mggsbms wrote on 20 Jun 2025 15:56:
I suffered terribly from OCD after I got married pertaining to the halachas of family purity, as well as general marriage anxieties, such as whether I was permitted to be married and if the kiddushin was valid. This was compounded by a misplaced and immature sense of kedusha. While I had issues with OCD before marriage, it intensified significantly after I got married. Every time my wife counted and went to the mikvah, it was sheer terror for me.
This had a severe, negative effect on our relationship. Every time we were together, it was fraught with extreme anxiety. The Rav I was in contact with at the time had no understanding of my condition and unfortunately made things worse by frightening me even more. I am incredibly lucky that my wife stood by me during those turbulent times. It took about two years for my healing to begin. I'm not entirely sure how, but things eventually calmed down.
However, the experience left a lasting stain. I still resent the fact that I didn't have a normal start to married life. This also contributed to my struggles with lust; once the dam of my anxieties broke, a sense of apathy took over, and I went to the other extreme.
Wow. That's alot of pain. Obviously you are you and I am I but I think I relate to some of what you are saying. I didn't have a normal start to married life because of OCD as well and marriage was part of a major trigger that brought out my OCD, along with other factors. My lack of a normal start to marriage still burns in me today as well. The bright spot that I see for myself personally is that this is my ticket to growth. I really think of OCD survivors as incredible people. If they can conquer that than they can conquer anything. (Bs"d of course)
How did your anxieties "break"? Was it because of therapy and than it was auto replaced by apathy, which led to P & M? Or did it break by numbung yourself with P & M, which in turn led to apathy...?
Sorry I'm not undertanding that part, thanks if you want to clarify.