therapy for ocd in new york and michigan
Learn to spend less time in your thoughts and more time living your life.
OCD is More Than Being Organized
OCD isn't always about being neat, organized, or liking things a certain way. It's a cycle driven by anxiety and fear, leading you to do things that create a sense of certainty or prevent something bad from happening.
Intrusive thoughts can center around almost anything, including contamination, harming someone, relationships, religion, morality, health, or making the "wrong" decision. They often feel upsetting because they go against what matters most to you, making them feel impossible to ignore.
To feel better, you might find yourself checking, avoiding certain situations, asking others for reassurance, replaying conversations, mentally reviewing memories, researching online, or trying to "figure out" whether your fears are true. While these strategies may bring temporary relief, they teach your brain that these thoughts are unsafe to think about or need to be solved. Over time, this strengthens OCD's cycle, making the thoughts return more often and with greater intensity.
Here’s what working together can look like
The right treatment can help you feel less anxious and more in control.
OCD can take up a lot of mental space—through constant doubt, repetitive thoughts, and the feeling that you need to figure things out before you can move on. In therapy, we talk through what that has been like for you and what tends to keep it going.
A lot of the work involves noticing how OCD shows up in real time—when it pulls you into overthinking, when it pushes you to check or seek certainty, and when it makes it hard to feel settled in your decisions.
Over time, many people notice OCD doesn’t feel as loud or as urgent as it used to. The thoughts may still show up, but they don’t take over in the same way or dictate what you do next.
There’s more room to get through your day without getting pulled into the same loops, and more moments where OCD feels present—but not in control.
At the end of the day, I want you to know:
If you've been struggling with OCD for a long time, it may be hard to imagine things ever feeling different. You may even wonder if this is simply how life will always be. Many people feel this way before starting treatment, and meaningful change is still possible.
What we’ll work on
Imagine a life where…
You can let uncertainty exist without needing to immediately fix it
You trust yourself instead of constantly needing confirmation
Spending less of your day trying to solve thoughts that don't have clear answers
Being able to make decisions without needing complete certainty first
You can enjoy conversations, relationships, and experiences without OCD pulling you away
Support is available when you’re ready.
Questions?
FAQs
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OCD is often misunderstood as simply being “organized” or “liking things clean,” but it is much more complex than that. OCD involves unwanted thoughts, images, urges, or fears (obsessions) that create distress, followed by behaviors or mental rituals (compulsions) that are used to try to reduce that distress.
For some people, OCD may look like repeatedly checking, cleaning, or seeking reassurance. For others, it may involve intrusive thoughts about harming someone, making a mistake, being responsible for something bad happening, or needing complete certainty before moving forward. OCD can look different from person to person, but a common theme is feeling trapped in a cycle of fear, doubt, and attempts to feel certain again.
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Many people experience worry or anxious thoughts, but OCD thoughts often feel different because they are intrusive, repetitive, and difficult to let go of. You may find yourself stuck trying to answer the same question over and over, seeking reassurance, checking for certainty, or avoiding situations because of what your thoughts might mean.
With OCD, the problem is often not the thought itself — it’s the importance your brain assigns to the thought and the amount of time and energy spent trying to get rid of the uncertainty that comes with it.
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Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) is a specialized form of therapy designed specifically to treat OCD. ERP helps you gradually face the situations, thoughts, or feelings that trigger your OCD while practicing not engaging in the compulsions or rituals that keep the cycle going.
The goal is not to force yourself to “just stop worrying” or pretend that your fears do not exist. Instead, ERP helps you discover that you are capable of experiencing uncertainty, discomfort, or anxiety without needing OCD to take over. Over time, your brain learns that you can handle these moments without relying on rituals for relief.
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No. ERP is not about throwing you into your worst fear without support. Treatment is collaborative and moves at a pace that allows you to build confidence while making meaningful progress.
Together, we identify the situations, thoughts, or behaviors that OCD has been keeping you stuck with and create a plan for gradually approaching them. The goal is not to eliminate every uncomfortable feeling — it is to help you feel more in control of your choices instead of letting OCD make decisions for you.
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This is one of the most frustrating parts of OCD. Many people with OCD recognize that their fears may not seem logical, but that awareness alone does not make the anxiety disappear.
OCD is not a problem of simply “knowing better.” The cycle continues because your brain has learned that checking, avoiding, analyzing, or seeking reassurance provides temporary relief. ERP helps interrupt that cycle by giving you the opportunity to experience uncertainty without needing to perform the behaviors that keep OCD going.
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The length of OCD treatment depends on several factors, including how long OCD has been affecting your life, the severity of symptoms, the types of compulsions involved, and how consistently you are able to practice ERP outside of sessions.
Many people begin noticing changes as they learn how OCD works and start practicing new responses, but meaningful progress takes time and repetition. OCD treatment is not about rushing through exposures — it is about creating lasting change by helping you build confidence in your ability to handle uncertainty and discomfort.
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OCD symptoms can improve significantly with effective treatment, some even report that their OCD goes into remission and many people learn to spend much less time caught in OCD cycles. While some people may continue to experience occasional intrusive thoughts or moments of uncertainty, treatment can help you respond differently so those thoughts no longer control your day.
The goal of OCD treatment is not to create a life where you never experience anxiety or unwanted thoughts. The goal is to help you spend less time fighting with your mind and more time doing the things that matter to you.

