Do I have mental repression? Is obsessive compulsive disorder a type of psychosis?

Updated on healthy 2024-05-21
20 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    I'm similar to you, I'm obsessive-compulsive, I just keep thinking about a problem, like.

    1+1=2, I always think about it, in fact, I know it's equal to 2, but I will continue to think about it. What is 1+1?

    You should be obsessive-compulsive behavior, you say that you don't close the window, I think it should be because you already know that it's off, but there is also a consciousness that tells you that it's not off, but in fact, you know it's off, but if you don't turn it off, you will be sad. Be sure to do it repeatedly.

    I only have it recently, and I recently listened to a special lecture on oppression on the Internet, and it was somewhat useful. Hope it helps you too. You have time to listen, you have to go, or it doesn't get worse, and it will develop into other things, such as when you feel that your hands are not clean, and you wash them when you get old.

    Maybe it will take you a few hours to wash.

    272166485 my QQ, have time to add me.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Only once? I think it's normal, sometimes I lock the door and think it's not locked properly. But I'm not going to come back to see it, hehe.

    There seems to be a universality to this mentality. If you don't feel like this all the time, you don't have to think about it at all, the more you think about it, the more you think about it, the more you look like that, you don't want him, they're nothing.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    This is called obsessive-compulsive disorder and is not mentally oppressive.

    It can be cured by exercise.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    There are mild obsessive-compulsive symptoms, and the severity depends on how much distress you have caused in your life when you have the time of day when you have the behavior. It is recommended to test according to a scale (Yale Brown Scale).

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    .If you have compulsive behavior, you can consult a professional, otherwise it is dangerous to think crankily on your own, because your behavior is not dangerous, but the psychological burden is very large.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    It's obsessive-compulsive disorder, I want to open something, don't worry about everything.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    It's so scary.,It's like a ghost story again.。

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Forced levy. There are so many people who have this kind of disease now.

    Talk to a psychologist. It is resolved when the condition is not very serious.

    Know that this is very common. But the process is unbearable.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Take a look at a psychiatrist, they can give you better answers......

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    I sometimes have this phenomenon!

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Based on what you presented, I think you have "neurosis", which is a high-level neurological disorder caused by nervousness. Neurosis is not a psychosis and can be alleviated and cured with proper ** and self-regulation.

    There are many types of neurosis, and the main ones you suffer from are phobias (fear of closing rooms and fear of uncleanness) and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The causes of neurosis are often complex, for example, it may come from childhood.

    One or two shocks, recent setbacks in life and work, etc., are also related to the personality characteristics of the patient.

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder and phobias should be psychologically oriented (direct help from a psychologist is of course the best), and there are many specific methods. Since you live in a rural area and don't have easy access to psychologists, here's a simple way to do phobia – exposure. This is done by going straight to the place where your terror is causing you, on the premise of recognizing that terror is "not really necessary".

    Stay for 15-30 minutes, repeating daily, until the horror subsides. At first, the fear may be intense (consider taking a small amount of tranquilizers or being accompanied by family and friends), but as the number of repetitions increases, the fear gradually decreases.

    Most people with phobias and obsessive-compulsive disorder have the characteristics of introversion, subtle and rigid work, too much pursuit of perfection, too much attention to their own physical feelings, lack of self-confidence, etc., these people often usually "live tired", and feel terrible when there is a little "abnormality", and there is a high degree of tension and anxiety, which will further aggravate the "abnormal feeling" and make it difficult to extricate themselves. In fact, neurotic patients may wish to have a "let it go" attitude to themselves and do whatever they need to do. Once your self-attention is lowered, the "symptoms" may disappear, so you might as well give it a try.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    I have it too, but don't give up.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    I'm kind of like you, I stick with it whenever I'm upset! Hope you're doing well!

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Analysis:

    Suggestions: It is recommended to go out and walk more, do not stay at home, and communicate more than friends.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder It's good to see a Chinese medicine doctor Obsessive-compulsive disorder is a mental and neurological problem.

    The fragrant healing Chinese herbal therapy pillow developed by Chinese medicine psychiatric experts is quite effective.

    Don't worry too much and don't stress too much Proper relaxation and recuperation are also good for this problem.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder is a condition that is a mental anxiety disorder. But not all compulsions are diseased.

    Because in a person's life, due to the tension or uneasiness about certain things, there may be some repetitive behaviors, or some lingering uneasy ideas, but usually these do not dare to make people feel very painful, because with the change of the environment, or the passage of time, these thoughts or behaviors will disappear automatically.

    There will probably be a time when we will check whether the doors and windows are closed, and we will suddenly wonder if the gas is still on in our home. But none of this can rise to OCD.

    The real symptom of OCD is that it is a long-term obsession with a repetitive idea, or a repetition of a behavior, which can be disturbing to break or change the behavior slightly. I know that some behaviors are meaningless and some thoughts are meaningless, but I just can't control my thinking and behavior, and it affects my work and life.

    For example, a girl is not wrong to love cleanliness. But if she is in the company's meeting, she always feels that the pile of dust in front of others is an eyesore, and she has the urge to wipe it off, but she didn't listen to a word in the whole meeting, just how to solve the dust. This falls under the category of mental illness.

    Because this will not only affect your work, but also your relationships. If this phenomenon occurs repeatedly and for a long time, this is obsessive-compulsive disorder.

    OCD usually shows a great penchant for neatness and does not allow others to spoil it. But they are often troubled by this kind of neatness or cleanliness. For example, I recently heard a medical record that we usually think that women who have a habit of cleanliness must have a very clean home.

    But things came unexpectedly. A woman with a habit of cleanliness, in order to keep her hands from getting dirty, has toilet paper everywhere in her home, because she has to wipe the traces left by others, but it turns out to make a mess of the tidy home. She herself is miserable, and tomorrow she lives in anxiety.

    These are all outward manifestations. There is also a kind of mental obsessive-compulsive disorder, which is often troubled and anxious by a fixed idea, and develops to the point that it is impossible to do anything else. This is obsessive-compulsive disorder.

    Therefore, we should distinguish between obsessive-compulsive behaviors and obsessive-compulsive disorder. There are some repetitive behaviors that do not affect the quality of life. However, if a thought or behavior exceeds a certain degree, making oneself and others feel so painful that it is impossible to manage one's life in an orderly manner, this may be obsessive-compulsive disorder.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Hello, obsessive-compulsive disorder is a very serious mental illness, if you give up ** or ** do not return, not timely, it will have very serious consequences for the patient's future life, will directly lead to the patient in the obsessive-compulsive thoughts, compulsive distorted behaviors and the emergence of extreme personality and other serious consequences, so be sure to go to a professional and regular hospital for treatment.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Hello, obsessive-compulsive disorder is a type of anxiety disorder, which is a group of neuropsychiatric disorders with obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors as the main clinical manifestations, characterized by the coexistence of conscious compulsion and counter-compulsion, and some meaningless or even contrary to one's own will thoughts or impulses repeatedly invade the daily life of patients.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder is a mental illness, and it is good to carry out psychological intervention and adjustment, and learn to relax and relax.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    In the CCMD-3 classification in our country.

    Bai is psychosis, mainly du

    It refers to the fact that problems such as schizophrenia and major depression are usually accompanied by qualitative lesions, which require follow-up observation and medication.

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a ritual behavior that originates from relieving anxiety, and is an individual distress caused by emotions and individuals, and does not belong to the category of mental illness. Classified in CCMD as: neurosis.

    These problems can be improved by ordinary conversational counseling.

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