Home→Forums→Relationships→So confused…
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August 16, 2016 at 6:13 pm #112536pinkiepopsParticipant
So I did write a post a few weeks ago about my ex and how we’d broken up as things had got lazy and I wasn’t happy. But long story short, this weekend just gone he messaged me and said he missed me, I’d missed him too and after a lot of talking and him assuring me the things that made things go wrong between us before, weren’t applicable anymore, we decided to get back together as we really do love each other.
The thing is, I’m going on holiday to the states in three weeks (I live in Australia) and the thought of going there and being with someone just fills me with an anxiety I can’t explain. I’m diagnosed with thought OCD so basically once something is in my head, I obsess and i go over and over and over things. I constantly think i’m cheating or doing something wrong, even if I just talk to another guy. I know if I go away and I’m with him, I simply won’t enjoy my holiday, it will trigger major anxiety.
Also, I feel guilty but i was genuinely enjoying single life. Not because I could get with other guys, but because I felt free, and because I didn’t have any commitment to anyone, my OCD couldn’t focus on anything as I was ‘single’. So I was just happy and felt no weight on my shoulders at all. Now, although I love him more than life itself, i feel claustrophobic, anxious and like I did when he first broke up. i don’t know what to do. i don’t want to lose him, i’d like to marry him and have a baby one day but i don’t know how to get past all this or if I should even try.
it doesn’t help all of my friends think i’m better not being with him and they keep saying ‘you need to go to america single’ because then i feel like i’m cheating on myself, for spending so much on a trip of a lifetime when i’m not really even going to enjoy it.
I hope this makes sense.
Please someone help me 🙁
August 16, 2016 at 7:22 pm #112540AnonymousGuestDear pinkiepops:
Having had OCD since I was five or six, I may understand your predicament. It was interesting to me recently when I learned that OCDs are labeled by the nature of the obsession, and yours is ROCD, Relationship OCD. This is why being single you had a relief from ROCD.
People’s OCDs, that is the topic of obsession, changes. Sometimes OCD is .. gone and anxiety is expressed some other way. Anxiety, that is, excessive, ongoing fear is in the core of OCD as well as many diagnoses, probably most.
Your fear is nesting at the moment where it is. Have you been in therapy for OCD/ anxiety? Medication? Are you in the practice of relaxation techniques, such as breathing, meditation/ mindfulness, yoga, exercise…? Such practice before you leave to the U.S and during your stay there can help, as in the core of OCD, there is anxiety. Keep yourself calm, and the OCD will weaken.
The key is to not panic when you have a thought. The key in OCD is to disengage from the thought and observe it from a calm place. Once you have a thought, don’t drown in it. Instead, breathe deeply, in and out, imagine a calming scenery and watch the thought drift through your scenery like a cloud in the sky. Here it is and there it is gone. There are such guided meditations, observing thoughts pass by. You may want to download such and take those with you on your travel.
Does your boyfriend know about your ROCD? Your predicament about going to the U.S? If you explain it to him he may cooperate with you and break up just for the purpose of your travel. Then re-unite when you are back.
If you want to back up your explanation to him, about ROCD, you can google Psych Forums, there click OCD and you will see posts regarding ROCD. You can share some of these with him so he can understand that indeed (like other young people share there), you are not planning on dating anyone in the U.S. You are experiencing an “intrusive thought” about dating someone. Not different than this common obsession in OCD sufferers: thinking after driving that one ran over a person on the road even though it didn’t happen. Often the person drives back and checks, even though nothing happened. The thought of having driven over someone is an intrusive thought not based on reality just like your thought about dating someone in the U.S.
anita
August 16, 2016 at 7:45 pm #112546pinkiepopsParticipantThank you so much for your reply.
My OCD does actually change to what I’m obsessing about at the time but at the moment, you’re right, it’s focused on my relationship. I have had counselling at a specialist clinic but still sometimes it’s so consuming and hard to control even with the right ‘tools’. And then of course, there’s the whole doubting yourself and “is it really OCD or am I using that as an excuse?” It’s exhausting.
My BF does know about it and is extremely supportive, takes me to counselling sessions and doesn’t get mad, just listens and comforts.
I just worry that I’m not ready for this relationship I guess and that I am in fact happier being single. Of course we all like a harmless flirt from time to time, but even just looking at a boy means I convince myself I’ve cheated.
Also, I have been with a few different guys since we broke up – I guess my way of coping (wasn’t interested in the sex side, but liked sleeping next to someone else) and I also feel extreme guilt from that and that entices my OCD too “see you do want to cheat, look how easy it was for you to move on”
I’m so tired.
August 16, 2016 at 7:56 pm #112548AnonymousGuestDear pinkiepops:
Maybe you have OCD and you are not ready for a relationship. In your first thread you clearly stated that you wish you could be in a relationship so to make him happy, because you felt so guilty imagining him sad.
It seems to me that you are not ready for a relationship and that you have things to work on in therapy first, before considering a relationship and while not dating at all.
Can you explain this to your on-again-off-again boyfriend? Just tell him you are … not well and you are very sorry for the trouble, that you very much regret your part in this on-again-off-again, but you can’t handle (no matter how intensely you want to make him happy!)- you just can not handle having a relationship.
End it and keep it ended so you can be free and he has the opportunity to move on. I think it is best for the two of you.
anita
August 16, 2016 at 8:26 pm #112552pinkiepopsParticipantI’ve had a chance to think in the last couple of months and I do want to be with him, our issues that were making me so unhappy have actually disappeared (i’d prefer to keep what this was private though) and I do want to give it another go for sure.
August 16, 2016 at 8:31 pm #112553pinkiepopsParticipantI feel like by breaking up with him as well I’m allowing my OCD to win/control me – as breaking up with him isn’t what I actually want
August 16, 2016 at 8:45 pm #112555AnonymousGuestDear pinkiepops:
The OCD is a symptom of your anxiety, it is not a separate entity that shouldn’t win. There is no It and You. If you are suffering, and you are suffering, you need relief. You need to stop the suffering.
Heal your anxiety first, then have a relationship. Be friends with the guy, even best friends but not gf/ bf at this point, not before some significant healing of your anxiety takes place.
anita
August 17, 2016 at 7:20 pm #112701SerenaParticipantDear pinkiepops,
Just following up after your other post. Oddly enough, I’ve done this too.. I’ve taken back my boyfriend after a few days.. so be it.. because he too, said he missed me and just couldn’t take the break. I missed him too, I did. I bet like me, it was truly hard for you to follow through with this. Maybe like I responded to your previous post (just now) the problem was communication.. maybe it was something else. As long as it’s an issue that can be worked through. One of the hardest things is learning when to walk away. I hope you’re truly happy. It’s important to be honest with yourself. Relationships are hard work, and as much as some people like to say they aren’t they are. It takes a fair amount of balance and love between the two people to make everything work. Problems will arise, that’s natural. To clarify, I was also the type to have a very specific idea of a relationship and would give up easily when it wouldn’t go my way. Just in case you resonate with any of that. Anyway I recently read an article about relinquishing control. Often times, we do things like freak out, jump to conclusions, or even break up with someone, because we’re scared and that I totally get. But that’s what makes love and relationships so much better. It’s scary, but sometimes when we let go that’s when we can really feel love thrive. I hope what I’ve said has been somewhat helpful.
I really wish you all the love and happiness that life has to offer.
-S
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