Guest guest Posted May 14, 2002 Report Share Posted May 14, 2002 wow. as for the eyeglasses my son, jake who is 10 does the same thing, he uses his facial muscles,my whole family is trying to figure out what is ocd and what is not, there were times that i had to beg my son to get a bath, and then when he finally did, he took or wanted to take 4 or 5 a day, now we are down to 2 showers a day which i think is great, hang in there rondy from ill Contamination My son doesn't have any contamination obsessions -- just the opposite, in fact (we have to remind him to wash and bathe). His compulsions are mostly mental, some touching, and of the " evening up " variety. But every now and then I see just an inkling of a contamination obsession and I try to nip it in the bud. One day, while he was doing some homework, my son came up with a good answer and I licked my finger, touched his sleeve, and made a sizzling sound (as if to say, " you're hot! " ). My son pulled away from me with a look of horror on his face and said, " I hope you really didn't lick you finger just now! " I knew this was a " therapy moment " (other families have " Kodak moments " -- OCD families have therapy moments). So I said, " Of course I did, " and I did it again. Then I told him to lick his finger and touch my arm, which he did, and we did that over and over until his anxiety passed away and both of us got bored. Something similar happened in a restaurant when the waiter forgot to give my son a knife, so I offered him mine, but it had a tiny bit of my food on it so he didn't want it. I said, " Therapy moment -- use it " and he did, reluctantly. Since my son was diagnosed with OCD, our whole family has been trying to model non-OCD behavior whenever we think of it. We eat food that has been dropped on the floor, leave things off-kilter and uncorrected, give loads of cast-offs to charity, etc. And we try very hard not to " enable. " Here's what I'm wondering, though. My son had had a compulsion lately to " even up " his eyeglasses, but he doesn't use his hands to straighten them, he uses his facial muscles. This results in all kinds of strange-looking facial contortions and distracts him terribly (we all know OCD isn't pretty). I tried doing therapy at home, and finally ended up buying him contact lenses and the problem is solved. But is this enbling? Socially, I think I did him a big favor, but I don't like to think that I let OCD win this round. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2002 Report Share Posted May 17, 2002 Hi there, I just wanted to say that you seem to be doing wonderfully with the " therapy " moments that pop up--it took me a very long time to get good at this. I seemed to only recognize them in hindsight for a long while. My daughter also has only vague contamination-type concerns and since OCDers seem almost prewired for this type of obsession/compulsion, I do all I can to nip these in the bud too. We do our kids an immense favor when the whole family can adopt a CBT/ERP mindset and model non-OCD behavior. :-) Regarding getting contacts, I bet your son still wears his glasses on occasion. He could still do exposures with the glasses when he does wear them, or with sunglasses, which would limit OCD's " win " on this issue. Take care, Kathy R. in Indiana Contamination My son doesn't have any contamination obsessions -- just the opposite, in fact (we have to remind him to wash and bathe). His compulsions are mostly mental, some touching, and of the " evening up " variety. But every now and then I see just an inkling of a contamination obsession and I try to nip it in the bud. One day, while he was doing some homework, my son came up with a good answer and I licked my finger, touched his sleeve, and made a sizzling sound (as if to say, " you're hot! " ). My son pulled away from me with a look of horror on his face and said, " I hope you really didn't lick you finger just now! " I knew this was a " therapy moment " (other families have " Kodak moments " -- OCD families have therapy moments). So I said, " Of course I did, " and I did it again. Then I told him to lick his finger and touch my arm, which he did, and we did that over and over until his anxiety passed away and both of us got bored. Something similar happened in a restaurant when the waiter forgot to give my son a knife, so I offered him mine, but it had a tiny bit of my food on it so he didn't want it. I said, " Therapy moment -- use it " and he did, reluctantly. Since my son was diagnosed with OCD, our whole family has been trying to model non-OCD behavior whenever we think of it. We eat food that has been dropped on the floor, leave things off-kilter and uncorrected, give loads of cast-offs to charity, etc. And we try very hard not to " enable. " Here's what I'm wondering, though. My son had had a compulsion lately to " even up " his eyeglasses, but he doesn't use his hands to straighten them, he uses his facial muscles. This results in all kinds of strange-looking facial contortions and distracts him terribly (we all know OCD isn't pretty). I tried doing therapy at home, and finally ended up buying him contact lenses and the problem is solved. But is this enbling? Socially, I think I did him a big favor, but I don't like to think that I let OCD win this round. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2005 Report Share Posted February 3, 2005 How do you know if your tea is contaminated or not? I noticed a blob of dark green mold attached to the mother, is that normal? Which is better to use the mother or baby for the next batch? Thanks for any help, P.S. Thanks Margaret for the websites that was really helpful! and thanks again to Rusty for all his help! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2005 Report Share Posted February 3, 2005 Hi EveryOne, Mold is not supposed to be growing on your Kombucha. If you have mold you must throw everything away, clean your utensils and brewing container, rinse well, and start with a uncontaminated Kombucha tea and a new Kombucha Colony if possible. Mold on Kombucha looks fuzzy just like mold on bread or fruit. It can be black, white, red, green etc.If you see it you need to start fresh. Please do not risk using any Kombucha that has mold. Some molds are very toxic! Better safe than sorry:-)) Peace, Love and Harmony, Bev Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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