The above video features IOCDF Ambassadors Ethan Smith, Shala Nicely, LPC, and Kimberley Quinlan, LMFT for a Town Hall discussion about how COVID-19 is affecting the OCD community. Be sure to watch!
The IOCDF are here to support the OCD community during this difficult time. As such, they’ve created new resources for those with OCD, their family members, and professionals on dealing with COVID-19. Check them out at iocdf.org/covid19, and be sure to watch the above video–a special Town Hall about OCD and the coronavirus.
OCD Awareness Week is an international effort taking place during the second week in October each year to raise awareness and understanding about obsessive-compulsive disorder and related disorders–with the goal of helping more people to get timely access to appropriate and effective treatment. Launched in 2009 by the IOCDF, OCD Awareness Week is now celebrated by a number of organizations across the US and around the world, with events such as OCD screening days, lectures, conferences, fundraisers, online Q&As, and more.
Current planned events (please keep checking back for more possible events announced):
1. Sunday, October 13, 2019; 1pm to 5pm- In Orange County, OCD So Cal is holding an outdoor OCD Picnic Event that will include clinicians discussing and answering questions on OCD, success stories from individuals in OCD recovery, OCD information booths, a catered lunch, bounce house, classic games such as a water balloon toss and watermelon eating contest, music, fun in the sun, and more! This free event is aimed for adults, families, children, and friends! RSVP here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/ocd-awareness-orange-county-tickets-72137963591
2. Wednesday, October 16, 2019; 7pm to 9pm- “The Diagnosis, Characteristics, and Treatment of OCD–and the ADHD Connection!” OCD Southern California’s Vice President, Chris Trondsen, M.S., AMFT, APCC, will be presenting on OCD and ADHD. The talk will focus on individuals dealing with both OCD and ADHD, how the disorders are both different and similar, how to treat an individual with both disorders with medication and therapy, why doctors misdiagnose and confuse these disorders, as well as a general overview of the diagnosis, characteristics, and treatment of OCD!
3. Saturday, October 19, 2019; 9:30am to 2:00pm- “A to the Z of Breaking OCD.” OCD Southern California is hosting an event at Rogers Behavioral Health in San Diego, CA. This educational presentation will include breakout sessions led by clinicians focusing on the following topics: OCD Medication Management, Dealing with Resistance to OCD Treatment, Treating Co-Existing Disorders of OCD, and “I Got My OCD Controlled.. Now What?” The event will include a Q&A segment and lunch, as well as a tour of Rogers’ new facility!
4. Saturday, October 19, 2019; 2pm to 5pm- OCD Southern California is hosting an event in Los Angeles, CA. Location and details to be announced soon!
For more information, please email info@OCDSoCal.org and indicate that you would like to join our mailing list to be notified with up-to-date information about our 2019 OCD Awareness Week events!
Prime Day is July 15 & 16! We are reminding you that AmazonSmile donates to OCD Southern California when you shop at smile.amazon.com.
You can make a difference while you shop Amazon Prime Day deals on July 15 & 16. Simply shop at smile.amazon.com/ch/45-1749394 and AmazonSmile donates a portion of your purchases directly to OCD Southern California! It is that easy. Simply click the link above and shop as you normally do. You will be supporting OCD So Cal with your purchases!
Spenser Gabin is a videographer living in California. Inspired by attending the Annual OCD Conference, he is planning to go to school this fall to become an OCD specialist.
About two years, I first came across the IOCDF through a video they posted on Facebook featuring Dr. Jonathan Grayson. Dr. Grayson’s book, Freedom from Obsessive Compulsive Disorder: A Personalized Recovery Program for Living with Uncertainty, was instrumental in my recovery from OCD. I wanted to make a contribution to the OCD community, so I decided to contact the organization to see if they were interested in having professional videos made at their annual conference. They were interested and I have had the pleasure of attending and making videos at both conferences the last two years – in San Francisco in 2017 and Washington D.C. in 2018.
While I was excited to attend my first conference, I was slightly apprehensive because I didn’t know anyone and I wondered if anyone else would understand my particular issues. I thought I was somewhat unusual in that I had doubts about whether I really had OCD or whether my case was severe enough to justify going to an OCD conference in which I would present myself as an OCD sufferer. I have since learned that these doubts are not unusual. In fact, this past year, I spoke on a panel at the conference with Stuart Ralph, Chrissie Hodges, and Alison Dotson in which we discussed this particular doubt.
While Grayson’s book provided the intellectual and theoretical foundation in my recovery, the emotional component has come largely from my connection to other sufferers and the sense of understanding that such connections provide. When I spoke on that panel, I felt completely understood in a way that is unparalleled by any other setting. I found that it was much easier to be vulnerable when I was in a group and in an environment where people were likely to be empathetic. It was incredibly rewarding when people approached me after the panel and shared that my story had helped them or might be helpful for a loved one. In my conversations with other sufferers at the conference, there has been such a strong sense of understanding that is extremely difficult to find anywhere else. The conference gives you an opportunity to get to know people on a deeper level and it’s especially fun to leave the hotel and hang out in more casual settings.
Perhaps due to stereotypical portrayals of OCD, I admit to having had a skewed view of what “typical” OCD sufferers were like. I saw myself as a departure from this “typical” sufferer and was thus concerned that I would not fit in at the conference. Again, this was proven to be misguided through my experience interacting with other sufferers. I met many people who had extremely similar obsessions and compulsions (my compulsions are almost exclusively mental, which I assumed was rare or some kind of outlier case, this is yet another misconception which was disabused by the conference) and found tremendous relief in their sense of understanding and camaraderie in our collective struggle and recovery.
These relationships also elicit the common sense of humanity behind mental health issues. It is one thing to consider the abstraction created by a statistic in a psychopathology textbook; it is another to realize that everyone battling mental illness has their own particular background, personality, and complexity that cannot be summarized or understood by any particular diagnosis or data set. We may have OCD, but we are much more than OCD.
It has been a pleasure to meet so many OCD professionals through the process of making videos at both conferences. The opportunity to talk to them one-on-one and develop those relationships has been extremely satisfying. In fact, it was a large influence in my decision to change career paths and become an OCD specialist (I plan on beginning graduate school in the fall). In particular, Jon Hershfield’s experience as both a specialist and sufferer has been especially inspiring.
In our increasingly digitized world, the IOCDF’s conference is a wonderful opportunity to put away your screens and focus on the people right in front of you. While it can be nice to connect with people through online forums, nothing beats sharing physical space with people who understand you. While the panels and presentations at the conference are diverse and well-executed, the most satisfying aspect of it is connecting with people outside of any formal structure. The atmosphere at the conference is extremely accepting and there is no pressure to attend any particular speaker or panel. If you would rather just sit outside the hotel and chat with a new friend, that is perfectly acceptable and even encouraged.
All in all, the conference is a wonderful experience that can only truly be had once a year. I highly recommend it to anyone looking to connect with others who will understand their struggle with OCD.
Interested in attending the 26th Annual OCD Conference?
To learn more about the 26th Annual OCD Conference, taking place in Austin, TX from July 19-21, click here.