Step 1: The Delaying Technique — How I Practiced It Day by Day

When I first realized something in my mind wasn’t working right, I truly didn’t know what to do. My thoughts came and went like endless waves, and in the middle of that storm I understood one thing: I still had things to do in life. There was still a spark of life inside me — a place untouched by sorrow. That small point became a light that pulled me out of the darkness.
In that instant I realized this condition was no different from death — either I had to heal, or…

The First Spark of Change

At another moment I noticed that in certain situations those thoughts lost their weight. That simple fact revealed itself like a trick; my mind was deceiving me.
I told myself:

“If I can’t stop these thoughts, maybe I can decide not to think about them right now.”

That was the first time the idea of delaying came to my mind.
From that moment, I decided that whenever an obsessive thought appeared, I would wait.
Not forever — just ten minutes.
I would gently tell myself: “Not now. Later.”
That small sentence slowly became my way out.

Learning to Wait

In the beginning, even ten minutes felt like forever.
My anxiety spiked, my body trembled, and my mind begged me to give in.
But I learned to simply watch — not to fight, not to run away.
Every time I managed to delay a little longer, something inside me grew calmer.

Week by week, I realized I could wait longer — thirty minutes, an hour, half a day.
And that’s when I discovered something powerful:

Thoughts lose their power when they don’t get your reaction.

The same applied to emotions.
The fear and tightness in my chest began to fade.
I realized that emotions, if left alone, come and go on their own.

Six Months Later

It wasn’t an easy path.
There were days I wanted to give up, but I didn’t.
After about six months, one quiet day, I noticed my mind was silent.
The thought that once felt like the center of my life no longer mattered.
I smiled and told myself:

“All this time… I just needed to wait.”

Later, I discovered that what I had done was similar to many modern therapies —
but I had found it on my own, through trial, error, and intuition.
That realization changed my life.

Final Thoughts

This experience taught me something I’ll never forget:
When you stop reacting to your thoughts and emotions, your mind begins to heal itself.
That’s what finally freed me from OCD.

Next: Step 2 – Staying Present: How focusing on the moment helped me stay free from obsessive thoughts.


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