What is Obsessive Compulsive Disorder?
The characteristics of this disorder, especially as it appears in children
5/8/20243 min read


OCD is not always straightforward. It can look so different from one kid to the next. Often significant parts of symptoms are kept hidden. What I hope to offer in this post is something directed to parents who are trying to understand their child’s behavior and how OCD appears.
What is OCD?
OCD is usually an anxiety disorder although the feeling can vary from being strictly anxiety. For our purpose there is intense anxiety or distress for someone suffering with this. It is easy to get confused or overwhelmed by the symptoms so it is important to understand it is powered by anxiety.
Obsessions
So broadly, what is OCD? Let’s start with the “O”, obsessive. The term means a kid’s brain is stuck thinking about something over and over and over. But is it more than just a stuck thought. A kid feels dominated by the scary thoughts and feelings. Obsess was originally a medieval term for besieging a city! A kid’s brain has been invaded by fearful thoughts and feelings.
One thing that is unique with OCD compared to other worries is that these thoughts are commonly felt to be intrusive and unwanted. Because they are unwanted and highly distressing the person feels compelled to do something about them. It is far too troubling to just ignore. The reason the thoughts are so scary is that they are about something of the greatest personal importance. For example, if a child deeply loves someone the thoughts might be that harm would come to that person. The more important the value, the scarier it would be if something catastrophic happened. These thoughts are present every day and persist for a long time. The thoughts are extreme and the imagined consequences terrible. Most adults can tell the thoughts and feelings are extreme and unreasonable but sometimes that is not as clear to kids. It is important to note that obsessions cause and increase anxiety and/or distress.
Compulsions
Because these thoughts are unwanted, intrusive and scary this leads to fierce attempts to do something to fix it and make it safe. This is where the “C” or compulsive part comes into play. A compulsion is an action (mental or behavioral) a kid might take to fix the problem. You need to know for your child, this doesn’t feel optional; the urge to do something feels nearly irresistible. The emotional force and effort can be stunning. A compulsion can take lots of forms. It can be more mental like trying to ignore, suppress, neutralize or counter act the thoughts, or it can be behavioral action to fix or escape the danger.
Even though the actions can seem quite eccentric and purposeless they are not. They are definitely disruptive to the normal flow of life. They aren’t even consistent. For example, if the fear is about a contaminant, one bathroom might be totally scary but another fine. To an observer there is no difference. Most parents get pretty worried that their child will have lots of social backlash because of these compulsions. Please understand that the symptoms are an attempt to get rid of the problem that is causing distress. Your kid isn’t okay with acting so unusual; they are so distressed they will do just about anything to get safe. Kids with OCD are NOT crazy, broken or destined to weirdness. Underneath these intense and sometime peculiar symptoms is a kid just trying to solve what seems like an enormous problem. While obsessions increase distress, compulsions decrease anxiety (although only temporarily).
O + C = Disorder
Okay, so you have intrusive, unwanted and highly distressing thoughts that dominate a kid’s thoughts and feelings plus a nearly irresistible urge to do something to fix the fear and make things safe. For a diagnosis of OCD you have them both. By the way, if you have been researching you may have run into something described as pure “O”. The idea is that the only symptom is the obsession. There is no such thing. There are always compulsions. Sometimes the O seems the most prominent and sometimes the C does but they are always both there.
So a quick summary:
Obsession
Thinking, imagining, focusing on something highly distressing
These thoughts intrude and dominate your mind
They are scary because they threaten something deeply important
They are present almost always and persist day after day
The content of the thoughts seem personally catastrophic
Cause or increase anxiety
Compulsion
A nearly overwhelming urge to do something about the obsession
It might be mental like replaying a thought, counting to avoid bad luck, replacing bad thoughts with good thoughts
It might be behavioral like cleaning, apologizing, touching, or organizing
To an observer it might look useless or contradictory but there is always the underlying purpose of solving a problem
Reduces anxiety briefly
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