Feeling ashamed of weird or scary thoughts? Learn why your brain creates mental spam and how to stop these glitches from affecting your self-worth.

The content of these thoughts is actually a backhanded compliment to your character. They only 'hook' you because they contradict who you are; the fact that you find them 'disgusting' is the ultimate proof that you aren't the kind of person who would ever want those things to be true.
Intrusive thoughts are unwanted, involuntary "mental pop-ups" that research shows affect up to 94% of the population. They often feel distressing because they are "ego-dystonic," meaning they are the polar opposite of your actual values and character. Because your brain’s security system is over-sensitized, it scans for the worst possible "what if" scenarios to keep you safe; when it hits on something you find morally repellent, it flags it as a high-priority threat, making the thought "stick" and causing you to feel a false sense of shame.
No, the script explains that the horror you feel toward these thoughts is actually a "backhanded compliment" to your character. If you actually wanted to do something "disgusting," the thought would be "ego-syntonic"—meaning it would harmonize with your desires—and it wouldn't cause you distress. The fact that you are bothered by the thought and feel a loss of dignity is the ultimate proof that you are a person of high integrity who would never want those thoughts to be true.
When you analyze a thought to prove you aren't a bad person, you fall into the "importance trap." By giving the thought your attention and trying to "reason" with it, you signal to your brain that the thought is a legitimate danger that requires a solution. This trains your brain to keep bringing the thought back to the front of the line so you can "practice" defending yourself, which creates a vicious cycle of anxiety and mental repetition.
The gold-standard approach is Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), which involves changing your relationship with the thought rather than fighting it. Instead of seeking reassurance or performing "mental compulsions" like replaying memories, you should label the thought as "neurological noise" or "mental spam" and allow the anxiety to exist without trying to fix it. By sitting with the uncertainty and letting the "anxiety wave" peak and fade naturally, you retrain your brain to realize the thought is not a real-world emergency.
The primary difference lies in how the person perceives their symptoms. OCD is "ego-dystonic," where the thoughts are unwanted, alien, and cause massive distress to the individual. In contrast, OCPD (Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder) is "ego-syntonic," meaning the person’s perfectionism and need for control align with their own values; they often view their rigid standards as a positive trait or a sign of discipline rather than a source of personal horror.
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