Living With Sexual Intrusive Thoughts
- I have OCD – Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
- I’m going to explain what that means, because not enough people understand.
- It’s not what you might think.
- It’s irrational, it’s cruel and it’s so, so frightening.
- ‘Obsessive’ – means obsessional thoughts and feelings that you just can’t let go.
- Terrifying thoughts (they can be impulses too).
- My obsessions are upsetting obsessional sexual thoughts.
- Thoughts that I could do something awful – filling me with anxiety.
- Constantly repeating in my mind.
- ‘Compulsive’ – Compulsions are your reactions to these thoughts.
- Things you feel will stop the thoughts becoming real.
- My ‘Compulsions’ were very covert, invisible behaviours.
- I became a master at hiding them and didn’t always recognise them myself.
- A big one was avoidance.
- I’ve had times where I was terrified of being too close to members of my family for fear of doing something awful to them.
- Another was being overly aware of my hand placement. I would often sit on my hands to stop them acting on perceived impulses.
- I would argue with myself in my head for hours to the point of not being able to concentrate on much else. Once you start a dialogue with OCD you have lost against it.
- The obsessional sexual thoughts started when I was 19.
- I read something in a book about a young boy being abused (part of a plot line I wasn’t expecting) and became bombarded with intrusive thoughts.
- I became hyper sensitive to any news reports along that theme and my brain tormented me with the constant ‘what if’. ‘If they are capable, I am capable’.
- ‘What if. What if. What if…’
- It got so bad and so upsetting that I remember being alone in my room one day and screaming ‘JUST STOP’ over and over.
- I was terrified it meant I was an evil person capable of doing these things.
- I hunted desperately online for anyone else going through the same.
- I found hundreds of forums about ‘intrusive thoughts’.
- But so few people were talking about it without being anonymous, which made it still feel so shameful.
- Little did I know that reading these articles again and again was a compulsion that was feeding my obsessive thoughts.
- I lived through a rollercoaster of OCD episodes throughout my 20s.
- Panic attack after panic attack never being sure what was happening to me.
- Then I’d feel better.
- Then I thought I’d beaten it.
- Then I had my daughter.
- When she was three months old my OCD manifested itself as an irrational fear that I could abuse her.
- Despite knowing I may be hit with my OCD (it comes in waves of ‘episodes’) when she was born, my pregnancy was so good that I felt like I had a handle on it.
- It crept up on me when I was at my most sleep deprived and vulnerable.
- I saw a headline about the abuse of a child on Facebook and that was it, a huge trigger knocked me into the worst OCD episode I’ve experienced.
- At first I just bawled my eyes out, it haunted me for days and then suddenly it twisted. It filled me with dread that I could be capable of harming her.
- From then I became lost in a battle of compulsions.
- When my husband left the house I would spend hours crying curled in a ball on the sofa just reading about other people’s OCD experiences over and over.
- I could only just about bring myself to do the basics to look after my daughter.
- Then I had a series of days where I would leave the house with her straight after my husband left for work so I wouldn’t be alone with her.
- I didn’t realize that all of these behaviours were just fuelling my irrational belief and making me feel worse and worse.
- Any parent can tell you that the thought of threat to their child will make them feel sick to their stomach.
- The best way I can describe how my OCD felt is living with this constant sick feeling 24/7.
- The moment I woke up with her lying in her basket next to me.
- Every time I was alone with her, gave her a bath, changed her nappy.
- I knew I had to do something.
- I opened up to my husband, and a few close family and friends.
- I had waves of relief.
- They responded so compassionately and with such understanding I couldn’t quite believe it.
- This was the beginning of my road to recovery.
- After the initial relief I became overwhelmed with feelings of doubt.
- I became convinced I should be locked up so my daughter could be safe.
- I then completely broke down.
- I called my health visitor in floods of tears.
- She was so compassionate.
- She called the NHS crisis team to come to see me.
- My husband came home from work to look after us both.
- We waited and waited and no one came.
- I don’t want the focus of this to be about how underfunded the NHS is.
- But when you’re in the system you realize how true it is.
- I ended up walking myself to our local A&E.
- I was numb with fear.
- I laid there sobbing uncontrollably.
- They kept me over night.
- Most of the staff were incredibly supportive.
- But one Psychiatric Nurse had not come across OCD before.
- She mentioned social services.
- I completely clammed up and refused to speak to her.
- That moment was so damaging to me.
- I was petrified they would not let me see my daughter.
- The next morning my husband and daughter came up to see me.
- Just thinking about this moment is so heartbreaking.
- It must have been difficult for him to see me like that.
- That was the lowest moment in this whole journey.
- Now for the positive stuff.
- I’m getting better.
- I barely remember the horrific feelings.
- I ended up being officially diagnosed twice.
- Once on the NHS and once privately at The Priory.
- They were both the same — Obsessive Compulsive Disorder — I needed to hear it from two Psychiatrists.
- Getting a diagnosis is so important.
- Exposure therapy (a specific form of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy) saved me.
My ‘Compulsions’ were very covert, invisible behaviours.
I became a master at hiding them and didn’t always recognise them myself.
Kim French
- I did ten weeks of weekly sessions.
- It set me truly on the road to recovery – I still go every few months.
- I take an antidepressant called Sertaline.
- It works for me.
- I might stop taking it one day.
- I might not.
- Right now I’m not prepared to rock the boat.
- I also believe strongly in shaking the stigma attached to taking medication for your mental health.
- Getting better is a process.
- You have to be dedicated.
- You have to be unimaginably brave.
- There is so much to it.
- Here are a few things I’ve learned:
- Recognizing is not enough.
- I did that.
- 7 years ago I went to a mental health clinic when I was living out in Canada.
- They said I had OCD, but it was like I wasn’t really listening.
- I felt that I’d done my part by acknowledging that there was something wrong.
- The moment I started to feel a bit better I just carried on without addressing it.
- Don’t push the thoughts away.
- Let them in.
- Accept them and let them be there.
- Eventually they will subside naturally.
- Stop your compulsions.
- This sounds near impossible.
- It will fill you with fear and anxiety.
- But you must stop or delay them as long as possible as they are fuelling your obsessions.
- My little girl is almost 2 now, she is the happiest little thing (aside from those tantrums!).
- I now feel like I am able to be the mom I want to be.
- A strong one.
- If I can make it through this, then I can take on anything life throws at me. Even being back at work and dealing with teething and nights of little sleep feels like a doddle compared to battling my OCD.
- I also volunteer for the charity Maternal OCD, the women who run it, Diana and Maria were an incredible support to me. You can read other success stories on their website – https://maternalocd.org/