When OCD starts to take over your thinking
A lot of people come to therapy with a thought cycle they don’t know is Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. They describe it as getting stuck in their own head in a way that feels hard to explain.
You might notice thoughts showing up that feel intrusive or unsettling, and instead of passing, they stay. You try to reason with them, push them away, or make sense of them, but they keep coming back.
Some clients describe it as a thought that hooks them. Once it shows up, it feels difficult to move on without doing something to resolve it.
For some, this shows up in visible ways. You might leave the house and go back to check the door multiple times, even though you remember locking it. You might reread messages repeatedly to make sure nothing could be interpreted the wrong way.
For others, it is more internal. You may replay events in your mind, trying to feel certain about what happened or what you meant. You may try to mentally correct or neutralize a thought because it feels wrong or uncomfortable.
A common statement is, I know this does not make sense, but I cannot let it go.
At that point, it is not just a thought. It becomes a pattern that starts to take up time, attention, and energy, and it becomes difficult to move forward without responding to it in some way.