online in CA & TX | IN-person in San Bernardino, Ca

OCD Counseling

For women who are ready to ditch the nagging doubt of OCD.

 
 

Stop resisting your thoughts and lean into them.


 

Sound familiar?

 
  • Time-consuming routines

  • Seeking constant reassurance

  • Acting to prevent your worst fears

  • Avoidance

  • Asking “what if” all the time

  • Feeling embarrassed, ashamed, or disgusted

  • Keeping your thoughts a secret

  • Trying desperately to prevent the most awful things

  • Arguing with your family because they don’t understand

 
 

You have strong values for safety, love, connection, and health. You care deeply about your family, try to do your best at your job, and want to live a meaningful life.

BUT NOW ANXIETY HAS ATTACHED ITSELF TO EVERYTHING YOU’VE EVER LOVED.

Your intrusive thoughts feel like the opposite of a wish— everything you never wanted to happen. You feel overwhelmingly driven to do certain things to make sure you aren’t the reason bad things happen in your life.

 
 

We’re here to tell you:

You don’t have to perform one more ritual.

What you resist persists—effort works backwards.

What we’ll work on

Identify

What is triggering your intrusive thoughts? We’ll make a list of all of the things you think, feel, see, and hear that create discomfort. 

Rate

Your discomfort using a scale of 0 to 100 to visualize just how intense your triggers feel. Rating them sets us up for testing them in a gradual way.

Organize

Your triggers onto a ranking system. In a progressive way, we will begin to face what your thoughts have been telling you is the worst case scenario.

Test

Different theories in a systematic way. Like a scientist conducting an experiment, in real life, we expose ourselves to our feared outcomes and see what happens.

Lean In

To all of the feelings that may come, knowing that we don’t need to ‘do’ anything to make feelings go away. The urge to ritualize will go away, the more we lean in.

Process

What happens in our experiments, instead of relying on predictions. While confronting our feelings, without rituals, escapism, or avoidance, we codify what we learned.

 
 

What if

You could buy back time?


 

What if I told you that you can ‘buy back’ your time by eliminating time-consuming rituals? What if you could spend the time you would normally spend on rituals by actually watching your kids play (without worrying about them getting hurt)? What about going to bed earlier because you don’t have to check every lock, door, and outlet in your house? If you could let your spouse say what they truly feel and not just say things to reassure you 1000%, you could have more time to do what is important. Without rituals, you wouldn’t be watching the clock

Don’t let OCD cost you the time you can never get back.

 
 

Frequently Asked Questions about OCD counseling

  • Nope. We all have these neurological “junk thoughts” or “sticky thoughts” that are sometimes labeled as bad because they can bring our horror, disgust, shame, humiliation and other taboo emotions. The reality is that these thoughts are opportunistic and will attach themselves to what you care most about (i.e. love, family, health, being liked) no matter what kind of person you are.

    However, following the content of a sticky thought to judge your ‘goodness’ as a person will be very misleading. We only define obsessions and compulsions by how they act and how they feel, not the content of what they are. Therapy helps parse out these important ideas and move you away from trying to over analyze and out-logic what has proven to be ineffective. What is most important is getting tailored help from someone who is specialized in knowing the tricks that OCD can play!

  • Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) is the gold standard for treating OCD. It is usually completed between 17-20 sessions of about 60-90 minutes each. The exposures are the way we test theories— in real and imagined ways—and then gradually increase our tolerance for uncertainty, doubt, discomfort, and unanswerable questions.

    ERP is a systemized way of testing behaviorally what happens when you gradually expose yourself to what you fear. In tandem, we eliminate rituals, avoidance, and escapism. When we allow our distress to rise and fall naturally, without ritualizing, the urge to perform the rituals also goes away.

    The structure, educational components, and materials introduced in therapy help refocus your energy back into the here and now. We are still willing to be uncomfortable as we face our fears, yes, but instead of trying to get rid of discomfort, we lean into it. We use this method because an obsession paradoxically gets stuck because of the energy used to fight it. ‘What you resist persists. Effort works backward.’ Gradual exposure and resisting rituals are all about withdrawing the fuel for the fire.

    Self-compassion, humane goals, self awareness and committed action are how we ultimately discover our convictions and ourselves in order to live authentically.

  • Many times, OCD can masquerade as other conditions, such as depression, generalized anxiety, or even phobias, and/or exist at the same time as other conditions. OCD can be differentiated from other conditions based on the pattern of intrusive thoughts and repetitive, ritualistic behavior. A thorough clinical assessment by a provider who specializes in the identification and treatment of OCD will give you the most clear answer (and the quickest way to relief).

    OCD can also be shown in the media in misleading ways, i.e. they only show you people who power-clean and check door locks, but OCD can take many different forms. In fact, OCD can create some very intense silent shame because of the ways we don’t see it talked about.

    Intrusive thoughts can be around some of the most socially shaming topics we have like harm (such as worrying about driving your car through a crowd of pedestrians), sexual behavior (feeling disgusted that you might be attracted to someone of the same sex, someone other than your spouse, children, or a family member) or morality (feeling horror about the idea of going to hell, prison, or permanently be a bad person). If it affects multiple areas of your life, it may be OCD.

    We differentiate OCD from other conditions by the level of distress somebody feels when they encounter an obsession and how they cope with it. Obsessions raise anxiety and compulsions temporarily lower them. We change your relationship to your thoughts as soon as possible so you can get back to living in the present, in control of your time, and not being bullied by your OCD.

Brave. Peaceful. Free.

effective care is available.

Our commitment

All of you is welcome here.


When you work with us, we won’t shy away from the hard or taboo parts of life: sex, money, cultural messages, oppression, body shaming—it’s all fair game. We give you permission to share freely, embrace your authenticity, and lean into your own intuition.

OCD counseling with us is:

  • Culturally responsive

  • LGBTQ-friendly

  • Trauma-informed

  • Body positive

  • Sex-worker allied

  • Social-justice-informed