You didn’t ask to have intrusive thoughts and paralyzing doubts. But therapy can help you get a handle on them.

Treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)

If you’ve been struggling with unwanted thoughts and obsessive fears, it might seem like a hopeless situation. No matter how much you reassure yourself, you may find yourself avoiding fun activities or dwelling endlessly on unlikely scenarios. What if I hurt the people I love? What if my sexuality or gender identity isn’t what I thought it was? What if I’m a sexual predator or a murderer? You might even start to believe that these thoughts make you a bad, unlovable, or broken person.

OCD is treatable, and therapy can help you gain more control of your thoughts and behavior. In therapy, using practical, empirically supported techniques like exposure and response prevention (ERP) and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), you can learn the skills to learn to tolerate uncertainty, stop unwanted rumination, and gain more confidence in situations that cause fear and anxiety.

But therapy for OCD doesn’t start and end with practical tools. We won’t just talk about the surface manifestations of your obsessions. We’ll talk about the meaning of your obsessive themes in relation to your bigger, deeper conflicts and the life experiences that have shaped your individual themes. We’ll look at the entire picture of your life—including co-occurring issues like ADHD, depression, and trauma—and treat these as a coherent whole, not as separate conditions.

Request an appointment at the link below, or reach out at (212) 203-7072 for a free phone consultation. And if you’re looking for therapy for OCD-related hoarding, read more here.

FAQs about OCD treatment