Loving
Someone with OCD Help for You and Your Family By Karen J. Landsman, Ph.D., Kathleen M. Rupertus, MA, MS, and Cherry Pedrick, R.N.
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Loving Someone with OCD
was published in 2005 by New Harbinger Publications. Wed like to tell you more about this valuable new resource. Below is an overview of Loving Someone with OCD. For more information on Loving Someone with OCD. please click on one of the following links.Overview of Loving Someone with OCD
Obsessive-compulsive disorder takes a steep toll on families. One that until
now has been overlooked. In Loving Someone with OCD: Help for Families, Karen J.
Landsman, Ph.D,; Kathleen M. Rupertus, MA, MS; and Cherry Pedrick, RN, recognize the
plight of the spouses, siblings, parents, and significant others of those challenged by
OCD. In this first-of-its-kind book they provide the skills families need to support their
loved ones healing and to keep OCD from taking over the family. Readers find:
· An
understanding of how accommodating OCD behaviors undermines the person suffering from
them;
· A
lay persons understanding of what the latest research tells us about OCD;
· The
skills they need to help a loved one overcome OCD and free him or herself from the grip;
· Strategies
for stopping OCD from compromising the familys wellbeing;
· Case
histories of families whove struggled with and overcome OCD together.
OCD-by-proxy
Family members of someone with OCD are often required to participate in
the ritualistic behaviors that this illness demands. The authors profile a number of these
families in Loving Someone with OCD. In one, the husband of someone with
OCD-related fears of contamination is required to remove all his clothing in the garage
prior to entering the house, then wash his hands and feet with a bleach solution and
finally take a shower while his wife decontaminates his clothing in the
laundry. In another, the wife must rearrange her work schedule so she has time to check
all the household appliances before leaving home. The authors respond with guidance for
these issues.
Accommodating OCD secures its grip on
your loved one
Your spouse, your sister, or your step-dad is tormented by the fear that they
didnt lock the front door and that this will result in a family-wide catastrophe You
love them and dont want to see them miserable, so you go back to make sure the door
is locked, then they become fearful that they left the iron on and back to the house you
go, then its the stove that starts to worry them and youre back a third time.
Its natural to want to allay a loved ones fears. The problem is that by
accommodating OCD-driven fears and compulsions you are, in fact, cementing their hold on
him or her. In Loving Someone with OCD, the authors offer step-by-step guidance for
responding to a loved ones fears in a way that strengthens them, not their OCD.
What you probably dont know about
OCD
In recent years, OCD has been fodder for pop culture vehicles like Monk and As
Good as It Gets. Because its an illness thats made its way into the
popular consciousness many of us think we know all about it but, as the authors reveal,
theres plenty of new info on the horizon. For example, did you know that:
Some cases of OCD in children are
associated with strep infections.
The relatives of OCD sufferers have
higher rates of Tourettes syndrome and tics, leading researchers to suspect a
connection among these conditions.
PET scans have shown that those with
OCD have increased activity in the areas of the brain that control impulsivity and
reaction to fear.
Hoarding can be a symptom of OCD
Some OCD sufferers have whats
called scupulosity. Those with it obsess about having blasphemed or violated a
divine moral code in thought or deed.
For women with OCD it sometimes
worsens during pregnancy.
You may find Monk a laugh-out-loud funny character, but how would you
feel if he was your husband? OCD can impact a couples emotional and physical
intimacy, take a financial toll, and sometimes stress a relationship to its breaking
point.
Surprise...I have OCD. What if your spouse or significant
other doesnt reveal his or her OCD before youre married or living together?
Often deep-rooted shame about OCD and fear about how it will affect a relationship
inspires secrecy. When this happens the non-OCD partner often feels unprepared to handle
the situation and can wind up asking difficult questions like Why would someone I
have devoted my life to not trust our relationship enough to reveal this sooner?
The family contract is the cornerstone of the authors program
for freeing a loved one and the whole family from OCDs grip. When a family enters
into a behavioral contract they make an agreement to respond instead of react to
their loved ones OCD. While the specifics differ from family to family, at the core
of the contract lies an agreement to replace the accommodating behaviors that undermine a
loved one and strengthen OCD with responses that support the person, not the OCD. These
include:
Nixing the quick fix: Curbing the
behaviors that accommodate OCD fears and undermine your loved one;
Proactive problem solving: Making a
plan to respond effectively to predictable OCD situations; and
Promising to make informed,
reason-based decision even in the face of a loved-ones anxiety: Rather than
participating in the rituals that will temporarily calm a loved ones fear, sticking
to the plan that will help your loved one overcome OCD.
Karen J. Landsman, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist who
specializes in the treatment of anxiety disorders. She is in private practice in New
Jersey and is a frequent presenter at psychological seminars across the country. She has
been interviewed by national and local print media.
Kathleen M. Rupertus, MA, MS, is a counselor specializing in the
treatment of anxiety disorders at the Anxiety and Agoraphobia Treatment Center in
Pennsylvania where she works with children and adults. She is a doctoral candidate at The
Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine. An OCD sufferer herself, Rupertus has a
unique empathy for those families living with OCD.
Cherry Pedrick is a registered nurse and
freelance writer in Lacey, Washington. In 1994 she was diagnosed with OCD, which began an
intensive search for knowledge, effective treatment, and management of compulsive
behaviors. She is coauthor of The OCD Workbook: Your Guide to Breaking Free from
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, The Habit Change Workbook: How to Break Bad Habits and Form New
Ones, and The BDD Workbook: Overcome Body Dysmorphic Disorder and End Body
Image Obsessions, Helping
Your Child with OCD, A Workbook for Parents of Children with Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder, and Loving Someone with
OCD: Help for You and Your Family, published by New Harbinger
Publications, and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, published by Lerner Press. Visit her website at http://www.cherrypedrick.com/
E-mail her at cherlene@aol.com
FOR AN INTERVIEW REQUEST OR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT: Lorna Garano, 510-652-0215, x107, lorna@newharbinger.com
Order Loving Someone with OCD now at Amazon.com
Copyright 2006, Web Page designed by James Pedrick III