Guest guest Posted June 9, 2009 Report Share Posted June 9, 2009 Welcome to the group. ) The best course of treatment, is the correct therapy. It is called CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy) and ERP (exposure and response prevention). It is the most effective way to fight OCD, and has been shown to make positive, permanent changes to the brain. It can give him tools to use for life. Therapists who are trained in knowing how to use it can be hard to find, but worth the effort. Usually medication is brought in as an assist to the therapy, if they are unable to confront their OCD using ERP. Often that can cause the anxiety to rise (temporarily) and that is where the meds can help. If they are too anxious, they may be unable to do the therapy. In our son's case, with his last relapse, he needed the meds to even get off of the sofa and out of the house, to get to a therapist. He was nonfunctional at the time, but now has his life back and is living the best life he can. There are some natural things that some in here have used successfully. Inositol is one. There are also some products by Native Remedies some have used that have helped. They seem to work for some and are worth a try. Glad you found us. If you have any questions, feel free to ask. Many in here are happy to share information and things that have worked for them. BJ > > Hi, I new to this group. My 14 year old has been diagnosed with OCD. We've always known there was something different but his " symptoms " would change and get better. We used to think it was habits. Now that he has hit the teenage years, the OCD is coming out in full force. He has to check every plug 3 times, he will not eat anything with cheese listed as an ingredient (you should see our pizzas), constantly asking questions even though he knows the answer, etc. We do not want to use medication, at least not yet. He feels better now that he knows that there is a physical reason for his thoughts and actions. Is there a vitamin or dietary supplement that can help with the OCD? He plays music and that seems to calm him more than anything else. He can get on stage and play piano and sing in front of 300-400 people and it doesn't bother him at all but off stage, sometimes, he is a nervous wreck. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2009 Report Share Posted June 9, 2009 Hi, welcome!! Well, first, I'm glad the OCD isn't messing up his enjoyment of music and playing and singing. So are you finding that new things are popping up with OCD now, as opposed to the older " habits " ? What is he asking questions about, I'm curious if it relates to him in any way as so many kids can have worries about getting sick or germs, etc. Hope his food list continues to stay only cheese (is that recent?) and doesn't grow. Sigh, my son (now 20) at one time had made all these " promises to God " about not eating certain foods, ingredients. Impulsive, just pop in the head type promises. And it was a scary time! So glad he managed to get past that! BJ mentioned some alternative things to try, the inositol powder and then Native Remedies brand products. We used inositol powder back in middle school and it worked well, but we tried it again (and at higher doses too) this last year and had no luck. So it's just sort of a 50/50 chance if you try it, it might work, might not. Others have found it helpful, then some not. Some parents have said that the Native Remedies products PureCalm and MindSoothe (believe those are the 2) have helped. With inositol powder, brand names can vary (that's fine, no particular brand to use) and it's MUCH cheaper to buy it online. You can search thru past posts here for " inositol " or the word " Native " and should turn up some past posts...if Yahoo has fixed our search feature (just remembered that, it was only showing results back to Feb. or March I think, nothing more recent; Yahoo is supposed to fix it!). single mom, 3 sons , 20, with OCD, dysgraphia and Aspergers > > Hi, I new to this group. My 14 year old has been diagnosed with OCD. We've always known there was something different but his " symptoms " would change and get better. We used to think it was habits. Now that he has hit the teenage years, the OCD is coming out in full force. He has to check every plug 3 times, he will not eat anything with cheese listed as an ingredient (you should see our pizzas), constantly asking questions even though he knows the answer, etc. We do not want to use medication, at least not yet. He feels better now that he knows that Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 10, 2009 Report Share Posted June 10, 2009 Thanks for all of the suggestions. I intend on trying the Inositol or the Mindsoothe. Usually the OCD is not bad. We're finding new things slowly come up. We noticed the plug situation about a year ago. We had to confront him about it. He was going three times a night to check. We then lowered it to two, and then one. He is slowly stopping himself from going upstairs everynight to check to make sure everything is unplugged and all of the lights are turned out. It had gotten so bad that we figured out he was taking pictures and looking at them to make sure he had done it. As far as his food, it seems to be only cheese. Again this started last year. He doesn't like cheese which is fine, but now he will read the ingredients before he eats anything. I've gotten to where I throw the packages away before he can see them. I think his music has not only helped but is better because of his OCD. He can hear the music once and go upstairs and can have the song figured out in one night. We have enrolled him in ROTC this year-he will be a freshman. My oldest son is the CO and very understanding. was worried about it but he has been in Air-Rifle Camp this week and loves it. I figured it would give him one class that was very structured and safe. > > > > Hi, I new to this group. My 14 year old has been diagnosed with OCD. We've always known there was something different but his " symptoms " would change and get better. We used to think it was habits. Now that he has hit the teenage years, the OCD is coming out in full force. He has to check every plug 3 times, he will not eat anything with cheese listed as an ingredient (you should see our pizzas), constantly asking questions even though he knows the answer, etc. We do not want to use medication, at least not yet. He feels better now that he knows that > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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