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Brown & Cream Image Depicting Typed Wording On Typewriter Paper Mentioning 'Fear & OCD'. Image Credit: PhotoFunia.com Category Vintage Typewriter

Understanding OCD: Breaking Down Misconceptions

People with OCD don’t “choose” their thoughts or compulsions. Telling someone to “just get over it” is dismissive, harmful, and perpetuates ableist attitudes. If someone has lived with OCD for decades and tried all known interventions, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), medication, counseling, and even alternative therapies such as hypnosis, it is unjust to boil their suffering down to a fad.

Image Description: Brown & Cream Coloured Image Depicting a Typewriter With Wording "Volant Trust & Lumos". Typed On Paper. Image Credit: PhotoFunia.com Category: Vintage Typewriter.

From Adversity to Advocacy: Charities Volant Trust & Lumos.org

How one woman’s journey through grief and hardship led to the creation of two powerful charities – and why her story continues to inspire global change. When we think of JK Rowling, most picture the global Harry Potter phenomenon. But behind the fame is a woman who once lived on state benefits, writing in cafes while caring for a young child as a single mother battling grief after losing her mother to Multiple Sclerosis.

Image Description: Brown & Cream Coloured Image Depicting a Typewriter With Wording "Ablest Attitudes". Typed On Paper. Image Credit: PhotoFunia.com Category: Vintage Typewriter.

How To Deal With People With Ableist Attidudes

Living with an invisible disability is a silent struggle, one that is often met with doubt, judgment, and unsolicited advice. The absence of visible symptoms often leads others, sometimes even friends or family, to minimise or dismiss the very real impact such conditions have on daily life. This ableist mindset can be harmful, especially when it’s cloaked in “concern” or feigned expertise.