
What can you do?
In my previous blog How do Obsessive Compulsive People Think? I describe eleven characteristics of OCD thinking:

What can you do?
In my previous blog How do Obsessive Compulsive People Think? I describe eleven characteristics of OCD thinking:
1. Triggers for your obsessions
2. "Odd" thoughts or images
3. Negative evaluation of thoughts
4. Self-monitoring
5. Demand for certainty
6. Thought-action fusion.
7. Thought-suppression
8. "I've lost control"
9. Compulsions
10. Felt sense of completion
11. Avoidance of triggers
You probably have seen a lot of your own thinking in this. But what can you do about this? In one of my blogs, Those Damn Unwanted Thoughts!, I describe your "failed strategies", and why they fail. Just as you can't run away from your hips, you can't get rid of your thoughts. Thought control and thought suppression don't work. Worse---they make you feel more hopeless.

I lay out a number of ways of changing the way that you relate to your thinking. Rather than view your thinking as the "enemy", you can try the following:
1. Prove that thought suppression doesn't work. Example: Try not to think of white bears for the next thirty minutes. Oops. There's another white bear. It won't work.
2. Prove that thoughts don't control reality. Example: If you think that Satan will possess you, beg him to possess you. It won't work.
4. Float your obsession. Example: Rather than trying to get rid of your obsession, imagine it is a tiny piece of wood floating ever-so-gently down a stream. Watch it in your mind's eye. Imagine yourself breathing out as it floats away. Let it return and float past once again and breathe it away. (I'm imagining that if you do this enough you will get sleepy.)
In future blogs we will look at how you can change your relationship to your obsessive thoughts-rather than trying to suppress them, we will see how you can "make space" for them. It's like a relative at a big picnic--- you can tolerate him without feeling like he occupies your entire mind.
She's successful and charming as well as ruthless and calculating.