Relationship OCD
When you first fall in love it can feel all-consuming and
even obsessive. You think about your loved one all the time, wondering what
they are doing and feeling. You dream about what exciting things you could be
doing together. You can’t wait to see them again. You are mindfully aware of
them in everything you do.
However like any new relationship over time the excitement
burns off as you become more settled with one another. It then gradually
nestles into a more relaxed, calmer and secure natural place of being. But with
people who experience Relationship OCD (ROCD) their fear responses do not
switch off. They develop a hyper-alertness around their partner and start to
doubt their own security. Bottom line the more they care the more obsessive
they become.
Do you have Relationship OCD?
·
Do you obsessive about your partner’s previous
intimacies and relationships?
·
Do you constantly question their whereabouts or
their love for you?
·
Do you obsess about their day to day activities
and grill them when you next see them?
·
Do you find yourself locked on to your partners
past and find it hard to accept?
·
Do you avoid places, people and anything that
could be associated to your partners past in fear that it will evoke an
obsessive thought in you?
·
Do you constantly worry that he/she is not the
one?
·
Do you fear
he/she may not love you, even though there is no evidence to support this?
·
Do you ask for continuous reassurance from your
partner that he/she really loves you?
·
Do you repeatedly check that you love your
partner?
·
Do you seek constant reassurance from others
that your relationship is right?
·
Is your day consumed with wondering what your
partner is doing and find it hard to concentrate on anything else?
·
Do you insist that you communicate with your
partner several times a day; if a communication is missed you obsess and worry
and think the worse?
·
Do you worry you may not love your partner or
find him/her attractive anymore?
·
Do you imagine lots of worrisome scenarios about
your partner that has no relevance to any facts?
Of course the above are normal thought processes which we can all
experience from time to time. However if they are persistent and are causing
you much distress and fear and consume much of your time each day, then you may well be experiencing
Relationship OCD.
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