Hello all,
I just wanted to share an experience with you, hopefully to encourage us all to continue to "fight the good fight."
As many of you know, I went off my meds for a while. I thought (problem #1
) that it would force me to deal with this problem and not avoid it. Well, let's just say it was ok for a while, then it blew up and I was back in the pit
.
This experience made me realize how REAL ocd is
.
So, with God's strength, I went after it hard. I got a psychiatrist, a great psychologist, who specializes in intrusive thoughts, got back on meds, and began exposure therapy. Things were hard at first, then after a couple of weeks, I began to feel much better. I felt like I was really under grace, and I was able to see myself as a new creation in Christ, which I think we all struggle to do. I started to see the thoughts as harmless symptoms.
Well, the past few days my ocd has been getting the better of me. Looking back, I think what has started to happen is, I felt better, so I expected more of myself and then the thoughts were a disappointment. I may have let my guard down and began to once again fight the thoughts, and thereby heating up the battle. I also started to feel a bit "spiritually dry," which I think is just a mood more than a reality. Maybe I am over-rationalizing, but when the thoughts accompanied the "dryness," I became upset over them and ocd began "putting points back on the board." Does anybody know what I mean?
In my mind, this leads me to realize tree things:
1. OCD is chronic, and almost seems to "mutate," so as to catch us off guard.
2. Victory or success may have led me to more self-reliance, and I began to place myself back in that self-judgement seat -- where God, not me, belongs.
3. I must keep focused on what God is doing, not what I am thinking.
This is a marathon, not a sprint:
Keep on, keep on, keep on!
I just wanted to share an experience with you, hopefully to encourage us all to continue to "fight the good fight."
As many of you know, I went off my meds for a while. I thought (problem #1
. This experience made me realize how REAL ocd is
. So, with God's strength, I went after it hard. I got a psychiatrist, a great psychologist, who specializes in intrusive thoughts, got back on meds, and began exposure therapy. Things were hard at first, then after a couple of weeks, I began to feel much better. I felt like I was really under grace, and I was able to see myself as a new creation in Christ, which I think we all struggle to do. I started to see the thoughts as harmless symptoms.
Well, the past few days my ocd has been getting the better of me. Looking back, I think what has started to happen is, I felt better, so I expected more of myself and then the thoughts were a disappointment. I may have let my guard down and began to once again fight the thoughts, and thereby heating up the battle. I also started to feel a bit "spiritually dry," which I think is just a mood more than a reality. Maybe I am over-rationalizing, but when the thoughts accompanied the "dryness," I became upset over them and ocd began "putting points back on the board." Does anybody know what I mean?
In my mind, this leads me to realize tree things:
1. OCD is chronic, and almost seems to "mutate," so as to catch us off guard.
2. Victory or success may have led me to more self-reliance, and I began to place myself back in that self-judgement seat -- where God, not me, belongs.
3. I must keep focused on what God is doing, not what I am thinking.
This is a marathon, not a sprint:
Keep on, keep on, keep on!
Thanks for the encouragement.