Get rid of intrusive thoughts

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • If you want to leave intrusive thoughts behind, it can help to look at how we attach judgments and meaning to the stuff in our heads.
    For working on recovery skills, grab my book, YOU ARE NOT A ROCK, wherever books are sold, like here on Amazon: bit.ly/youareno...
    (It's called THE MIND WORKOUT in the UK and Australia/New Zealand, DAS MIND-WORKOUT in Deutsch, ENTRENA TU MENTE en español)
    For coaching details, visit: www.markfreema...
    Connect here:
    Travel mental health blog: www.themindful...
    Instagram: / markwfreeman

Комментарии • 305

  • @kaanyldz4814
    @kaanyldz4814 Год назад +184

    It's such a joy to see someone emerge victorious from a disorder that is thought of as chronic and even help thousands of us do the same. 🎉

  • @Christabel44
    @Christabel44 Год назад +84

    You’re one of the few people that say it’s possible to leave ocd behind. I appreciate that so much. I’m tired of people saying it’s chronic.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +26

      It is strange people are still stuck on the old chronic myth.

    • @shawnleong3605
      @shawnleong3605 Год назад +10

      I feel like those ppl are like crabs in the bucket - they can’t get out of ocd, or they are taught that cod is a chronic chemical imbalance, and then they spread those beliefs to those who seek hope.

    • @jonber9411
      @jonber9411 3 месяца назад

      The chronic lovers maybe are identified with the pain that the OCD serves them? Pain itself can be identity. Then they will protect their beloved pain.

    • @Mary_0888
      @Mary_0888 2 месяца назад +1

      So many times have doctors called something chronic and then it turned out that it wasn't chronic. I hate the word chronic. Chronic just means: we don't have the solution in this moment.

  • @TheCrayonMan529
    @TheCrayonMan529 Год назад +67

    I also realized one of my intrusive thoughts was actually a mental compulsion to see how I would react. The more I stopped compulsions, the longer I go without intrusive thoughts. I also notice now the more I don't react, the more the thought turns into short term memory and I forget the thought.

  • @vh3914
    @vh3914 Год назад +124

    Watching this as a person who used to struggle with crazy intrusive thoughts is so cool. Because of Mark’s teaching (yeah, sounds epic) I don’t struggle with them anymore. For guys who have hard time because of their OCD - it is absolutely possible to live full and fulfilling life even with OCD and, of course, later on, when you walk away from it. You can do it. I believe in you❤

  • @duppyshuman
    @duppyshuman 9 месяцев назад +36

    Learning to sit with discomfort. I use mindfulness. Acknowledge the emotions the thoughts are bringing up, then let them roll away like waves on the beach and redirect myself back to the good place I was and repeat as many times as necessary.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  8 месяцев назад +1

      Enjoy letting the waves flow!

    • @duppyshuman
      @duppyshuman 8 месяцев назад

      Amen.@@everybodyhasabrain

    • @williamflyckt76
      @williamflyckt76 Месяц назад +1

      ERP response + sitting in discomfort without judging the thoughts until they pass is the key to deal have unwanted thoughts.

  • @tarrandairamnarine9251
    @tarrandairamnarine9251 16 дней назад +1

    Thank you so much, Mark. You really made me feel understood because you helped me realise how my own brain works better than I could’ve on my own! I think it will be hard to stop my judging nature but I would like to try, thanks to your story of resilience with your own thoughts 😁

  • @killjoyxprt
    @killjoyxprt Год назад +35

    You have no idea how much this video has helped me. Literally life saving. I’ve been struggling for months, crying myself to sleep, getting up in the middle of the night freaked out. I’m gonna pay no mind to my intrusive thoughts more often. Thank you so much!

  • @mikarose9405
    @mikarose9405 4 месяца назад +12

    I have had this affliction for so long. I had no idea for a long time that there was anyone else in the world who has suffered from it. I find so much comfort in knowing that I am not alone, that there are others who understand. Thanks so much for putting this video out.

  • @JoaoNeto-wc9sy
    @JoaoNeto-wc9sy Год назад +22

    I've been struggling with this issue for about 6 months, watching this video and reading some comments here feels like a breath of fresh air, thanks a lot!

  • @Lorenzo_Marchetti4537
    @Lorenzo_Marchetti4537 Год назад +72

    This 12 minute video is absolute gold. Better info than I’ve heard from 3 psychologists, I need to thank you Mark for this. We appreciate it!!

  • @originmaple
    @originmaple Год назад +30

    I never thought I would find a video that broke down exactly whats going on in my head. The allegator anology was spot on to what I have been experiencing for years now and hearing you talk about it in this video gave me hope that I too can deal with it.

  • @JorPanzer
    @JorPanzer 8 месяцев назад +7

    the bit at 5:40 'does that mean i'm attracted to alligators' made me howl. God thats such an accurate stereotypical 'intrusive thought'

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  8 месяцев назад

      Its scales were genuinely a very attractive shade of green...

  • @789quicky
    @789quicky Год назад +12

    This video should be an advert on every channel. Imagine how many peoples lives it would change for the better... Everyone struggling with their mental health or even not struggling needs this kind of advice. Well done Mark 👏

  • @adamabraham6835
    @adamabraham6835 Год назад +18

    Thank you Mark, the problem is when we initially judge in our head. If i had applied the stoic philosophy sooner to myself i would've never ended up struggling as much as i did. No more labelling thoughts as intrusive no more attaching emotions to any thought for that matter. This approach may certainly be the best to achieve any sense of actual "stillness'' or "peace" & "clarity" in my head. Time to rewire the mind.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      And if there isn't any peace, stillness, or clarity, you can allow those to be there, too!

  • @cha0siithe0ry19
    @cha0siithe0ry19 7 месяцев назад +6

    one of the best videos on intrusive thoughs in a way that really translates to the people. Listen to Mark. The theme is irrelevant. A thought is just a thought. The content of it doesn't matter. Yes if you take it literally the subject might be weird, but that's not what you did or liked. You simply had a thought. Your thought of x y or z is the same as thinking about 'sponge' treat it the same way. Don't judge it or try to figure it out. Let's all have a better time of being us and give our judment superpowers to things we love. It can feel hard and almost impossible, but we can give our energy to things we value whilst any thought or feeling pops up. Good luck everyone and remember no luck is required we all have it in us to exist peacefully and productively to the things we care about

  • @ifeanyiokonkwo7130
    @ifeanyiokonkwo7130 Год назад +8

    The alligator metaphor was so spot on with how my brain treats intrusive thoughts omg. This was the first video I watched that really broke it down in a personable way ❤

  • @franciscodnb
    @franciscodnb Год назад +7

    If UFC had GSP as a role model for all fighters, Mental Health Community has Mark Freeman!
    Thank you Mark for your everyday work. You a blessing in people’s life.

  • @Deathhead68
    @Deathhead68 Год назад +5

    The alligator thing made me laugh so much, really captures what these compulsive thoughts can be like in such a relatable and funny way.

  • @iapreneuriat
    @iapreneuriat 7 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you, you just put a smile on my face today.

  • @Octaviacliosisley
    @Octaviacliosisley Год назад +7

    Amazing. ❤ This applies to almost anything. Saying to yourself, I have no bad parts. Let it be. This resonates so much, thank you.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      Yes, it's so useful to look at how we're interacting with any experience.

  • @immaisuradze
    @immaisuradze Год назад +9

    Your videos are so inspiring!!! Thank god gave me people like you ❤️😄😁

  • @romantheroman98
    @romantheroman98 Год назад +4

    Mark out of context: a pen jabbed through my eyeball. This one was one of my brains favorites. We can have these experiences and they can be there.

  • @Alrokerthon
    @Alrokerthon Год назад +6

    This is amazing - agree this is the way

  • @Marty_Mcslime
    @Marty_Mcslime Год назад +2

    I swear this video hit right on time. Mark this advice is gold.

  • @Amina-cw1em
    @Amina-cw1em Год назад +4

    I just re-watched this video again. This was a powerful video and testament to recovery! Thank you!

  • @brianlouis2590
    @brianlouis2590 Год назад +8

    So true , you can’t control them

  • @littlepsworld2371
    @littlepsworld2371 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much, I always think if I could have those thoughts instead of these ones I’d be okay. I wouldn’t be a bad person… etc. you’re amazing

  • @nintendo_gamer
    @nintendo_gamer Год назад +3

    Thank you, you have no idea how much this has made me feel more relaxed and less stressed from now on I’m going to watch this video every time I get them which tbh is from the second I wake up till the second I go to sleep… so thank you so much for making this video for us

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      Watching a video when we get a thought is actually an example of an external compulsion / ritual. It would encourage the brain to throw them up more. It's like rewarding a dog everytime it chews up your shoes. It's going to chew the shoes more because then you'll do the thing that makes you feel good. So it's more useful to not do something to replace the thoughts or feelings. This video is about cutting out the compulsions around thoughts. We don't have to judge them as bad and wrong. The thoughts can be there and we can take them along for adventures in life!

    • @nintendo_gamer
      @nintendo_gamer Год назад +1

      @@everybodyhasabrain ok thanks :) I just really hate getting them

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +3

      @nintendo_gamer This video is about not hating on them. Hating on thoughts is a quick way to create more thoughts to hate on.

    • @alderamin1402
      @alderamin1402 7 месяцев назад

      ​@everybodyhasabrain omg So all we have to do just NOTHING

  • @gingerisevil02
    @gingerisevil02 Год назад +8

    I think limiting your time in social media and toxic people also is key… that shit is bad for your body and mental health.
    My ocd is sucks because it overlaps my ptsd (obsession that others are monitoring me/my body is on display… so if someone comments, or activates that belief,) and my adhd (fear others will constantly distracting me …)
    You can abuse your brain or treat it well…
    I thought your ideas were Bullshit till I was in a better place. I appreciate you sharing your recovery !

  • @majaexploring3801
    @majaexploring3801 Год назад +5

    Mark your book and teachings helped me so much a couple years back. I am realising what you teach is also applicable to my thoughts in general. With "normal fears" I would allow myself to try to control them, because it seemed reasonable. But it's all the same fear based way of reacting to brainstuff be it a "realistic" fear or not

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      Absolutely. It's so useful to see that these skills are just about life and all of the real things that can happen in life, too.

  • @sammullett17
    @sammullett17 Год назад +2

    Not being able to fix it, is the hardest part!

  • @magictone13
    @magictone13 Год назад +1

    Dear Mark, Thank You. You make it simple. Thank You 💗 Bless You 🌸

  • @anabiticu
    @anabiticu Год назад +3

    I want to thank you so much! You helped me enormously!

  • @jcrypto7475
    @jcrypto7475 11 месяцев назад +2

    This is awesome thanks so much for sharing took a load off my mind.
    This needs spreading 👏

  • @ninajohnson940
    @ninajohnson940 Год назад +1

    The cop thing was so spot on. I always think they are coming for me

  • @ker331
    @ker331 7 месяцев назад +2

    yes- calling them 'intrusive' can send the message that they are not 'normal' and are 'wrong' in some way.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  7 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely. It's way more useful to just have human brain stuff

  • @ubernerrd
    @ubernerrd Год назад +2

    Thanks for posting this.

  • @ThePROMINENCE
    @ThePROMINENCE Год назад +2

    I needed this. Thank you Mark.

  • @emach07
    @emach07 6 месяцев назад +2

    Man, this helped my so SO much. He's been struggling with both anxiety and OCD and is Autistic to boot. And today told me of some thoughts he's had for the first time that was SO out of character for him and it really bothered him. I tried explaining to him just because it entered his mind doesn't mean that he deliberately thought up the thought.
    So I started looking around for some videos on it and found TONS f them including this one. He was so relieved not only seeing this one but all the dozens and dozens in the YT suggested section as I told him, see! it's not just you. Thanks a bunch for having the courage to say all these things and share them 😍

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  6 месяцев назад

      I'm glad you both found it useful! These are very common experiences and it's very doable to make changes around them. 😁🙌

  • @zzippelgazz
    @zzippelgazz Год назад +3

    Mark is amazing, i was watching his videos past 3 years now and i have improved so much that i rarely even consider any ocd and its relation to me, i have a life to live, so i do that instead 😀

  • @kalvess
    @kalvess 4 месяца назад +1

    Very smart approach bro.

  • @Whoopsie_woggzy
    @Whoopsie_woggzy 8 месяцев назад +1

    the way you discribed it really makes my brain 'feel' sort of sisyfusian (??) (i appreciate it!!)

  • @gingerisevil02
    @gingerisevil02 Год назад

    I couldn’t recover from OCD when I was living alone on disability in substafized housing with no autonomy being oppressed… now that I have a job, more security and autonomy, starting with an OCD specialist and ditching my unhelpful therapist, I’m starting to lose some intrusive thoughts…
    My ocd overlaps my other conditions, like self image and anorexia (body dysmorphia and anorexia nervousa…) I’ll obsess bout how other people perceive me.. working in child care was good exposure therapy… also cutting out superficial people who value those things/don’t value me… innocent and kind people do not objectify and devalue people. And I only did it to myself because I internalized narcissistic abuse and hated myself… still working on it. Still doing some compulsions like avoiding but that’s what I need right now until I can work with a specalist in April.
    These videos help a lot! Self compassion sounds like the key to recovery, not concerning yourself with being “pure” and “clean” and “perfect.”
    If you’re a woman, plenty of people who will objectify and dehumanize you… (my obsession is fear of being judged, humiliated, monitored, and watched in terms of my body and self image… harmed in my sleep, etc.) I feared it so much I’d isolate myself, or put myself in situations to be harmed… I think it’s also about mitigating your life. Ocd and anxiety are normal responses to high stress and oppressive situations for too long.
    TL;DR; I guess it’s true constantly exposing yourself to things helps!
    Having kids has helped me grow a thicker skin 😅the “mean comments” (they’re 4-5 they don’t know,) came later like “why is your face like that?” And “you have a skinny nose.” They didn’t cause my “trigger”/the insecurities were already inside me. Having compassion for myself and also knowing I can choose to disagree with what people say/not attatch significance to it as part of my value help.. I had guys who liked me insult my appearance too… understanding negging as of manipulation /gaslighting helped me realize what they say isn’t shit and I also don’t need to hang around people like that

  • @Metalhead1409W
    @Metalhead1409W Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your experience on intrusive thoughts. It takes courage to tell the world what you went through. I believe I have OCD and PTSD. I went to a therapist, but I found it to be a waste of time (or I just didn't find the right one).

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      I hope you find some great supports to help along the journey 😁

    • @Metalhead1409W
      @Metalhead1409W Год назад +1

      @@everybodyhasabrain appreciate it 🙏

  • @Kaku.0399
    @Kaku.0399 Год назад +15

    I was also struggling with intrusive thoughts for almost 3 to 6 months.. but then i understood that it's just the brain which are creating these thoughts.. we should not take our thoughts too seriously.. dn i stopped taking the thoughts seriously and i stop to put meaning on them..after that i overcome very quickly from these thoughts.. sometimes intrusive thoughts pop into my mind but i tell my brain , ohh intrusive thoughts you are here again okay you want to play but i will not gonna judge my thoughts..they are just harmless..do what you want to do my brain ... You enjoy your party .. it really helped when you don't put meaning on them..

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +4

      It is a wonderful skill to just let the brain go and do its thing

    • @Nicolas-rz7uc
      @Nicolas-rz7uc Год назад +2

      Really interesting. That’s what I’ve been focusing on lately. Would you say that the intrusive thoughts were linked to some sort of anxiety? Did you focus on changing things in the real world as well? Or that was just about calming the thoughts in your head. Thank you for your comment!

    • @Kaku.0399
      @Kaku.0399 Год назад

      @@Nicolas-rz7uc hey, actually during covid we all were busy with social media like Instagram , Facebook.. and there were so many news about death and all .. i had read many news about heart attack which negatively impact me.. and after that my brain started to create some thoughts related to my close ones .. which were very disturbing.. at first i tried to control my thoughts but that didn't work.. thn i came across to a video which literally change everything.. just don't take your thoughts seriously.. let them come in your mind and give them permission to do party in your head.. they will disappear automatically from your head..and if you find it difficult thn just give your brain a name and think it as a second person..and just ignore him completely..and you can finally see the change..

    • @Kaku.0399
      @Kaku.0399 Год назад +2

      @@Nicolas-rz7uc now i don't use social media that much..i only see those things which will improve my thoughts process.. and i started to spend more time with my family and friends .. just focus on your goals spend time with your love ones..and you'll overcome it.. fighting 🤘

  • @johnnymanning4920
    @johnnymanning4920 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is brilliant stuff. Thank you

  • @cha0siithe0ry19
    @cha0siithe0ry19 7 месяцев назад +1

    This is genius. Good ass video brother. Much love.

  • @ЙоанаТерзийска-й6д

    Thank you for your video and for your advices

  • @sweetAZhoney01
    @sweetAZhoney01 Год назад +1

    Fantastic video. You never fail to create awesomeness. Thanks for being here and for helping us 😊

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      Thank you so much for the super thanks donation, Chez! I appreciate the support and the kind words. It is an honour to be part of such an excellent community doing hard things!

  • @Peterstevoli
    @Peterstevoli 11 дней назад

    🙏🏻🙏🏻

  • @CandyWorld30
    @CandyWorld30 Год назад +1

    The OCD theme is different to each person depending on what is most important to the person and what they fear the most

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      Yes, it depends on beliefs and goals the person is holding onto.

  • @princesses278
    @princesses278 Год назад +1

    So stop ruminating ❤

  • @arfajmind2984
    @arfajmind2984 Год назад +2

    At the beginning of the video I was confused.. The title "get rid of intrusive thoughts" seemed to go agianst your teachings and views.. Now I understand that not judging brain stuff as "intrusive" is like not having "intrusive stuff" in the first place..

  • @gregfromusa
    @gregfromusa 7 месяцев назад +1

    I totally relate !!

  • @aaronmanzo1684
    @aaronmanzo1684 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU

  • @zeplin8349
    @zeplin8349 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Bro.

  • @SolarBabeLLC
    @SolarBabeLLC Год назад +1

    This video came right on time for me. Everything you said was extremely helpful, thank you so much!❤

  • @chelzyramirez3663
    @chelzyramirez3663 Год назад +2

    I noticed that when I don’t give into compulsions and sit with the thoughts my brain will give me a new theme every few minutes or hours if I sit with it it’s like nonstop I hope it ends soon😭

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      That's normal and it's also why themes aren't helpful and and why it's important to cut out compulsions across life (instead of topics), and why it's actually useful to look at the consequence of the fear/topic, not the superficial topic itself. The video I'll upload next weekend touches on this and the video later that week will look at how to go after the feared consequences instead of getting wrapped up in superficial brain indigestion.

  • @khushi600M
    @khushi600M Месяц назад

    I love you.

  • @miarosec.6514
    @miarosec.6514 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much❤️

  • @titusbrutus8861
    @titusbrutus8861 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much man

  • @aktsundere
    @aktsundere Год назад +4

    The problem with my intrusive thoughts is that they're all objectively wrong and often extremely gross so they really really scare me I know pushing them away Is the opposite of what I should be doing but I can't help it they scare the hell out of me

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +3

      That's usually where people are at when they start learning useful mental health skills. Grabbing a good workbook or working with a skilled professional could be great places to start learning skills

    • @aktsundere
      @aktsundere Год назад

      @Mark Freeman thanks for the reply mate I do have a therapist but I'm afraid of discussing these thoughts with them because they're not thoughts you should really discuss with anyone it makes me feel great to know that there is a path to recovery and that I'm not alone in this fight though

    • @anygoodnames
      @anygoodnames Год назад +4

      @@aktsundere I have thoughts of me being violent too, meditation and Buddhism helps a lot.

  • @soothersgreenjackson
    @soothersgreenjackson 9 месяцев назад +1

    Good video thankyou

  • @Advika-u1p
    @Advika-u1p Год назад +2

    Thank you for letting us know how this thing work.. How our brain work.. Without your help I would never have understood and my each day would go as in hell.. From now I will stop acting on these thoughts like Saying it's not true, and then justifying why it's not true and fighting with it which I used to do it..
    From now on I will just accept them.. It's hard accepting them, because I feel like i am getting attracted to that thought..an urge to make myself prove right..its like fighting me against me even though deep inside I know nothing such things as per thought gonna ever happen in reality but still i react like it's involuntary....but from now I will try to stay calm the moment the thought comes up, first I will try not to judge and engage with that thought.. And say it's okay mind.. You can think whatever you want.. That's your function.. But I will focus on my function and not interfere with yours

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      It is so useful to just let the brain do its thing. Have fun making the brain catch up to your instead of you trying to chase after it!

  • @drakefulton3914
    @drakefulton3914 Год назад +1

    Thank you Mark, very empowering

  • @vinkokrobot2226
    @vinkokrobot2226 Год назад

    Thanks brother

  • @shamailazeeshan2649
    @shamailazeeshan2649 Год назад +1

    suffering from the same kind of intrusive thoughts as you are telling , so much frustrating these are .

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      It helped me to cut out all of the compulsions I was doing around thoughts and other brain stuff

  • @Alhamdulilah6873
    @Alhamdulilah6873 Год назад +3

  • @Howdy-Personality
    @Howdy-Personality 11 месяцев назад

    The thoughts that i might sometimes have are related to the ones that i love basically getting hurt in such a violent and cruel way. It makes me feel sick in the head, but i know that they're only my intrusive thoughts, and its not sick if i react to them with nervousness. But i do want these thoughts to get away as quick as possible

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  11 месяцев назад

      But can you see the reassurance compulsion you just did in that comment? It helped me to see that's the kind of stuff that keeps the thoughts going.

  • @dariusthedestroyer7183
    @dariusthedestroyer7183 Год назад +1

    Amazing video Mark I remember discovering you on the podcast OCD stories it would be amazing if you would do a follow up podcast

  • @onyllindoro1361
    @onyllindoro1361 Год назад

    Magnificent info. Thank you 🙏

  • @Peach0023
    @Peach0023 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you

  • @JesseTaylorTraxxx
    @JesseTaylorTraxxx Год назад

    Amazing Video! Thank You Mark!

  • @sammullett17
    @sammullett17 Год назад +1

    My intrusive thoughts tell me I've done something bad! It's worse than you think your gonna do something bad!

  • @mehrabahmedhasam5998
    @mehrabahmedhasam5998 Год назад +4

    Just don't try to solve it.

  • @sollerclock
    @sollerclock Год назад

    Thanks so much man

  • @gmma125_5
    @gmma125_5 Год назад +1

    Mark, thanks so much, I love you’re unique perspective it’s very helpful. Do you have any insight you can share on social anxiety?

  • @dudewhatthehellman
    @dudewhatthehellman Год назад +2

    What’s the actionable insight? Realise that thoughts are only intrusive because we attach meaning to them, and be ok with thinking any thought?

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      Cut out all of those compulsions around thoughts and instead be a brain stuff athlete: want to have any thought or feeling or whatevers up there.

  • @honoringlife896
    @honoringlife896 Год назад

    Hey wow, thanks for the video. Like it very much :)

  • @immortalqq2560
    @immortalqq2560 Год назад +1

    I have thoughts that are disgusting and unacceptable in the real world. So that’s why it bothers me. I tend to stick on to them because they are so unacceptable. Should i just say to myself when these thoughts show up the word “ok”?

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +3

      I'm not sure why you'd need to say something to them. I would also skip all of that judging you're doing. I'm not sure how a thought could be "unacceptable in the real world". It's a thought. There's no difference between whatever thought you mean and a thought about a potato or a blue penguin on Mars. Those would all still be the same thing: a thought.

  • @ScottJ_Moses
    @ScottJ_Moses Год назад +2

    Hey Mark, for starters, your material has been one of the biggest factors in my ongoing recovery. That said, I’ve had a lapse recently, and I think it’s because, while I haven’t been ruminating, I’ve been judging old thoughts as “unwanted” and as a “lack of progress.” I’m going to watch the video again (it’s been some weeks) but I was wondering if you have any tips? (I’m aware I may get everything from the video, so thanks in advance) Thanks for it all.

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      This is really common, Scott! There are a couple of things that helped me with the same kinds of experiences. I explained a bunch of them in this video on 10 Things Nobody Tells You About Recovery: ruclips.net/video/cFHNhKnf-uY/видео.html Also, one thing I don't think I mentioned in that video, is that there seems to be a couple of fears/intrusive thoughts, which become like the brain's default alarm system for awhile. I noticed this for a year or two after I'd made a lot of changes: if there was anything going on in my life that involved more uncertainty than usual, I'd have some of the old intrusive thoughts, even if they were completely impossible at that point. But that was my brain's language. That's how it announced a problem, in the only way it knew how: with something I'd previously done compulsions around.
      Another thing that I've found very important, especially with maintaining skills that are useful to me, is that: The presence or absence of thoughts and feelings has NOTHING to do with mental health.

    • @ScottJ_Moses
      @ScottJ_Moses Год назад

      @@everybodyhasabrain Thanks so much, Mark. I’ve gone back to not engaging/judging the thoughts and just allowing them to be there. Seems to be helping quite a bit, and I appreciate what you said about the brain’s default alarm system. I just found out recently I’ll have a few major life changes in the next 8-9 months, so that really made sense to me. Thanks again for all you do.

  • @persistent-s
    @persistent-s 17 дней назад +1

    Hi Sir, thanks a lot for sharing. I am in deep trouble since last 1 year.
    I had some ocd before this but from last year due to some fear something got triggered and it became very worse.
    I am fighting since 1 year amd currently the main problem is.
    That my mind is auto visualizing everything, mostly if it dangerous or fearful then it does it more. Even while talking or reading etc.
    And a constant rubbish auto visualization that a big knife or something harmful(a sharp plate type thing or something unclear) is coming with speed on my neck and will cut it or hit it. It is very frequent sometimes😔😢 and the thing is
    everything is normal around me but this visualisation keeps going and it is very difficult to convey to my mind that nothing of that sort is real. But it creates choking and pain in neck😔
    I am troubled due to this.
    Then I have to change it or do something or kill the visualisation with another visualisation or something otherwise it becomes very distressing and I am not able to work or focus on anything😞
    And this 1 is main and another is the fear of some wandering soul (bhatakti aatma) which i fear is in my house of entering my body, it started from this only. I am not able to fully get over this fear as this fear accompanies the visualisation where my mind creates auto visualisation of something unclear coming towards me from back and will enter my body and do harm to me and will cause trouble to my body😢 amd it creates lot of heaviness in back and bad feeling where it is difficult to work or do something 😞
    And based on different fears it changes and creates anxiety accordingly as my mind auto imagines these fearful things.
    Like I heard about an incident where rods in a truck entered inside the bus in an accident. So that auto visualisation comes that the rod might hit my neck or chin and i see that as mind creates that imagination automatically 😢 and creates distress and anxiety.
    And then all of this leads to overthinking a loop of thoughts that nothing will happen to me and all.
    And I fear dogs to sometimes when I am outside walking and there are fogs around then the mind creates auto visualisation that the dog will come from back and will bite or attack me. And due to that lower legs and that region gets a bit of pain and heaviness 😢
    How to deal with all of this? Please please help.
    I have been trying several ways, it has got better but not cured. Sometimes it gets difficult. My kind tries creating some visualisation formed of light always. It is always requiring some visualisation otherwise it tries to go to bad ones and I am fed up of doing replacement visualisations as that also doesn't lets me focus.
    I need help!😢 Please!

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  17 дней назад

      @@persistent-s Have you learned about cutting out compulsions? You're describing compulsions here, and it looks like you might've been posting compulsions under a video earlier today with numbers. It can be very useful to cut out compulsions. They just fuel more of the brain stuff we try to avoid and control

    • @persistent-s
      @persistent-s 17 дней назад

      @@everybodyhasabrain What compulsion with numbers?? I think you misunderstood it.
      Those were timestamps I registered in comment as I found the things said at those timstamps in the video as important. That has nothing to do with compulsion and all, you are interpreting it wrong.

  • @aiai3036
    @aiai3036 Год назад +1

    This one being stuck for 2 months and it’s scary and won’t go literally 24/7 how do deal? If not thoughts then the feeling … anxiety linked to the thought and I know the anxiety has linked it but why isn’t my brain getting it , sometimes I swear at my self in the mirror coz it won’t go , I even tried to swap it with other bad thoughts but didn’t work. It’s like my brain dying for me to accept and just when I started recovering from Gad this happend . It’s the same pattern everyday I say don’t care anymore but truth is I can’t accept. Gives feeling of guilt , fear ect I understand but why isn’t my brain getting it ? It’s like I don’t own my brain lol

  • @marcelvandervyver5366
    @marcelvandervyver5366 3 месяца назад +1

    i get thoughts like intrusive thoughts but about past memories that tell me i should have done bad and disgusting things instead of what my reactions where in the memory

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  3 месяца назад +1

      That's the exact same stuff. The brain can throw up whatever it wants and you don't need to do the compulsions around that stuff.

    • @marcelvandervyver5366
      @marcelvandervyver5366 3 месяца назад

      @@everybodyhasabrain thank you

  • @paulasantiago6532
    @paulasantiago6532 Год назад

    Omg this made me feel better because the only one that bothers me is the image that pops up in my brain of poking my eye or eyes out then comes one like oh let me just do it n maybe itll leave me alone so basically my question is i just had a intrusive image then a thought? Afterwards like omg

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  11 месяцев назад

      It can help to see that checking on this is an example of the compulsions that fuel it. It doesn't matter whether it's an image, a thought, a whatever, or a something. The problems arise from judging any of that as important and then spending time and energy on it to chase certainty.

  • @wutru20
    @wutru20 Год назад +3

    Would you judge physical sensations like dizzyness or pppd and all that rabbit Hole stuff the same?

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +5

      Yes! It's whatever experience we judge as not being allowed.

  • @JonGGcool
    @JonGGcool Год назад

    This is exactly my problem… i do not Care ABOUT The initial thought but all The rumination afterwards is my problem and it happends as new intusivw thoughts as i know its not helpful and i do not want to do it

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      It's useful to cut out the compulsions we do in our heads around thoughts. Something that helped me was learning how to make changes around the thoughts I didn't view as threatening. Learning how to stop bothering those thoughts was a useful way to learn how to stop bothering other thoughts.

  • @chanchito4401
    @chanchito4401 Год назад

    For me I have intrusive thoughts about bad stuff in the world that bother me and it's very hard for me to deal with since it's enough for instance to make me miss if I throw a ball into a hoop the thought is saying "miss miss miss" (because the bad people want me to). Sometimes I try to agree with the thought to make it lose power but I wonder if just letting it be is best.

  • @lukeo2405
    @lukeo2405 Год назад +1

    Your a legend mate!!! ✌🏼

  • @KingKeK
    @KingKeK Год назад

    i had them my whole life. never knew that had a name till i was 40. i thought i was just messed up this whole time lolol

  • @jameswolohan1382
    @jameswolohan1382 Год назад +1

    Very good video thanks

  • @bigfranchise
    @bigfranchise Месяц назад

    What if there are so many emotions and traumas associated with a thought? Mine is sexually related and the name of the person is constantly pulsating in my mind.

  • @89tonstar
    @89tonstar Месяц назад

    The other day, I went to go pee, suddenly I had the thought, wow wouldnt that suck to have to get a catheter to pee everytime? That would be like the worst, my urinary stream was a little hesitant that day(I take a medication that causes that) suddenly I got incredibly paranoid about not being able to pee. I dealt with this cycle over and over for the last week and I am doing alot better now but I had to go to the ER to get checked out I was that afraid. It was horrible, I thought about it so much I had real discomfort downstairs real tightness in my pelvic floor. I am a highly spiritual person so I believe that its a spiritual attack but Its based in my fear of not being enough. So I have been facing the fear that I am enough by accepting that I deal with health paranoia from time to time. Thats just where I am.

  • @homiekeen23
    @homiekeen23 Год назад +2

    Any advice on how to "stop" the physical reaction that happens the second the thought pops up even if we don't engage with the thought? I find that the hardest, I could manage to not engage mentally but the physical bodily reaction keeps happening anyway

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      Wanting it. If we hate on it, then it just becomes the intrusive stuff we try to clean away. It really helped me to see that it's just about unwanted experiences. So it's also very common that people will cut out the compulsions around the mental discomfort but keep on hating over physical discomforts. But that's just the brain's way of keeping us hooked. Both discomforts are happening in the brain.

    • @homiekeen23
      @homiekeen23 Год назад +2

      @@everybodyhasabrain makes sense, I will try that, thank you!

  • @jonpate6129
    @jonpate6129 Год назад +1

    You can't reason with madness.

  • @marisolsantiago3767
    @marisolsantiago3767 Год назад +1

    🎉😊

  • @dwoo6642
    @dwoo6642 Год назад +1

    What would you suggest my issue is that if I get a bad thought I start to think that I don’t want this thought stuck on my head, then I get it stuck in my head

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +2

      It sounds like you described the issue perfectly. If you practice judging a thought as "bad" and then hating on it, of course you would get stuck in your head. So I'd be curious why you were asking what the issue is when you see it very clearly.

    • @dwoo6642
      @dwoo6642 Год назад

      @@everybodyhasabrain it’s just when I think “what if it gets stuck in my head “ then it does

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +1

      @@dwoo6642 Of course. Trying to avoid and control experiences in our heads only encourages the brain to create more of those problems to solve. The moment you tried to get certainty and control about it getting stuck, you stuck it! So it's much more useful to welcome any thought or feeling. You see what happens when you try to control them and push them away.

    • @dwoo6642
      @dwoo6642 Год назад

      @@everybodyhasabrain how exactly do you accept a thought

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      @@dwoo6642 You're in luck! I just released a video on that question recently: ruclips.net/video/1DsFtuxFPt8/видео.html

  • @Gypsymumma90
    @Gypsymumma90 4 месяца назад

    What if it brings up trauma 😢

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  4 месяца назад

      That's a very normal reason why we're doing compulsions around thoughts-- because we're trying to get a sense of control about something we had a painful experience with before. So it's great you notice the connection to that trauma. That's the opportunity to explore more useful ways of interacting with that and looking at what you want to give to yourself in the present that maybe you couldn't access with the painful past experience.

  • @scottmcleod2157
    @scottmcleod2157 Год назад

    Does this apply to obsessive worries as well? I guess really no different than intrusive thoughts ?

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад +3

      Same thing. I'd just look at it broadly as spending time in our heads that we don't need to spend up there.

  • @EvolvingAgain
    @EvolvingAgain Год назад +1

    My intrusive thoughts are guns and shooting people knowing my past feeling like people are having weird and threatening dreams about me feel like I have I enemies I feel like people are going to kill me panic attacks telling people from my past I’m sorry feeling like somebody wants too kill me feel like I can hear peoples thoughts and they can hear me no friends scared to go in public feel like I was laced or poisoned constant vision of death and bad things happening scared and I’m so hurt I’m 21 and I wasn’t like this but I was with a guy who was spiritual evil and he swapped our fears he has bad paranoia and I didn’t have that much paranoia then again it might be my brain that just needs healing feel like people are doing voodoo on me and I’m just seeing stuff I’m scared my get exsposed

    • @EvolvingAgain
      @EvolvingAgain Год назад +1

      Thank you 🙏🏾🥰

    • @everybodyhasabrain
      @everybodyhasabrain  Год назад

      It's very common to experience fears like this. I talked about paranoia in a recent video, here: ruclips.net/video/q_D8L9JQ1WM/видео.html It helped me to see my brain was often wrong. It's just trying to protect us by inventing problems to fix. But then it's always making us feel danger so we can chase more safety.