View allAll Photos Tagged compulsive
My favorite action figure of all time.
This one I actually did buy.
This store has a crazy amount of hysterical action figures.
Understanding Obsessive Compulsive Disorder || Image Source: 4.bp.blogspot.com/-TgUp7O09nyM/WOylvJB504I/AAAAAAAACI8/Q_...
Sigh. I went to the desert, saw a steam engine pulling a house, and as a result became completely obsessed with all things steampunk. After stumbling across the Brass Goggles blog via crabfu's page (neither of which helped me get over this obsession) I got it in my silly little head to make an actual pair of brass goggles.
Still to do: order the damn lithos, sew the leather padding and strap, and make the other lens from that chunk of brass.
This woman sat outside the library and wrote and wrote and wrote...until the newspaper was covered with words. There is irony in the newspaper's bold text, "We have answers."
Me?
Yes. I'm tabulating the colors in each packet of M&m's I open. Most of the entries are for fun-size packets, which have 17 - 19 candies.
I just opened a standard bag, which had 57.
At home I have a five-pound bag, which will get this treatment someday.
I bet some of you out there line them up like that. Admit it.
I think that from the tone of the rhyme here, lorries were no more popular in town centres than they are now ... even though everyone wants the goods they carry!
What an outstanding display of regularity and order in the ExCeL London main corridor!
Its a pity that the general public enter the building and spoil it.
Despite my silly comments, Obsessive Compulsive Behaviour is not to be under-estimated...
Symptoms of the disorder include excessive washing or cleaning, repeated checking, extreme hoarding, preoccupation with sexual, violent or religious thoughts, relationship-related obsessions, aversion to particular numbers and nervous rituals such as opening and closing a door a certain number of times before entering or leaving a room.
These symptoms are time-consuming, might result in loss of relationships with others, and often cause severe emotional and financial distress.
The acts of those who have OCD may appear paranoid and potentially psychotic. However, people with OCD generally recognize their obsessions and compulsions as irrational and may become further distressed by this realization. Despite the irrational behaviour, OCD is sometimes associated with above-average intelligence. Its sufferers commonly share personality traits such as high attention to detail, avoidance of risk, careful planning, exaggerated sense of responsibility and a tendency to take time in making decisions.