Compulsive behavior:
1. Some patients like to count in their daily lives, depending on how many floors there are in a building, how many floors there are in a lot, how many telephone poles there are in a road, and how many tiles there are in a house, and the counting process is not allowed to be interrupted, otherwise they must start all over again.
Forced to suspect:
2. Obsessive-compulsive disorder patients repeatedly doubt their words and deeds, leading to compulsory examination. If you always doubt whether the doors and windows are closed, whether the faucet is closed, and whether the address is wrong, then check it again and again.
Compulsive emotion:
3. Obsessive emotion refers to emotional compulsion. For example, if a bar of soap is lost in the dormitory, the patient is worried that the owner will doubt himself. Even more than ten years later, he wrote to ask the owner if he had found soap, repeatedly declared that he had nothing to do with it, and quoted the testimony of several witnesses. He knew it was unnecessary, but he could not forget it.
Compulsive fatigue:
4. Obsessive-compulsive disorder patients always ponder over trivial matters or actual natural phenomena in their daily lives, and trace back to the source, often entangled in some problems that lack practical significance and cannot be controlled and rid of. This symptom is similar to drilling the bottom of a hole, and the patient will ponder over some meaningless problems and entangle them. This symptom can be seen in teenagers, such as why one plus one equals two instead of three. This is a typical symptom of compulsive thinking. The patient's mind is like being dragged into a never-ending train, and finally exhausted.
Forced memory and association:
5. Forced memory and association are involuntary repeated memories and associations of some things that you have experienced or done and what you or others have said. The common symptom of a past, a sentence or a song that appears repeatedly in my mind is forced memory.
Compulsive intention:
6. Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder always have a strong inner impulse to do things against their wishes, and patients repeatedly experience strong inner impulses to do things against their wishes. Although the patient himself knows that this is an absurd idea and will not do it himself, he can't get rid of this inner impulse. If you go out with your child in your arms, you have the intention to abandon your child; If you stand on a bridge or take a train, you have the impulse to jump; Or have the urge to call names and shout reactionary slogans.
Porridge is a staple food that China people can't give up. It can be sweet and salty, thick and thin, rich and poor, full and hungry. From ancient times to the present