When ROCD Targets Attraction, Chemistry, and Sex

For many people with Relationship OCD (ROCD), the doubt doesn’t stay abstract for long. It often narrows in on very specific and personal questions that can be hard to talk about, such as whether you are attracted enough to your partner, if you want sex as much as you think you should, or if the chemistry just isn’t right.
Why Relief Isn’t the Goal in OCD Recovery

If you are doing the work in OCD recovery and still feel anxious, it does not mean treatment is failing.
Let’s talk about why relief is not the goal of recovery and how real progress often comes before anxiety fades.
The Difference Between Thinking Carefully and Thinking Compulsively

OCD doesn’t only show up in behavior. For many people, it shows up in the way they think.
Financial OCD: When Anxiety Controls Your Money

Most people feel some anxiety about money from time to time. Wondering if you paid a bill, regretting a purchase, or worrying about the future is part of being human.
Climbing the Exposure Ladder: Learning to Sit with Discomfort, Step by Step

Imagine standing at the base of a steep mountain trail. You’re not here to sprint to the summit. You’re here to climb slowly, deliberately—step by step. And yes, you’re carrying a backpack full of discomfort.
What Ritual Prevention Really Means in OCD Recovery

When most people picture obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), they think of handwashing until the skin cracks or checking the stove five, ten, twenty times.
When OCD Turns on Itself: Understanding Meta OCD

It’s one of the more unsettling experiences in OCD recovery: you start to gain ground, feel more confident, even have moments of relief—and then suddenly, a new wave of anxiety hits.
When OCD Latches onto Real-Life Risks—Why It Happens and How to Break Free

OCD doesn’t just create random, irrational fears. One of the trickiest and most distressing parts of the disorder is its ability to latch onto real-life situations—mistakes we’ve actually made, health concerns that are legitimate, or relationship conflicts that genuinely need attention.
What Is “Pure O” OCD? Understanding the Invisible Struggle

When people think of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), they often picture physical compulsions—excessive handwashing, repeatedly checking locks, or arranging objects symmetrically.
Breaking Free from OCD: Understanding, Managing, and Reclaiming Your Life

Living with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) can feel like being trapped on a never-ending rollercoaster of anxiety and doubt. One moment, you’re overwhelmed by a disturbing thought or worry; the next, you’re performing rituals or mental checks, hoping to ease the fear.