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"description": "Two change stories detailing what happens when you look *away* from mental dis-order š",
"path": "/a-bit-more-on-ocd/",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-27T07:00:09.000Z",
"site": "https://www.gilespcroft.com",
"tags": [
"Daily Reminders subscriber",
"Part 1",
"Not writing about conditions",
"Not writing about conditionsWhy itās not always helpful to look at the details of a diagnosis š©š»āāļøThe Daily RemindersGiles P Croft",
"Beyond Diagnosis: A Paradigm Shift from Pathology to Innate Health",
"Samantha",
"Unknown unknowns",
"thought/feeling connection",
"podcast discussion between Samantha and Dr Amy Johnson",
"Nicola Bird and Damian Mark Smyth",
"power of insight",
"Syd Banks materials",
"previous post",
"trying",
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"Looking upstream šThe benefits and drawbacks of different modalities used to address mental health conditions. (Premium Written & Audio Content.)The Daily RemindersGiles P Croft"
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"textContent": "Please write _āa bit more on OCDā_ was a request from a Daily Reminders subscriber that I took to heart and have been researching on their behalf. My answer started a couple of days ago, with a Part 1 to this topic (this piece is Part 2).\n\nSo if you're reading this because of the post's title, then I'd say it's essential that you familiarise yourself with āNot writing about conditionsā first (it's a 4 min read), because it sets the entire context for this second part.\n\nI'll waitā¦\n\nNot writing about conditionsWhy itās not always helpful to look at the details of a diagnosis š©š»āāļøThe Daily RemindersGiles P Croft\n\nPart 1 of this 2-Part series on OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)\n\nYou're back! šš»\n\nNow, I'm going to go ahead and assume that if you've got an interest in this topic, you don't need to learn any more details about the condition, so really I'm signposting you to helpful resources š\n\n## Resource #1\n\nI ended that last piece by saying, I was going to look at a real life example of someone who āovercameā OCD when they were introduced to the Innate Health/3 Principles understanding.\n\nThat someone, and their story, has come from Chana Studley's fantastic, highly-recommended book Beyond Diagnosis: A Paradigm Shift from Pathology to Innate Health (the subtitle for which could be the subtitle for the Daily Reminders themselves, eh)? _#AllSayingTheSameThing_\n\nAfter _Part One_ of the book, where Chana outlines the Innate Health understanding in relation to mental health diagnoses, _Part Two_ explores stories from people who'd been given various diagnostic labels, and what happened to their lives (and their experience of their diagnosis) when pointed in this direction.\n\nOne of the chapters is from Samantha, who details all of her OCD symptomsāchecking, touching, organising; horrible intrusive thoughts; being _ā95% preoccupied ⦠and 5% presentā_ āand all of the things she tried over the years, for the condition: therapy, CBT, medication⦠none of which really had any lasting effect.\n\n#### **The post-insights version**\n\nThen she went on a 3 Principles/Innate Health-related course, and had these sorts of things to say:\n\n> _āThis opened a door to seeing my mental health in a way I had never imagined ⦠my mind quieted down for the first time ever.ā_\n\n(_āNever imaginedā_ = Unknown unknowns, yeah?) And this āquieting downā very much chimes with the first time this understanding really landed for me. The contrast between the noise in my head that I had _completely_ taken for granted, and the silence that descended, when the thought/feeling connection clicked for me⦠it was like night and day. Very strange, initially, truth be told!\n\nInsights are always unique to us, and Samantha describes hers as seeing deeply that:\n\n> _āAll minds are machines and churn out stories based on long-held beliefs to protect us ⦠it was fleeting and had nothing to do with me.ā_\n\nI actually listened to a podcast discussion between Samantha and Dr Amy Johnson (whose course she attended) and the most interesting part of that for me relates to my previous postāthat looking at everything from the perspective of the symptoms (which is what regular therapies often do) was not helpfulāwhen she said:\n\n> _āEverything had always been [looked at] through this OCD lens ⦠āI've got this, ⦠how do I get rid of it, I want to be back the way I wasā, and that was the big joke in the end; that was another huge insight I had: I was always wanting to get back to the way I wasāāLife was great when I was 18, right, before I had this episode?!āāand it was just this false, false hope that there's something to get back to and, God, that was just about the biggest relief I could ever feel when I saw that there's nothing to get back to! I didn't go anywhere! I've always been here! ⦠It was just covered up. Nothing changed, I just see it differently ā that's it.ā_\n\nShe concludes in the same way that most other 3 Principles stories with happy endings conclude:\n\n> _āWhen I could see this on a deeper level, the noise in my head had no reason to be so loud. It couldn't get my attention any more. And I found myself able to spend more time in the present moment. I found my peace with it all.ā_\n\nš\n\n## Resource #2\n\nI hope that's whet your appetite, because your second resourceāa podcast episode between Nicola Bird and Damian Mark Smythāis a real doozy.\n\nDamian had crippling OCD symptoms that changed _completely_ , after one weekend's course! (That's the power of insight, folks.)\n\nI'm going to leave it here for you, and just bullet point some of my favourite highlights, below:\n\nEpisode 29: Obsessive Compulsive Disorder with Damian Mark Smyth\n\n0:00\n\n/2651.06285\n\n1Ć\n\nOMG I _love_ this episode!! Highlights for me were:\n\n * His description of OCD from the inside of it all\n * How this human-made, diagnostic label of a ādis-orderā wasn't actually a thing\n * How he binged a whole load of Syd Banks materials, looking for answers, and got precisely nowhere\n * The way it was only when he was a bit hungover and not even really _capable_ of trying to āget itā intellectually that something really landed (you'll have to listen in, to hear the big insight that changed everything for him)\n * How he didn't have to **_do_** anything for the OCD symptoms to go away ā they just ādidn't make senseā any more\n * Finally, his assertionālike mine, in the previous postāthat the symptoms themselves are **_never_** the problem.\n\n\n\n## Conclusion\n\nSo there we go ā just a ābit moreā on OCD (two whole posts!) that nonetheless will quite possibly come as a bit of a disappointment to the seeking Reader Ego Construct š¦ ⦠as we point _away_ from these patterns of behaviour, not deeper _into_ them.\n\nBoth Samantha and Damian found their way through it all, not by trying harder; not by doing _more_ research or reading _more_ about the condition, but essentially by doing _less_ :\n\n * Samantha by stopping the search for āsomething to get back toā\n * Damian when he was a bit hungover and frankly incapable of intellectually wrestling any sense out of it!\n\n\n\nš\n\nThere's a message in there somewhere.\n\nI'll leave you to find it for yourself⦠but don't try _too_ hard, eh?\n\nš\n\nGiles\n\np.s. If you recognise yourself in either of these stories and you're curious (or even a teeny bit excited) at the possibility of change, then get in touch. Working 1:1, _with_ people, to get through these things is what I do ā what I _love_ to do! Not teaching techniques, raking over the past or giving you _more_ to do⦠just the kind of conversation that points in a more useful direction. You know, upstream šš®āŗļø\n\n### Related\n\nLooking upstream šThe benefits and drawbacks of different modalities used to address mental health conditions. (Premium Written & Audio Content.)The Daily RemindersGiles P Croft",
"title": "āA bit more on OCDā",
"updatedAt": "2026-03-27T07:00:09.907Z"
}