Guest posts

5 powerful hacks to boost your productivity in 2022

Guest post

I am so happy to welcome this guest post from Magdalene. You can find details on how to contact this amazing blogger below.

The first time I heard the word motion without productivity from my line manager, it sounded weird to me. How can one be unproductive yet move about working all day? This is so true sometimes for me. There are days that I take stock of my to-do at the end of the day and find out I barely scratched the surface. How can I boost my productivity either working from home or at work?

Here are 5 tips on how to boost your productivity in 2022 like a pro. These tips will come in handy for anyone looking to improve their productivity ASAP.

powerful hacks to boost your productivity

Make a to-do list

Like the saying, if you fail to plan then you plan to fail. So, it is true if you fail to plan your day. I feel most productive when I have a plan for the day.

Work your way through your to-do list as you go about your day. One way to write my to-do list is by using a planner. Planners are very useful in being productive. Especially digital planners that prompt you to do your task as it comes. You can also read my post on why you need a digital planner to boost your productivity. In this planner, you can split your task into small bits. 

Start with the hardest task of the day before moving to the easiest task. Also, prioritize your task as urgent, not so urgent etc. So, you tackle the very urgent task first before moving to another task for the day. 

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You can send your idea to mummyconqueringanxiety@gmail.com

Take short breaks

We all feel like we have so much to do daily. So, we may feel tempted to work for straight hours without breaks. Doing this is bad for you. Plus, you get burnt out faster this way. 

Always incorporate times for breaks in your work. Take short breaks, like 5 minutes away from your screen or your workstation. If possible, take a short nap for 10 minutes within your work. This will greatly improve your productivity. 

So, while your work, take these short breaks to keep you refreshed to carry out your daily task and maximise productivity.

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Cut out distractions

There is so much noise and distractions we must deal with these days. The temptation to spend time catching up with colleagues instead of working. Also, you may spend so much time scrolling through social media without care.

It is even worse if you’re a stay-at-home working mom. The distraction from the kids, house chores, errands, cleaning etc. Cut out these distractions by blocking out time for your task. If you work from home allocate time for the home tasks and work separately. 

Have a discussion with your family on the time you blocked out for work. In this way, they will help you limit your distractions. So, by limiting distractions you get to do more of your work. This will in turn boost your daily productivity.

Do a daily Call-over of your to-do list

My day job is banking. One skill I have learnt from my job is doing a daily call over of my task. This skill I have also used to boost my productivity. At the end of each day, go through your to-do list to track your achievement. Any task you cannot achieve on the same day, you can move over to the next day. 

This daily tracking will help you stay on top of your tasks. Also, it will boost your daily productivity.

Summary

In conclusion, productivity is achievable for anyone. All you need is to apply these 5 tips on how to boost your productivity in 2022. These tips will help you squash your daily goals and overall boost your productivity. Don’t forget to comment on other tips you use to boost your productivity. 

About the Author

Magdalene is a copywriter, content creator and fashion blogger. She loves to travel, shop and try out new fashion trends. Follow Trendsenstylez blog for fashion & lifestyle content.

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The challenges of parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis – Part one

Guest post – I am honoured to welcome Jason who has written an amazing guest post about parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis

Let’s dive in…

PART 2 will be published later this week...

The earliest years of parenthood are hard.  Really hard, actually.  Parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis is especially difficult.

It’s a time when stressors go up, stress relievers go down. And your scope of responsibility skyrockets in the most beautiful, but also complex and exhausting ways.  For those of us who enter these years with a mental health disorder, some aspects of parenting may be more complicated than others. Especially if, as I did, you have to make parenting and treatment work at the same time.  It’s doable, but it’s not easy. 

Below, I will explain why.

parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis

When you add mental health stigma to the pressures of parenting, you reach a simple but troubling conclusion. The mere existence of mental health stigma prevents some people from seeking mental health support when they need it most.  

Here’s why:

Confronting a mental health disorder while parenting poses a difficult paradox. You’ve likely never had a better or more pressing reason to get better. But you also have to contend with two new complications. First, all the usual blocks to mental health treatment. Including, stigma, lack of information and resources. These feel even more pronounced because of the added responsibilities and complexities of parenthood. 

Second, mental health treatment and parenting require many of the same resources. Energy, meaningful attention, information, time, and money.  As any new parent will tell you, those resources are strained and limited at the best of times.  In my case, I only learned this lesson after trying (and failing) to ‘power through’ what I thought were typical ‘new parent worries’. Only to discover that what I was trying to manage were clinical OCD symptoms. 

My own challenges

Over the next year and a half, I spent many long days and nights learning how to be a parent and manage my mental health at the same time.  In the earliest months of my therapy journey, I was struck by one question above all others. Why don’t more people talk about the challenges of managing mental health treatment and parenting at the same time?  As we’ll see, there are numerous answers to this question, but for now, let’s start with a seemingly obvious but deceptively insidious reason: stigma.

Paradoxes, Parenting and Stigma

Fred Rogers once said that anything human is mentionable, and anything mentionable is manageable.  I know, from personal experience, that Mr. Rogers’ words are as true now as when he first said them. But it’s also been my experience that certain aspects of parenting are more mentionable, and, by extension, more manageable than others. 

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Parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis is difficult because the fact is, it’s not easy to admit you’re suffering from a mental health disorder when you’re a parent.  There are real and daunting fears of the stigma that come with opening up about your struggles.  For me, these fears manifested in the form of some daunting and complicated questions.

What will people think?

Parenting is a visceral journey that often defines at least part of a person’s life and identity.  With strong emotions come strong opinions.  If it’s something we teach to kids, be it feeding, sleeping, toileting or discipline, someone has an opinion about it. 

In one sense, a range of opinions is helpful because it allows parents to make informed decisions, but in another sense, it adds pressure and judgment to every decision we make.  When you add mental health stigma to the pressures of parenting, you reach a simple but troubling conclusion. The mere existence of mental health stigma prevents some people from seeking mental health support when they need it most.  

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Think of it this way: when are you most likely to need help?  When you’re struggling, of course. However, when are you least likely to admit that you’re vulnerable?  For most people, the answer to the question is likely a time when you’re responsible for something important to you. 

For me, the answer was the day I became a Dad.  To say it was a stressful collision of circumstances is an understatement, at best.  I would like to say I immediately admitted to my struggles and sought help, but I didn’t.  I resisted the reality of my situation because I was stuck. And, I was stuck because I couldn’t answer another important question about my symptoms.

Extreme reactions are great for extreme situations, but they’re not practical for responding to the everyday ups and downs of raising kids.  The inner battle of deciding which feeling was right was constant and agonizing.  It was a seemingly endless process that often left me emotionally exhausted.

What does my mental health (or lack thereof) say about me as a parent?

Anxiety thrives in the hypothetical.  When I first experienced an onset of clinical OCD symptoms, my mind went into overdrive about what my symptoms meant for me and my family.  Was I sick for life?  Was I cursed?  Was I just too weak to manage my new responsibilities?  Part of me knew that these questions were irrational. But another part of me worried that admitting to my symptoms would trigger stigma towards me from others, and, ultimately, affect the way they saw me as a parent. 

The irony was, anyone who knew me well could see that I was suffering anyway.  Or, to be more precise, they could see that I was trying to cover the fact I was suffering.  In retrospect, I can see many ways OCD affected my parenting in my earliest months of Dadhood.  To dissuade others from missing similar details, I’ve listed several of my most prevalent behaviours below.

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OCD and Parenting: Conflicting Emotions, Conflicting Behaviours

Having kids is touted as a joyous experience, and in so many ways, it is.  For me, though, having kids also meant spikes in stress and anxiety. The likes of which I had never felt before.  From the moment I first held my boys, I felt dedicated to their growth, happiness, and protection. I loved those feelings.  The problem was, my malfunctioning brain took those natural parental emotions, swirled them up with obsessions, and sent my mind into a tailspin.  I never doubted I loved my boys, but my anxieties and emotions were so out of control I couldn’t love every moment of raising them, at least not at first.  Here’s how those feelings manifested in day-to-day life.

Zero to One Thousand

A baby crying isn’t just an early attempt at communication.  It’s a biological chain reaction designed to alert parents to their children’s needs and to prompt them to act.  To an obsessive-compulsive brain, a baby crying is like strapping a rocket to a race car. Your brain is already in non-stop stress response mode. And then it gets flooded with another round of stress hormones every time your baby cries.  Consider, for example, a normal parental response to baby crying:

1.     Baby cries.

2.     Parent hears the cry.

3.     Parent thinks, ‘I need to go check on the baby’.

4.     Parent calmly goes to the baby.

5.     Parent assesses the baby’s needs and offers food, comfort, and attention as needed.

It’s a logical sequence of baby care, and it’s what I expected to be doing when I heard my babies crying.  I was wrong. Here’s what my reaction cycle looked like:

parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis

1.     Baby cries.

2.     I hear the cry.

3.     My chest tightens, and my heart rate goes up.

4.     I start picturing worst-case scenarios and wondering which one of them is playing out.

5.     I bolt up from what I’m doing.

6.     I go to my babies and start to assess them for serious injuries and missing vital signs.

7.     I realise they’re OK, and I start trying to calm everyone down, including myself.

The problem was, I was locked in a state of flared emotions and rigid thinking.  I couldn’t think outside my own head because I couldn’t see beyond my own thoughts.  

What you’re seeing is the effect of increased stress hormones on an already-imbalanced set of neural circuits.  The logical parent in me knew crying was normal and encouraged me to react rationally.  The OCD part of me jumped straight to the worst-case scenario.  Extreme reactions are great for extreme situations, but they’re not practical for responding to the everyday ups and downs of raising kids.  The inner battle of deciding which feeling was right was constant and agonizing.  It was a seemingly endless process that often left me emotionally exhausted.  Speaking of which.

Emotional Exhaustion

Raising kids takes a lot of patience and resilience.  To manage those ups and downs successfully, you need emotional energy.  When my OCD symptoms were at their worst, I was running on emotional fumes.  Sleep times meant I could relax physically, but it also meant lying alone with my brain and fighting off non-stop obsessions.  By the time I went into the nursery to get my boys up for their next feed, it was like I had just returned from hiking on an icy mountain top.  I felt relieved, but I was mentally and emotionally fried.

When my symptoms were at their worst, I was frequently frustrated, irritable, and difficult to be around for my wife and family.  Simple messes and spills were an infuriating disaster.  Stubbing my toe made me feel like the universe was conspiring against me.  It’s not that I’m a petty person.  Normally, those things don’t bother me.  The problem was I had no patience for minor annoyances because all my emotional energy was being spent on managing my obsessions and compulsions.  Over time, getting through the motions of day-to-day life became harder and harder. The longer I tried to tough it out, the more exhausted I became.  Still, I pressed on, thinking it was only a matter of time before things got better.  When that approach didn’t work, I tried to find relief by exercising more control over my circumstances.

parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis

Overprotective (No, Like Really Overprotective)

It’s natural to feel reasonably protective of your kids, but OCD makes it hard to react calmly and rationally to even the possibility of a threat.  Some of my worst obsessions were based on my kids choking, drowning, and falling from heights.  Combined with a parent’s emotions, those obsessions made feedings, bath time, and carrying my boys up and down stairs difficult. 

I reacted with fight-or-flight intensity to the slightest hint of choking, unexpected slips in water. And even the slightest of squirms when I carried them up and downstairs.  In other words, I acted as if there was a real threat based on the possibility of a hazard.  OCD is like that.  It makes you believe that situations are either completely safe or imminently dangerous. That your actions are the difference between the two. 

There isn’t a place or situation on planet Earth that is one hundred percent safe, and kids have to take risks to learn their limitations. But at first, I couldn’t accept this.  Believe it or not, that approach made perfect sense to me.  After all, I was just doing my parental duties, wasn’t I?  As it turns out, even those were harder than I thought.

Parenting Duties

I had a lot of trouble learning how to put shirts on my sons.  That’s not a typo.  I had to ‘learn’ how to do it.  Here’s why: babies are tiny and delicate.  When I pull a shirt over my head, I line my head up with the hole and pull.  I can do that because my neck is strong.  It doesn’t move when I put on a shirt.  My sons were little, and their necks were delicate.  In my head, that meant risk for them, and life-or-death responsibility for me. 

For most parents, the delicacy of a baby is just a reminder to be reasonably cautious.  For me, it meant I needed a procedure to ensure there was zero risk of breaking my kids’ necks, or of them suffocating if the shirt got stuck at their noses or mouths on the way down to their bodies.  Most times I was successful, but when a shirt did get stuck, I had to remove it and find another way to put it on. Or find a new shirt altogether. 

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I also tried to only use shirts with extra-wide head holes, and if the head hole wasn’t wide enough, I would stretch it before putting it on (let’s just say my wife – the one who did all the clothes shopping – was none too pleased about that).  Remember, neither of us knew about my OCD diagnosis at first, so there was confusion and frustration all around.

Where am I now?

Looking back, part of me feels proud I didn’t let my symptoms ruin my parenting altogether.  Dressing my boys was difficult, but I still dressed them.  Diaper changes were stressful, but I still did them.  That, in itself, is an accomplishment.  I just wish I could’ve enjoyed those things without feeling like I was navigating a life-or-death situation.  The problem was, I was locked in a state of flared emotions and rigid thinking.  I couldn’t think outside my head because I couldn’t see beyond my thoughts.  

Thankfully, with the help of a brilliant therapist and a supportive family, I found the strategies I was looking for. 

Final thoughts

If you’d like to know more about the practicalities of making OCD, therapy, and parenting work together, be sure to check out part two of this blog series for more information.  You can also find my book, which contains all the gritty details mentioned in this blog and more, at http://www.theocdad.ca

A few final words from me

I want to thank Jason for sharing this honest post about parenting struggles whilst managing a mental health condition. I was emotional when I first read through this post, simply because I totally relate to the struggles. I also relate to the guilt you feel for not being your best self as a parent.

I hope this post helps someone out there, and I can’t wait to share part two with you all later in the week.

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parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis

The challenges of parenting twins with an OCD diagnosis – Part Two

Thank you to Jason for providing Part Two of this wonderful story. It is important we raise awareness of these issues. If you missed part one, you can click on the button below to access this:

Back when I began writing my first book (OCDad: Learning to Be a Parent with a Mental Health Disorder – read about it here!). I had a mantra that I kept repeating throughout the project: practical, not profound…practical, not profound. 

The reason for that mantra was simple: I knew my situation as a parent with a mental health disorder wasn’t unique.  I’m not saying my situation was insignificant. But I knew I couldn’t be the only one out there looking for practical ways to manage my mental health. And be a good, reliable parent at the same time.  I personally, only wanted to engage with posts and resources that gave me relatable, practical advice. The advice I could use in my real life.

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Therapy is a process, not a lifestyle.  At some point, it’s important to take what you’ve learned and get back out into the world to give it a try.

My desire to help other people

To that end, I wanted to take a bit of time to share some key points from my notes and experiences. This information is for those who either can’t engage with a full-length book at the moment (no judgment, honestly…I’ve been there, too). Or who are just looking for some supplemental information along with their parenting and mental health journeys?  This being the case, here are some thoughts on the practicalities of managing mental health treatment and parenting in tandem.

Some Practicalities of Accessing Therapy When You’re a Parent

I always say parenting and therapy are difficult to manage together because they demand the same resources: time, money, emotional energy, and meaningful attention.  Parenthood is also a challenging time to put oneself first. After all, you have at least one tiny human in your life who is utterly dependent on you for survival. And, later, for playtimes, questions, discussions, and fort-building.  It’s a tough balance, and it needs to be approached with intention whenever possible. 

With that goal in mind, let’s turn first to some of the obstacles to accessing therapy as a parent, and then to a few starting ideas about what you can do to help yourself, and your loved ones:

Time

This is one of the most common reasons people use for turning down lots of different commitments, parents or otherwise.  I was worried therapy would be an all-encompassing drain on my time, but that was an untested assumption.  It’s not as if it only took a few minutes per week, but it wasn’t overwhelming either. 

Here are some specific numbers that might help. For the first two months, I went to therapy once every two or three weeks for one hour.  I was fortunate to be able to schedule appointments outside of my work hours. But for those who can’t do that, many therapy services now work online, and at odd hours.  For the time required to journal and complete my therapy exercises at home, my time commitments looked like this:

  • First three months: thirty to forty-five minutes per day, five to six days per week
  • Three months to six months: thirty minutes per day, four to five days per week
  • Six months to one year: thirty minutes per day, three to four days per week
  • One year onward: journaling two to three times per week, and therapy exercises as needed

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Your journey could be different – read on for more tips

Remember, those are my numbers, not yours.  Some people might need more time, others will need less.  I should also note that the gradual tapering of my therapy was due, in part, to my therapist’s recommendation.  Therapy is a process, not a lifestyle.  At some point, it’s important to take what you’ve learned and get back out into the world to give it a try.

In terms of the time at home for journaling and exercises, I’ll admit, it was a struggle sometimes.  There were plenty of days where time for therapy simply went out the window, but there were also some strategies that helped.  Here is a list of my top five:

  1. Keep the right mindset from the start. For a time, therapy will likely have to replace something in your life.  In my case, I modified the frequency and intensity of my workout schedule and readjusted my down time in the evenings.  I also allocated funds for my therapy knowing that it was a necessary investment.  Honestly, I didn’t want to do any of those things, but I wanted to heal more than I wanted money and down time.
  2. Trade off driving responsibilities on long road trips and complete some journaling or written CBT exercises.
  3. Watch less TV.  Yes, sorry, it’s true.  Even one less episode of something per night can really add up.  I cut out TV a few nights per week for therapy exercises for the first year of my treatment.  It helped.  A lot.
  4. Take advantage of any family support and babysitting you can access.  It’s OK if you don’t want to disclose your therapy journey to other people, but you can always spend a bit of your release time in a cafe with a workbook, or on the phone with a therapist.  Every bit of time helps.
  5. Trade off on rest and chore times with your partner.  For example, maybe your partner can manage evening clean-up while you do your therapy exercises in exchange for a bit of sleep in time the next morning.

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Why therapy is worth it

As I’m sure you can see, I viewed (and still view) therapy as work; important, life-altering work, but still work.  I don’t think it’s wrong to admit that.  The fact is, therapy takes time and effort.  With time and effort comes results, but also some inevitable sacrifices.  I don’t mention that to be pessimistic, or to deter anyone in their therapy journey.  I say it so that you can have a realistic idea of what you’re signing up for when you start therapy as a parent.  There are drawbacks, but there are so many benefits.  In the next section, we’re going to look at an example of each of those.

Exposure Response with Prevention therapy (ERP)

Exposure Response with Prevention therapy (ERP) is the process of gradually exposing yourself to things that trigger your obsessions. To lessen the intensity of your reactions and reconceptualize the source and function of your intrusive thoughts.  It sounds swell and helpful, and for the most part, it is. 

Here’s something I learned the hard way, though: not all exposures work for parents and families.  That was one of my biggest frustrations with every resource I read when I first started my treatment.  I remember thinking, ‘Great, this exposure stuff is going to work brilliantly for my obsession about heights and suicidal OCD, but what about my obsessions about my kids?’  There was no way I was going to expose my sons to gradually increasing levels of contaminants, greater heights, or more dangerous water settings. Just so I could prove to myself that I could feel more comfortable with them being at risk.  Luckily, I found a solution that worked well: imaginal exposures.

Imaginal Exposures

Imaginal exposures are exactly what they sound like. Exposing yourself to a distressing situation by imagining it and writing it out.  That might sound like a strange process, but I think it has a lot of advantages.  For one thing, you can confront any intrusive thought you want with no actual risk to you or your loved ones.  Second, you can control when and how the exposure takes place.  There are no concerns about making noise, leaving the house, spending money, or any other logistical demand you can think of, other than time and attention.

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A warning when working through exposures

That’s not to say, of course, that imaginal exposures are easy.  The first time I tried one, I broke down crying because I went straight to imagining my most difficult kid-based obsessions. Such as seeing my sons fall from a high balcony.  I didn’t realize that imaginal exposures work just like real-world exposures. They need to be conducted slowly, regularly, and in progressive steps. 

It would’ve made far more sense to start by writing out an exposure about my son falling from the couch, then maybe a couple of stairs, then maybe a small park climber.  If you’ve never done an exposure with the help of a qualified therapist, MAKE SURE you read about how to create an exposure hierarchy first.  This page and this page will help get you started.  DON’T go any further without reading both those pages (seriously, don’t). 

With that caution in mind, here are the instructions I used for my imaginal exposures:

Imaginal Exposure Instructions

  1. Select a trigger from your exposure ladder that you either can’t or don’t want to try in real life.
  2. Choose a scenario where this trigger plays out most often.
  3. Write out the scenario as vividly and powerfully as you can.  If possible, include a description from all five senses.
  4. Re-read your imaginal exposure often, and read it out loud.

Sometimes, the best you can do is reflect on a moment that didn’t go well and prepare for next time.

Next, a couple of reflection points from my experience with imaginal exposures:

I did my best to limit my imaginal exposures to one page of writing.  The point of this exercise is to confront a scenario that you repeatedly see in your mind. Not to imagine all kinds of other bizarre and irrational ways the situation could play out. I also found I had to be cautious about not letting my mind wander too much.  I also found my exposures had to be repeated until they became easy or boring, and that often took several repetitions.

Say it out loud

Also, step 4 in the instructions is worth repeating. Read your written exposures out loud, if possible.  Seriously.  Reading my imaginal exposures out loud helped me process them in a completely different way.  It took away so much of their influence over my mind and emotions. More so than writing alone, and infinitely more than keeping the exposure in my head.

Now, let me be clear about something – it was an immensely uncomfortable exercise at first.  I didn’t even want to write out an imaginal exposure, let alone read it out loud. And I was always worried that someone else was going to hear me and think I was crazy.  Eventually, I decided to give it a try. 

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Starting exposures

I waited until my boys were out on a walk with my wife and her friend, and then I locked myself in my room, opened the imaginal exposure, and read it; quietly, but out loud.  Have you ever had one of those moments where you explain an idea to someone and then realize that the idea made a lot more sense in your head than it does out loud?  It was a lot like that.  To this day, I’m so glad I took that uncomfortable leap, and I have therapy to thank for the push.

Drawback: CBT and ERP Don’t Always Work in the Moment (at least not right away)

Sometimes, even with all the progress I’ve made, my symptoms still get the better of me.  Whether it’s a compulsion that slips through my net or an anxious reaction to an unexpected trigger, sudden flare-ups just happen. 

I remember one incident, about a year into my treatment, when my wife and I took the boys to a park near our house.  The park was lined with oak trees, and acorns were strewn all over the ground.  I had just worked through an exaggerated threat exercise about fears of my boys choking at mealtime, and I was feeling good about my progress.  

Then, all of a sudden, one of my sons picked up an acorn and put it in his mouth.  I lost it.  I ran over to him, took the acorn out of his mouth, put him in the stroller, and insisted to my wife that we relocate our playtime to somewhere with no acorns.  She and the boys were understandably stressed and confused.  Mealtimes were no longer a trigger for obsessions about choking, but evidently, park time was, at least when there were acorns around.

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After that incident, I did the only thing I could do. Apologized to my wife, forgave myself for the lapse, and completed more exercises to help process my obsession in that situation.  Over time, I started using a specific set of questions to reflect on these kinds of incidents:

Momentary Lapse Reflection

  1. What happened?
  2. How did I react?
  3. Why did I react that way?
  4. What were the pros and cons of my reaction?
  5. How should I change my reaction if this situation comes up again?

Taking some intentional reflection time after momentary lapses was helpful and productive.  I didn’t have time to debrief every disagreeable situation. But it was great to have a resource available for when I needed it.  The next time we went to the park, I mentally prepared myself to manage the trigger of the acorns. And I had a much more balanced reaction when my boys tried to pick them up.  Sometimes, the best you can do is reflect on a moment that didn’t go well and prepare for next time.

Summary

So, there you have it.  A very brief glimpse into the practicalities of managing therapy and parenting.  If you would like to know more, please visit my website – http://www.theocdad.ca – and get in touch.  This conversation is a long and personal one, and there are so many ways therapy and OCD challenge each of us.  The key, in my opinion, is the same key that brings change and results in any other setting: consistent effort.  If you ever feel your efforts waning, just know that you’re not alone.  Ever.

Fighting forward.

Jason Adams

Final thoughts from me

I want to thank Jason for writing this post and highlighting these important issues. I know how difficult it is to discuss such personal topics. However, we must do. To help other people, we must speak out.

Please head over and check out Jason’s website and social media accounts.

Thank you all for taking the time to read and comment on these posts. Part one can be found here if you missed it.

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