Obsessive compulsive disorder - OCD treatment and therapy from NOCD

Living with OCD

We're creating resources to help people learn about OCD in the many ways it impacts their own lives—not just what it looks like on paper. You can search our resources to determine when your intrusive thoughts may be related to OCD.

12 min read
The mind-body link: How does physical health affect mental health? 

Holistic health includes more than what you see on the surface. Mental health and physical health are deeply intertwined. The well-being of one can

By Patrick McGrath, PhD

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8 min read
OCD and Eating Disorders: Understanding the Relationship

When you think about your relationship with food, you might have certain preferences or behaviors that lead you to wonder, “What’s really going on here?”

By Jenna Demmer

Reviewed by Hilary Stein, MSW, LCSW

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9 min read
Can OCD affect your sex life?

The short answer is: Yes. But stick with us because there’s a lot you should know about the connection between obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and the

By Elle Warren

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6 min read
The right OCD therapist changed Noelle Lepore’s life—So she became one herself

You could always spot Noelle Lepore in her high school cafeteria. She was the girl who wouldn't eat until all her prayers were done. She would have loved

By David Berreby

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6 min read
Worried about giving your kids OCD? What research and experts say

Lately, there’s been some pretty controversial chatter on social media about whether people with OCD should choose a partner without mental health issues

By Tia Wilson

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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4 min read
Anthony Wilkins isn’t afraid to sit through the hard work

We’re incredibly proud of the therapists in the NOCD network. While all of them are trained in delivering evidence-based treatment

By Jessica Migala

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11 min read
How Sam Temple Learned To Live With Uncertainty

You might assume Sam Temple has led an easy life. At 22 she was a young artist who'd just arrived in Los Angeles from her native Georgia. Now, four years

By David Berreby

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3 min read
Hiding your OCD can be a burden. Here’s how you can let it go

In my many years of working alongside people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), I know that they can be some of the most compassionate and

By Stacy Quick, LPC

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8 min read
I always think I have cancer. Am I just paranoid?

If you’re prone to worrying about your health, you’re not alone. Everyone experiences health anxieties from time to time. For many, these concerns are

By Elle Warren

Reviewed by Patrick McGrath, PhD

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7 min read
Cannabis and OCD: Does weed help OCD or make it worse?

There’s no doubt that attitudes towards cannabis are shifting. Recreational marijuana use is now legal in 24 U.S. states, and claims around what it can do

By Elle Warren

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9 min read
The day my brain broke

The OCD community needs to come together to talk more openly about taboo themes. These themes are far more common than anyone realizes and people are suffering in silence. Hearing others talk about their experiences can save lives. I wish my 13-year-old self could have learned about it sooner. I wish she could have been a part of the OCD community that I have today.

By Sarah

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15 min read
My battle with existential OCD

OCD will be part of my life until my last breath.  It’s a hard thing to live with, and it’s not fun.  But, I do have the ability to not let it destroy my life, and have a proven track record to show for it. 

By Brian Yamstein

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12 min read
Putting both feet in the water

Since starting my recovery journey with NOCD, my life has changed and is much more positive than I could have ever imagined. OCD moments still happen daily, but they no longer take up days, weeks, or months. They are moments that do not control my life, and my recovery includes understanding that OCD isn’t going anywhere. It’s going to be here, and it is up to me to decide the role I let it play.

By Breck W.

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4 min read
OCD won’t take away who I am

I felt like I had no control. I had no control over my compulsions. I felt completely powerless over the things my illness wanted me to do. It was as if a kidnapper was holding me hostage, and spewing troubling words constantly into my brain. Instead, it was not a kidnapper. It was not a real, evil person trying to manipulate me. It was just a chemical imbalance in my brain that made me see life so much differently. I was so much stronger than my thoughts, so why was I letting them take everything from me?

By Daisy

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6 min read
Picking your face or pulling your hair? You may have a BFRB

Now, as an ERP specialist with a BFRB specialty, I find it fun to be experimental with my own OCD.  At first, this treatment feels like torture. It's hard.  You feel like sometimes you're going to fail or that you can't handle it.  But guess what?  We're here to show you that you can handle it and you're going to eventually tolerate the heck out of it. 

By Alessandra

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8 min read
Sensorimotor OCD: Conquering shame and embracing uncertainty

I hope my story can give hope to someone else who is in a dark place. I was convinced that my OCD was treatment-resistant and that I was the “special” case that ERP wouldn’t work for. I was wrong, and I’m so glad I took a chance to reclaim my life. I now embrace my identity as someone who will always have OCD. The harder days don’t mean that things can’t improve, and having a mental illness doesn’t mean I can’t live a full and meaningful life. 

By Haley Biddanda

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8 min read
Living in the maybes

While compulsively googling,  I found an article about harm-themed OCD. It finally clicked. I now knew that I was dealing with OCD and had been for a long time. It had gone undiagnosed. It was then that I realized that what I had thought were actual suicidal thoughts previously were actually a form of OCD called suicidal-themed OCD. OCD had been causing confusion and disruption throughout my life. The article I found linked me to NOCD. I set up a call right away. I have now been working with my NOCD specialist for 6 months. This decision was life-altering. I am now living in recovery with OCD.

By Chelsea R.

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6 min read
Survivor, not a victim

After college, I went back to school to become a nurse. I remember being so excited about starting my career and looking back at all the hard work I did to get to where I was. It wasn’t until I started working as a nurse that my OCD decided to take the stage. I would excessively check to make sure I didn’t make a medication error and make sure I completed all my documentation. OCD thrived on my fear of losing everything I worked so hard for.

By Juan L.

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7 min read
OCD will not stop me

There may be other people suffering in silence, just like me 2 years ago, who can't find a way out and who don’t understand what’s wrong with them. I want everyone to know, no matter how tough you are, no matter what the circumstances, please speak up if you are struggling with thoughts like mine. There is a light at the end of the tunnel, but you have to get past many obstacles in the process. But you will get there. Don’t let mental health get in the way of your hopes and dreams, I know I certainly won’t.

By Max Persad

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7 min read
Trusting the unknown

Try and understand, and educate yourself about what OCD is all about and what it isn’t about. Too many people have the wrong idea about this very debilitating illness. If you are struggling, don’t be ashamed to ask for help. Reach out to those around you. Talk to people, and get the help that you need. You don’t need to suffer alone. I did that for too long. There is hope. I feel so happy now, even after having some bad days still. I know that the word “therapy” may sound scary to many people, it is trying to trust the unknown. It is unpredictable. It is uncertain- everything OCD hates.

By Dany Grimwood

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