Thursday, June 6, 2024

SEASON 1: EPISODE 38 MATTHEW CYPCAR SHARES HIS OCD STORY TO HELP OTHERS - TRANSCRIPT

 


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today's [Music]

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episode welcome to a round and around the OCD Circle podcast in today's

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episode I speak with Matthew Zipcar who was diagnosed with obsessive compulsive

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disorder at the age of 15 Matt says that it all started with perfectionism at

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school he told me that telling his story today was like a session of Erp and he

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was appreciative of the chance to share his journey with each of you hello Matt

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hey how you doing fine can I call you Matt is that all right yeah yeah yeah that's all good yeah okay good so uh why

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don't you tell us a little bit about you know like where you were raised where you are

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now loated sure so my name is Matthew um I'm

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29 years old I was born in born and raised in New Jersey um I currently

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reside in New Jersey um yeah and I could I could go into a

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little bit about myself you know yeah so yeah yeah so we're here to talk

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about OCD so you can start wherever you'd like or from the

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beginning yeah so so a little bit about myself and my OCD was like I really started with

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perfectionism and that like really happened around like age I want to say 14 was when it really came about at

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least from what I remember and um a lot of it came about with like

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schoolwork um just feeling like I needed

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to have a perfect understanding um of whatever I read

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whatever I studied so I would just when it came to like novels and stuff for

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school I would have to reread passages and until it felt right till I felt like

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I like fully understood it which would um

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I remember I I read this book for school it was it was like based off

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hoshima so I read that book and um took me forever to get through it but

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sometimes it would take me like 15 minutes to get through two pages of that novel because I would have to reread

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and kind of um until it felt right and at that age I

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didn't really know why I was doing it because it was like I was first you know learning about OCD

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and everything I wasn't even like I was really diagnosed at 15 though okay

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yeah um I mean I want to say from

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there a lot of that perfectionism like it took on different

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forms like from perfectionism it went onto like cleaning so I have I felt like I had to

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clean my hands cuz I had a fear of spreading like germs bodily fluid blood

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I just you know I felt like I had to clean it like and rean it until it

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felt right um so I'd say a lot of times I would just clean it

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to the point where I just like my hands would be so dry and just chapped like so

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the winters were just terrible cuz my hands would get cracked and it

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kind of kept the psycho going cuz my hands would sometimes bleed it would be would it would be that

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awful uh because of you know my fears

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uh it's just interesting because it's it jumped from like it wasn't as drastic

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but it like took on different forms like and uh I'd say from there

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like it kind of like took on like driving so for a while I was driving um you know just

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like like I would drive but I would have these fears going on in the back of my

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mind like and they were there were just unwanted thoughts I just couldn't help

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it but I would think what if I just you

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know what if I caused an accident you know what if

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um what if I did something that just like brought on an accident like I caught someone off guard like that was

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walking on the street if I caught another driver off guard and uh I would

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literally Circle back and I would have to revisit that same

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location and make sure that everything was good that like no one was hurt and

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it kept going and going until I kind of until I thought I felt some

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relief but you know it just keeps the cycle going once you feed it you

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know that's um I really think from there I mean I've

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always had like that part of me with harm OCD where it's

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been kind of it's difficult to um

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it's difficult to kind of wrap my head around because it's like it's totally against you know just my morals as a

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person you know and I feel like OCD attacks you know that kind of stuff like

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it like it like feeds on you know what you value most like just other people

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and connection with other people and it'll it'll try to take what it can from you

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um that's the difference between being crazy and having OCD you know that this

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isn't logical that you that you would never hurt anyone intentionally or you know

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that you're a careful driver yes exactly that's how you

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know yeah so it was um it was I had a lot

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of it was it was really like tough a lot of years like

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unfortunately it got so bad that I just stopped driving I was like I can't like

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these thoughts are just so like they're taking over and I just

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can't deal with it so for a while I just I gave up driving and that was my way

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of I just kind of gave into the OCD and

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um which had the time I felt like was my only option how old were time how old

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were you when you stopped driving for a while I want to say that was while I was

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in while I was in while I was in college well I took a

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break from college I think I was around

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20 want say around like 23 because I uh

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came in and out of college you know I had to take a break from college well that's veryy inconvenient how did you get around did you take a bus or walk or

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what did you do I mean to be honest I had to rely a lot on my family to take me places and

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I'd say it kind of felt like I don't know it was a little like embarrassing you know

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because it's like it's like I relied so much on driving um it was a big part of

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how I got around everywhere and so I would you know just rely on them

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actually when I when I return back to school it's funny because I actually I

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still relied on them to kind of take me to uh some classes like I started off

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slow and I still relied on them to kind of bring me uh there and back uh because

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I was uh commute commuting well they were helping me commute so how did your family react to

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all this uh they were so they were very they

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were very supportive of my OCD I would just say they didn't like

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they had trouble like understanding a lot of it because you know like one of

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the common things that they've like told me in the past was like you know you

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know just just don't just don't worry about it you know nothing nothing bad like nothing bad will will happen they

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kind of uh they kind of re reassured me like that it was okay and

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um I mean I I I can't I can't blame him I think that's like a natural thing we

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all want to like if someone's struggling you want to reassure reassure them that everything's

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okay um I just think they didn't know that it was making things

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worse but obviously they okay yeah yeah yeah

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yeah that's definitely that's definitely true so um but they were very supportive

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um I mean they tried the best to under understand what I'm going through

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and just listen to like you know try to listen to like what I had to say and

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kind of like let me speak my my mind so what led up to you being diagnosed at 15

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did they suggest for you to go see a doctor

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or um so actually like the the school system that I was in I had like a case

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manager that I think she was in contact with my mom and they like they like they

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knew that I was like cuz I was like really anxious like I was in a lot of

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distress and I I I feel like the casew worker

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knew something was up and they kind of knew it was OCD based off a lot of the stuff that I was doing which I like I

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don't know I was kind of shocked but like just that there would be that

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General understanding you know cuz me and myself I didn't even know it was

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really going on at that age but uh yeah they

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um yeah that's how I kind of like went to a psychiatrist and I was thousands

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correct um Yes Yes somewhere around there

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yeah well that's great she was doing her job and that means she was knowledgeable and that's good to know that there was

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someone in the school there that knew what was going on you don't always have that luxury in a school

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system exact exactly exactly um I feel like a lot of times we

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uh I feel like that's one of the things with school systems that kind of like

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uh just mental health is something that we don't that's not always

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like not always given attention to if you know like there's not a lot

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of awareness about it and I'm sure like a lot of people care about it you know I

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mean mental Wellness is important but uh it's kind of hard uh for people to wrap

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your heads head head around it you know that's right and I'm a former teacher

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and I'll tell you it's even worse than the private schools because they don't want to rock the boat they don't want to

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say anything that's going to get you to take your child out of their school and get special help because they need that

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tuition oh yeah yeah they just put up they just put up with anything and and

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and put Band-Aids on problems instead of um letting parents know sometimes I'm

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not say all private schools but the ones that I taught in tuition was the big deal you didn't Rock the

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Boat yeah it's really it's really unfortunate but that's like that's how

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it is sometimes so what did they do for you at 15 so like uh when I went to a

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psychiatrist um I I recall being started off I think

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it was on like a small dose of Zoloft um some

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medication uh they started me off on zolof um I

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remember I remember while taking the zolof well actually from the perspective of my parents they

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thought that it was making me very like nonchalant like almost like I wasn't

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like I was kind of like carefree and stuff like that but

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um I don't and I don't really recall if it made me feel much better but

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um it was just something that I was trying to I was just trying you know to

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see if it would help a little bit um so I I just took the medication

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and uh I recall going into therapy which I such a young age

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it's like it's like how do you like how do you even like process that like I I

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went into therapy uh I remember I had a therapist that we would that actually had OCD so it was

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really actually like interesting to actually like went through that like

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that I felt like I could kind of like you know relate with and um I just remember s sitting in therapy and a lot

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of times it was like kind of like that talking part just like talking through

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what I was going through and I remember playing board games and it's like it just felt like

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um I mean it felt it felt cool it felt having that like connection because you know how um OCD can definitely make you

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feel like very like withdrawn from like just like Society in

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itself and it could be very like isolating so I mean I felt like it was

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pretty cool but um it helped for a a little bit but it

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wasn't I didn't really feel like it's what I needed in terms of uh help you

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know so then what happened um

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so from that point um I remember as I as

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I Pro as I progressed through high school I mean things

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just I mean things just got worse and worse um unfortunately

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um I just struggled to make it to school on time like a lot of times I would come into school it would be like an hour

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late maybe like an hour and a half late um because you've been washing your hands oh oh yeah yeah I I would be like

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washing my hands um a lot of times it would be with the with showering too I

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would just be like in a show shower just scrubbing my body um it would be

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um on top of that I had some like I had a little bit of that

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perfectionism too that was I was still kind of holding on to so my clothes had to like fit a certain way and I would

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have to like like when putting them on I would have to kind of like put it on take it off put it on take it off um I

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didn't even like like it was I don't really at that time I didn't

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really understand the fear behind that in itself the perfectionism aspect with the clothes

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but um thinking a certain way but it just

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kind of you know start to spiral and take up too much of

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my mental mental capacity like I felt like I could barely function and get

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through school without a lot of extra support a lot of uh extensions

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on work that I had to complete like I had like a plan set in place where like

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um guess kind of like ISP or I'm not sure what you would what you would consider it not ISP but I just had stuff

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in place where it kind of catered to a lot of what I was dealing with with

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extra extensions for work did it affect your

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friendships oh yeah yeah um well I would say it did affect my

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friendships very very much so and even my ability to make I mean just

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making friendships was hard because um I was just so in my head constantly and so

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anxious that I mean for a while I didn't

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even like like put a priority on um just meeting and making relationships with

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other people I felt like a piece of me wanted that

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but just with how much I was suffering and the stuff that I was going through um it was just always kind of

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secondary for the longest for the longest uh time

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so we are now at what age we're High School um yeah so so like high school um

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at the I mean at the very tail end of high

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school was when I when I decided to

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really seek out intensive treatment and by intensive treatment I

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meant like like going out of state kind of like

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to unfamiliar territory like uh going like

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impatient impatient facilities trying to seek out help um I visited

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mlan so I went to mlan hospital

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um at the very actually was at the very tail end of high school I didn't even go

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to my graduation I was in mlan hospital um trying

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to trying to get better trying to implement all the therapy that they were

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trying to teach me and just just fighting all

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the all the fears that I had you know did it help you being

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hospitalized it it definitely it definitely helped me like I would say mlan

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was a very huge part of how I got of how I got

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better um the PE like the people there are just

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like amazing for any everyone from the clinicians to the to the staff that like

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would help with therapy it was it was honestly very

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uh it was a great experience but it was also very

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like difficult like I'm not going to say like oh it was such a lovely experience I was there you know like yeah yeah yeah

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like yeah I was you know going through like it felt like I was going through

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hell but at the same time with that support supportive cast it felt very

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comforting just having someone to lean on and um how long were you there

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for I was there for I would say like two months okay yeah I was there

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for two months um and I was working on

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uh I was working on exposure response prevention so like Erp I was gonna say I

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figured that was part of it yeah yeah it was a it was a huge it was a

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huge part of like just my everyday um like every day on the

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schedule there was like exposure response prevention Erp for like a set

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amount of hours and uh well that's

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intense yeah um it definitely was intense and also setting up the

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treatment plan cuz you know obviously there was a lot of stuff to tackle so I had like

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different had different things to work on so and there was a lot of adjusting like and figuring out like what would

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um what would trigger my anxiety like the most in you know just

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sitting with that anxiety and yeah Erp is definitely a interesting

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uh therapy that a lot of people aren't um I mean even some people with OCD they

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aren't aware of it like they don't know it exists and a lot of people the general public do not um that's true

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yeah do not know much about it but it really benefited me a lot yeah I was

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going to say I see a lot on the boards people talking about it and they'll say I I want to do it but I'm just too

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afraid and what you're saying is it was worth everything it it it was literally worth

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everything and a lot of those like people that post that like that was me that was me a while back like I had the

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exact same like fears there were times that I like that I literally had to uh

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the stimes where I literally had to be like like I would be doing an Europe and I

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just had to walk away I'm just like uh just too much I had to like regroup I

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had to like give myself uh give myself a little like break and I

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had to tackle it again like uh for people that don't know what it is can you give an example of an exercise that

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you would have done um yeah totally um

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so I just just want to say like like probably one example like well Erp I

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mean like basically is just you know exposing yourself

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to the feared the feared anxiety that you have like the feared Obsession so

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like I remember with me I I tackled a lot of my driving you

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know fears and fears of like unwanted fears like that I could hurt someone

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so with um with Erp they would just have me you know drive around and

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um the big piece of the therapy was just not engaging in my rituals

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or not not trying to relieve that anxiety that I was feeling you know cuz

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that what OCD is we want to do the rituals we want to relieve that anxiety so they they wanted me to stick with

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that anxiety without doing the ritual so right my anxiety would would go through

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the roof I'd be like sitting there like you know I'm like oh my God like yeah part

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it's it's the scary part like like literally when your anxiety that's high when it's that high you like feel like

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it's do or die like it's like that's how I can feel when anxiety is so bad but

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but I found and you know they taught me that after a while you know the anxiety would

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come down and sometimes it would take like a long

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time before it came down but it did come down to something where I could manage

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it like kind of be able to manage it get I got through the exposure so then next

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time we you know would do the kind of like similar exposure like same kind of

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process my anxiety would go up up up but then like I

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felt that it didn't kind of like Peak as high as it did like the first time it

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would still be like high so I would just kind of sit with it sit with it sit with it then you know it come down like it

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did the first time just like every time I kept doing that exposure like eventually it got to the

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point where I was feeling a very small amount of

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anxiety and it was it was literally like the best feeling like you know when you can

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tackle something and just get through it and it doesn't

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literally affect you as much as it did it kind of like you're it's like you're regaining your life back and essentially

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mhm um from these fears um but it's very very very hard work but it's it's

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something that like I don't regret like ever doing

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Europe I don't that's

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awesome so where are you today in your life as far as your OCD

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and so today um

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I will be I will be completely honest here like um

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I I do still struggle with OCD um I feel like it will

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always be a part of me I mean I mean there's no cure for OCD I mean that's what a lot

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of people like need to understand like that are that don't have OCD there's no like cure like but

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um so it's still affects me but it doesn't it kind of like it's kind of

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like a wave you know it's kind of like like how it affected me back then

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it was like really really bad and then I had I had a period where I was doing

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really really good I was literally taking a small dose of or just one dose of Prozac

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you know and um I was able to

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just get through my day I was able to you know I didn't have all those fears like

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attached to me uh I felt like a weight was lifted off me today

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um I will admit I do struggle um I do find that some of the thoughts are kind

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of like trying to creep its way back in some of the fears and a lot of it is

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based off the fact that I'm truly trying to

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be a vulnerable and by vulnerable I mean like

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seek out like a lot of social connections with people seek out um more so than I ever

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previously did so seeking out more social connections um just um really putting myself out

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there which I did find ocds trying to be a little bit sneaky and trying to be like okay we can work with that so like

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it's like it's good that you're doing that but it's like it'll always have that like kind of like I have that fear

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that's running in the in the background like you know

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um these like fears especially even just sharing my story today is just uh it's

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like one big huge Erp for me it's like essentially is one big huge Erp because

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it's it's something I want to do so bad and you know I want to help a lot of people but there's that fear behind it

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that's like and you're doing great yeah I I app I appre I appreciate that but

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it's that fear that's like behind it that's

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like I mean I kind of make fun of it sometimes but it's like that fear in the back of my head that's like oh man

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you're sharing your story you know I think people are going to start to leave your life they're going to discover you

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know all your fears all your you know everything that's going on they're going to be like yeah like they're just not

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going to want to be in your life anymore it's like it's it's extremely frustrating to

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to have to deal with that like uncertainty

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but I mean just like with Erp I mean just

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I just have to push through the uncertainty I can't be like I'm not going to like reassure myself oh you

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know yeah everything's going to be okay you know I mean it would be nice to but

32:39

just sitting with that uncertainty like oh yeah I mean is something you don't

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share with others much um for for a while I did not for a

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while I did not um I did to various degrees with some

32:56

people like family know about it um Family know about it some my friends

33:02

do to an extent but um but it's just really just sitting

33:07

with that uncertainty like okay people people

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may want to leave my life and you know I mean it's just like you know okay

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okay thought all right it's 2024 like yeah yeah you

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know yeah yeah and it's all it's all it's all fear it's all fear-based

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OCD so and that's part of what I'm doing this podcast for is people who don't

33:38

have OCD I'm hoping if they listen they'll understand it a little bit more you know what we go through and

33:47

yeah I I asked this of every one of my guests Matt how do you feel when people

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in general say oh I'm so OCD today about this um

33:59

you know how does that make you feel does it bother you or is it okay is

34:06

it just you just let it go I have so many mixed opinions about

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this so a part of me it does bother me a part of me it

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really does bother me because like there's so much like even

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in the media there's so much like I feel like OCD is just like seen

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as a quirk like oh it's like it's like this little cute thing it's like oh you want

34:35

to fix these things be perfect and like all that stuff but um I don't know I

34:40

just feel like OCD is kind of like uh the real nitty-gritty and the severe

34:46

OCD it doesn't really get the attention and the light that it

34:53

deserves um it's so I mean it's a little frustrating cuz it's like it's like you

34:59

hear someone say that meanwhile you're going through OCD or like you have severe or you know what it's like to be

35:06

severely compromised by this disorder and it's like well I mean I don't think you I don't

35:14

think you have it but I mean but um but

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also I I come at it from also the other side of things it's like a lot of it is just

35:29

not not having that knowledge behind it it's just like just kind of like a lot

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of society just doesn't know what OCD is really that's why I need to what yeah

35:41

it's what it's really about that's why education is so important uh so

35:46

important and I feel like this podcast is like a perfect platform for like

35:55

just just educating people it's it's very important and I wish there was I

36:02

mean I've seen quite a bit of OCD podcasts and quite a bit of OCD content

36:08

on YouTube and stuff like that I just feel like

36:14

the we've made so much progress in OCD like from i' say from like the

36:21

90s like and when I look back at it I'm like I mean and I was just like a little kid but when I look back at like the uh

36:30

look back and I read some of the stuff and some of the research that was done and

36:36

how how things have changed so much and I don't know it's it's honestly awesome

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awesome to see that a lot of people are willing to share their story and just

36:50

you know having podcasts like these are massively important really really it is

36:58

yeah I I wasn't diagnosed till I was over

37:04

35 almost 40 I lived for that long before anyone could actually tell me

37:10

what I had so I'm glad that they found do you

37:16

did you notice any symptoms before the age of 14 Matt or did your family are this just just this started right it

37:23

just started at 14 or uh uh so

37:28

so so I felt like a little bit beforehand I kind

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of it's kind of like very interesting because kind of growing up I was always

37:44

very emotional and I

37:50

know well so I was kind of like that emotional when I when I when I like grew

37:57

up like I had a very close-nit relationship with my uh Mom and Dad um

38:05

but I remember at one point when my mom and dad would work separate

38:10

shifts um so they would go into work and I during the week uh weekdays I'd

38:17

essentially see one of them only one of them um so

38:25

for I felt like that kind of um cuz sometimes they discuss how

38:33

like I wouldn't like I don't know if I want to term it as like trauma exactly

38:39

but it's something that kind of like upset me I remember you know being upset about it I

38:45

remember being emotional about it like even like when one of my parents used to leave I used to

38:50

like uh like pull out the driveway I would like tear up like it would literally be that much there would be so

38:57

much emotion driven behind it so um I kind of felt like

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that kind of like in a way triggered something but I don't know

39:13

for for sure cuz I mean based off what I mean based off of what I know I know

39:20

that sometimes there could be something like trauma that could trigger it sometimes a lot sometimes it could just

39:26

be genetics know right do you have any your family that has it that you know of

39:32

uh yeah so so my mom does experience um

39:39

some OCD but to very minor degree okay at least that's what she has discussed

39:46

with me the very very minor very minor OCD I feel like my

39:51

paternal grandfather probably had OCD

39:57

yeah um it's but a different type than I had but it doesn't matter um it's not

40:03

always trtic sometimes there's no reasoning for it there's no our brains are wired

40:08

differently and I think depending on stress trauma times of your life it can

40:15

just become full-blown mine became full-blown at the age of 32 but I still had it in ele

40:22

school but my behaviors were different in elementary school than they were when

40:27

I was 32 you know it was totally different the way I dealt with it yeah just the aspect the aspect of

40:37

how it can kind of shift from one form to another I mean I like I've known like

40:44

you know and i' I've seen it happen with other people but I've you know I just

40:51

like it's just very it's a very interesting concept and I'm really into

40:57

psychology and stuff like that like I went to school like studying psychology as an undergrad and so kind of OCD was

41:06

my um I felt it kind of like it was kind of

41:12

my like my drive to kind of you know like I want to help people and I want to

41:22

um I definitely want to spread like awareness to

41:27

about OCD you know

41:34

right trying to think if there's anything else I haven't asked you is there anything else that you want to

41:39

talk about um you are you in any are you in any

41:46

treatment now any medications or treatment so I uh I am in treatment

41:55

right now um so so I just meet with a therapist um it's kind of like every

42:02

like like bi-weekly and um I

42:09

do so I I do like discuss like a lot of the

42:15

stuff that's you know going on um sometimes I feel like it could be

42:22

complicated because OCD kind of

42:27

I kind of have OCD but I also have depression so just kind of that comorbid

42:34

you know in itself um Can complicate things because it's

42:40

always like you know what do you you know you need to tackle one thing first

42:46

kind of but um and I do so I do um go to

42:53

therapy Bi weekly um I do I'm on I'm

42:58

actually on proac right now I got back onto it and I'm on a small dose

43:05

currently um that was the drug helped me the most I think yeah so um for me I felt

43:16

like kind of like a similar situation it helped me quite a bit

43:22

um I mean I really like for my OCD I was maxing out at around like 60 or 80

43:30

milligrams somewhere around that and I felt like it would benefit me it just

43:35

benefited me a lot um I know everyone

43:41

um everyone is differently response to medication I've actually done some like

43:49

Gene testing which I thought was interesting because this was a while back but I was kind of able to see which

43:56

medication work best for me in terms of my genes

44:02

um yeah I think um it's called like a gene site or gen site or something like

44:10

that so I think that could be of a value to anyone that's you

44:17

know that's you know struggling with OCD and kind of trying to tackle it with

44:22

both therapy and medication San um always tell my listeners you know don't

44:28

go by what Matt and I are saying about medicine everyone metabolism is different everyone reacts differently

44:35

you're you may have to try many many medications before you find works for you we're just talking about our

44:41

experience with Prozac I've tried them all I always went back to proac I think

44:47

it helped me have a more even U emotional state which in that way

44:55

lessened my stress lessened my depression depression less of my anxiety and that all and all all that W together

45:02

helped my OCD but I've been on I've been on so many different things and I'm currently medfree right now been medfree

45:08

for about six years but I know there's going to be a time in my life um when I'm going to need to go back on it and

45:14

my first choice is going to be what I was most successful at and that's Prozac but then you know 10 years from now Pro

45:23

prac may not work for me so yeah then I have to start off over I can tell you

45:28

what doesn't work for me like U Boost bar I got double vision with that stuff

45:33

and um I was playing softball at the time and I would see two softballs coming at my face and I mean I had to

45:41

get off that stuff right away um other people love it you know yeah so it's it's very like it's

45:49

very dependent like uh what works for one person might not work for another

45:54

person so it's very important to it's very important to have like a good communication with your psychiatrist and

46:03

just being just being totally transparent

46:08

even as hard it's very challenging but just being totally transparent and

46:14

saying like I don't think this is working and just you know and and just

46:21

being like totally honest cuz like like we view psychiatrists as always having

46:26

you know like obviously they have the training but they rely on us to kind

46:33

of guide them kind of like so it's like is it working is it not working you know

46:38

what do you think could improve um so it's very

46:43

uh just having a psychiatrist that has some kind of like track history with OCD

46:50

therapist too it's very important having a therapist that you know they can't

46:56

unless you're honest with them yes there's no way they can help you you're you're you're wasting

47:01

their time and yours and your money exactly I completely agree with you on that one I wanted to change the subject

47:08

for a minute because you have what seems like contamination OCD for the most part how did you respond to

47:16

co so with uh I want to say with Co

47:22

though it wasn't actually surprisingly for me it wasn't actually too

47:29

uh too bad okay I know that doesn't make sense but

47:35

I yeah yeah I did I did interview uh another gentleman named AIS um and he

47:42

said the same thing he said that his OCD is more for you know things that don't

47:48

make sense so he would be worried that he would get AIDS or he would get Hepatitis or he would but something that

47:55

was real yes but or heart he would he was worried he was going to have a heart attack but something that was real that

48:01

was happening he didn't worry about as much it was the things that were not

48:07

logical EXA that you nail you nailed the hammer on the head with that one because

48:13

uh just for a while the that's like a perfect description of me because

48:20

um just like with the previous guest you know for a long time I had a fear

48:27

of fear of HIV fear of AIDS and you know it really just started when I was

48:34

you know I had a young like I had a job as a lifeguard you know and I would have

48:40

to perform like sometimes like first aid and stuff like that like very minor Cuts stuff like that but that like that

48:49

triggered uh a lot in me and I was super careful I would like you know I was

48:55

super careful I would watch my hands I would you know wash my hands a bunch of times um do all the precautions

49:03

necessary to keep myself safe you know the thoughts you know unfortunately they're

49:09

not they're not I mean they're not rational they're not rational at the end

49:15

at the end of the day um and that was you know well I think you'd

49:23

really relate to him so if you have a chance go back and listen his interview was in two episodes and he has you and

49:30

he have a lot in common as far as your symptoms and and uh things like that I think you would really relate to

49:37

him is there anything else we haven't talked about that you want to bring up

49:44

um I mean like I felt like we talked about a

49:49

lot of great stuff we did like we got like we we got a lot of great great stuff that we talked about uh

49:58

um and you're always welcome to come back anytime if you think of a topic that you really think needs to be

50:05

discussed you can just contact me I've had a couple of guests who have come back on a second time and said you know

50:10

I really want to talk about this or I want to you know and you're always welcome to come back anytime and I

50:17

usually ask you at the end if you have any words of wisdom that you can give to

50:22

our listeners to give them some hope

50:28

um so in terms of words of wisdom so I mean my biggest like Words of

50:35

Wisdom I mean I felt like I touched based on it a little bit earlier but um

50:42

like if you're listening and you have you know been diagnosed with OCD or you see a lot of the signs I mean it's

50:49

important to get the diagnosis part but Erp you know um if you not given an

50:56

Erp a try it's it's something that you should definitely consider and even if you gone through a therapy and you fell

51:04

out like it was just too difficult I feel like it's definitely

51:09

important to consider it again and I but I think it's important to go into

51:16

therapy like you don't have to go in guns blazing like you don't like you don't

51:21

have to go on gun guns blazing and like tackle every

51:27

huge fear that you have at once like you want to feel obviously discomfort like when you're doing when you're working U

51:35

through the therapy but at you know if you try to tackle

51:41

everything out once and it's just it's going to come it's going to be very

51:47

difficult it's going to go by really difficult for you and um I feel like

51:53

there has to be some kind of balance balance with that like you don't want to

51:59

get so discouraged that you end up just giving up

52:04

completely on therapy but you also want to challenge yourself you really do want to CH

52:11

challenge yourself um I mean that's that's the point of you know a good therapist will help you do

52:19

that oh yeah yeah a good a good therapist will definitely outline you know and go through that with you for

52:26

sure and if you don't and I've said this before and I know my listeners probably get tired of hearing it but if you get

52:33

into therapy and you don't feel like it's helping you it's not a problem to just change go somewhere else it it's

52:40

not you don't have to be embarrassed about that because I stayed in therapy for 11 years with someone who wasn't

52:45

helping me at all she was a super nice person and she sat there and agreed with me for everything I did said and did but

52:51

there was it was not helping me at all she didn't challenge me it was too easy other words and by the time I realized

52:59

she wasn't helping me it had been 11 years of my life I had given her

53:06

um you know yeah yes uh so I 100 100%

53:12

agree with agree with that because I feel like there's been times where I've

53:18

gone through therapy and I've felt kind of that like kind of like that low and the

53:25

action where it's like like I really you know I think me and the therapist had like a very good Bond

53:33

and they were they were awesome very super supportive and um just things were going you

53:41

know pretty good but there's a part of me it's like well I don't feel I don't feel challenged and part of

53:49

part of it's also like kind of landed on me cuz like but

53:54

like a part of it's like maybe just just a dynamic's not working

54:01

and it's okay to seek out other therapists it's you know because

54:07

at the end of the day it's you know it's your it's your life and you know honestly you

54:14

can't feel so like entitled like oh I may hurt their feelings you know I mean

54:20

you know it's like they want to see you get better too I mean they've been working with you like you know um um so

54:27

at the end of the day it's just you have to do it's in your best interest you

54:32

know to regain your sense of control that's right and that's part of

54:39

selflove so yes yes well I appreciate you joining me today Matt it's been a a

54:45

pleasure meeting you and listening to your story and um like I said you're

54:50

welcome to come back anytime yeah I think I thank you so much for having me on this podcast uh uh I

54:57

really do appreciate uh everything that you're doing and you know just spreading

55:02

the knowledge and I love to come back one day and you know kind of share my progress okay all righty thank you I

55:11

hope you enjoyed today's conversation with Matthew Zipcar and that it helped you feel less alone today's episode will

55:18

be the last episode of the season I hope to be back with you soon for season 2 if

55:23

you feel led to tell your OCD story please reach out to me at my social media links below remember that OCD

55:31

while it cannot be cured can be managed and I am living proof of that until next

55:37

time have a great summer

 

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