the potential that they might
do harm to others or that merely the idea of having the threatening thought
suggests something evil or depraved about their identity, capability, or self
worth. This classification periodically also involves persons who engage in a
tremendous amount of problem solving (also referred to as ruminating), as a
ritual. Endless attempts to answer questions related to one's own sexual
orientation or even something as simplistic as the name of one's third grade
teacher might occupy endless hours of problem solving.
This classification also involves persons with a heightened sense of
superstitiousness, in which, for example, certain numbers might take on a great
significance related to positive or negative outcomes. Typically, positive
numbers or perhaps the number "seven" involve a greater likelihood for safety or
permission to proceed with a given task. Other numbers forewarn of something
ominous about to happen. These persons typically engage in elaborate touching or
counting rituals to ensure that the safe or desirable number is the one upon
which the task or thought is to be ended. Superstitiousness need not be limited
to numbers. The old quirky childhood games of avoiding cracks or walking under
ladders takes on a significance beyond most people's ability to comprehend.
The last branch involves a somewhat more complex and difficult to treat form of
OCD. That is responsibility OC (hyperscrupulosity). Here, the person's concern
is not for themself, but directed toward the well-being of others. Typically,
significant others (although sometimes society at large) are thought of as the
predominant focus on which to prevent harm from coming. The responsibility OC
might take on a Pure-O form such as getting a noxious thought that some harm
might come to someone else. And the person might feel compelled to pray in a way
to stave off that harm coming to another. Also the responsibility OC might
engage in elaborate cleansing rituals to prevent others from receiving germs or
diseases which he or she may be carrying, yet feels no fear for his own
well-being. Persons with this form of OC often engage in warning others about
possible risks or cleansing their environment of possible risks to others at
large. Persons with responsibility OC often engage in excesses for another's
distress or danger, so as not to be held culpable. The reason this form is
particularly difficult to treat is the combination of anxiety in association
with the risk and guilt at being responsible for adversity happening to others.
More obscure forms of OCD involve body dysmorphia. Body dysmorphia is a
condition wherein persons become excessively focused on some body part, which
they perceive to be grossly malformed. Typically, the area that a person with
body dysmorphia focuses upon would never be thought of as a defect to others in
the person's peer group. Persons with body dysmorphia engage in elaborate
checking rituals to try to gain reassurance or assess the severity of their
deformity in the mirror or go for repeated plastic surgery or often engage
others in the attempt to gain reassurance in the absence of the problem. Another
obscure sub-classification of OCD involves an olfactory obsession in which
persons are entrenched in the idea that some part of their body is emitting a
noxious aroma. Typically, the areas that the person is convinced emits the
noxious smell involve genitalia, breath, feet, or underarms.
The last form of OCD involves a preoccupation with the potential of having some
physical malady, typically cancer or some life threatening disease. This
condition continues to be referred to as hypochondriasis and exists in the DSM-IIIR
as a separate disorder from OCD. However, like body dysmorphic disorder, the
symptoms and endless search for reassurance fall completely under the diagnostic
category of OCD.
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