Let’s have an ugly, raw, rough conversation. It’s a conversation about ‘bad thoughts’ and it’s well and truly overdue.
Have you ever had a thought that made you cringe? Like seeing a train approaching and seeing yourself jumping in front of it? Or – worse – pushing the lady in front of you onto the train tracks? What about seeing your baby in the bath and seeing yourself drowning him?
Upsetting? Yes. Anxiety-inducing? Yes. Weird? Nope. A staggering 4 out of 5 people experience these ‘intrusive thoughts’. But, for 1 in 50, these thoughts become harder to dismiss. They take a darker turn and hone in on the subjects we find most disturbing.
For those people who suffer from a form of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder commonly referred to as Pure OCD (referring to the focus being on obsessions, generally without any noticeable physical compulsions) intrusive thoughts can become all-consuming and target commonly delicate and taboo subjects like sex, violence and blasphemy (see, I told you we were going to get ugly).
It’s a normal human phenomena – thinking about things we don’t want to think about – and the funny and cruel twist is that the more you don’t want to think about something, the more it pops into your head. And, despite it being staggeringly common, people are still suffering in silence all over the world. Some, so much so, they don’t make it out of their darkness. They’re so convinced they’re the only person in the world who has these thoughts and so, they decide the world be better without them.
Just over a year ago I shared a story about my journey with postnatal OCD (also referred to as postpartum OCD or postnatal Anxiety). The illness is a subset of its parent OCD and often mimics that of pure OCD.