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Being independent (long thread)

66Mustang
66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
I appreciate this is a vague question

I am reliant on my parents for most things due to a combination of issues - OCD and autism/social anxiety but I believe the most significant issue is what I call my obsessive thoughts. These are thoughts that I am going to lose control and do something bad on purpose. A couple of examples are while driving, I’m worried I will crash the car, or while using a knife i.e. to cook I’m worried I’m going to hurt myself or others. These are just two examples - the thoughts plague every aspect of my life. The thoughts are less bad when I have someone with me for support but they are absolutely still there and a problem.

I’m reliant on my parents to do certain things, like take me to appointments or the shops or cook for me - that said, for the last few months, I have been doing a bit of cooking with someone there to support me, however I wouldn’t be able to do it on my own.

I’m reliant when going out as I couldn’t manage on my own due to the worries about losing control. There are other reasons like the social anxiety but this is a lesser problem and I believe if I was to tackle these horrible obsessive thoughts once and for all I would be able to start work on the social anxiety.

I’m just wondering about where to start if I want to be able to live on my own one day. Of course one day I will be forced to live alone, so ideally, I want to start doing it while it is still my choice, and, while my parents are still about so they can see that I’ve managed it.

Without sounding arrogant there are some things I am great at and will have no issues doing on my own - managing money being one - in fact I sort of manage the household finances as I am better at it than my parents and am nicknamed the family accountant! Another one is communicating via email or letter - people say I write a really good letter. However the things I can’t do seem to outnumber the things I can do and I need to work on those.

Here is a list of the main things I struggle with doing by myself. There are others but I feel these are the main ones.

- Cooking

- Going out: shops, medical, work, social

- Interacting with others

- Driving (although it might be that I could do without a car)

- Using the phone

- Organising and dealing with tradespeople when things go wrong in the house

- Working!

I appreciate my independence may be different to a lot of peoples. For example I may not have a massive social circle, I may only go shopping at night or quiet times, I may do without a car, etc. but if I got to a position where I could at least survive on my own I’d be happy.

I think I’ve possibly answered my own question in that I need to start by dealing with these obsessive thoughts, because compared to those, the other issues are manageable. However I’m not sure where to start here. I have spoken to numerous GPs, psychiatrists, psychologists etc. to no avail. My current psychiatrist does not seem too concerned. I am waiting on an appointment with my new GP in the new year and am optimistic about that. Do I just need to persist?

I’m just wondering if anyone has any suggestions?

Thanks

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Comments

  • rubin16
    rubin16 Community member Posts: 343 Pioneering
    Hey,

    I have Autism too (as well as mental and physical health problems) and trying to gain my own independence. I also have problem socialising and I rely on my family alot for shopping and support, I recently moved into supported accomodation whereby I get 12 hours a week support from support worker who takes me out shopping or to somewhere to eat and manages my bills and finances. The supported accomodation is my own lovely flat fully furnished in a quiet area and I'm really happy here and getting settled in.

    Depending on your area there should be options for something similar, I would research support services in your area and see if you could potentially be put on the waiting list for your own property with support. I had to wait a few years to get my own place but already feel like it was the best thing ever that happened to me and I'm so greatful. Also once I'm deemed independent they will transfer the tenancy over to me and let me keep the furniture so I have this flat for aslong as I want.

    I hope this somewhat helps, but theres support out there you just have to look and be referred, my nurse refered me for this property but I'm sure your GP or family members can refer yourself.

    I hope you manage to find something and start to gain your independence, all the best.
  • woodbine
    woodbine Community member Posts: 11,519 Disability Gamechanger
    @66Mustang the only advice I can offer is "one day at a time".

    Have a safe and happy Christmas.
    2024 The year of the general election...the time for change is coming 💡

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    @rubin16

    Thanks for the reply

    I’m pleased to hear about your situation improving and the support you managed to get.

    I kind of want to say I don’t need a support worker as I have my parents but I am guessing a support worker is better trained to get me to start doing things for myself. My parents will always do something for me if I don’t feel able to do it, but I guess a support worker has ways to encourage me to start doing it for myself?

    In your experience, as an adult, are support workers discrete when you are out and about? One thing that I struggled with in the past was in public when a support worker made it obvious that they were support workers as it felt like a spotlight was being shined on me with a banner saying I have issues. However this could be because I was younger at the time - maybe adult support is different.

    I don’t think I am ready to live somewhere on my own just yet, but if it takes several years to get a property, I think you are right that it might be worth putting my name down now in the hope that by the time I am offered something I am ready to take it.


  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    @woodbine

    Thanks for the kind words, I guess you are right, little improvements every day will add up to big ones over time :)

    I hope you have a great Christmas too.
  • janer1967
    janer1967 Community member Posts: 21,964 Disability Gamechanger
    You have made a start by cooking and even though it's supported that's how we all learn 

    I can see your writing skills by how you comment on here maybe something you can develop more 

    Good luck and have a great Christmas 
  • chiarieds
    chiarieds Community member Posts: 16,007 Disability Gamechanger
    Hi @66Mustang - I also can see some progress here.....think how you were a year ago, & what you have since achieved. I hope you are enjoying doing some cooking, even if it is with support; keep at it, as it's so rewarding.
    It must be frustrating not having had appropriate help for your obsessive thoughts, so I hope your new GP helps support you with this. Yes, do keep on persisting. Perhaps make some notes as to the main problems you have prior to your GP appointment so they'll really understand what you're going through.
    My best wishes for a lovely Christmas & for a better New Year for you. :)
  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    Thank you everyone for the lovely posts.

    I guess I have made a start and am doing all right compared to a year ago in some respects like cooking, and I have used the phone a few times for short calls. I’ve also moved the car by myself - I didn’t go anywhere, just shuffled it between the parking spaces at the front and the back of the house - but little steps I guess. :)

    Though I feel in some ways I have been knocked back since COVID happened (I guess we all have) in that I was going to an informal support/social group at a pub once a month, but since the restrictions put a stop to that for months I haven’t been back and I don’t think I’d manage it now. I’m still in touch with a couple of the people via email though which is positive.

    I guess it’s important to remember the positives but also focus on the negatives so I can improve those.

    Merry Christmas everyone :)
  • woodbine
    woodbine Community member Posts: 11,519 Disability Gamechanger
    Why not draw up a list before new year of things you want to achieve and in what time scale? Then as you do whatever you can cross that off the list.
    2024 The year of the general election...the time for change is coming 💡

  • OverlyAnxious
    OverlyAnxious Community member Posts: 2,585 Disability Gamechanger
    Hi Mustang,

    I genuinely believe you would be able to manage on your own ok, though living near to some support (either family or social) for if & when you needed it.

    You can cook without any sharp knives...not a cordon bleu meal of course, but basic things.  I don't have any sharp knives or peelers in my flat.  I know several people that can only go shopping or GP etc with support, that's not such an unusual requirement.  You could always build up slowly going out for leisure on your own in short periods and short distances etc while also having help for necessary outings.  You have improved with the telephone use so just keep going with that.  And interacting with others is something that it seems almost everyone has struggled with since Covid but more so for those of us that weren't so good at it before.  Again, that's something I think you'll improve slowly with practice again.  Not sure which part(s) of tradespeople you'd find most difficult...this is something that I've always found difficult due to contamination OCD, social anxiety, timescales (around IBS etc) and agoraphobia (being trapped in what should be my 'safe place' and without access to the bathroom or kitchen etc)...it's a bridge that you just have to cross when you reach it unfortunately, not much option when something breaks that you can't fix yourself.  If you're in an agent let place, they'll often deal with the admin side so you can just contact them via email (unless it's an emergency...burst water main might need some more urgent spoken comms lol!)

    As for working...I think you should probably leave that in the back of your mind for now.  I spent years trying to find a solution so that I could work 'around' my problems...  It never did work out, I tried various jobs, mostly self employed, and tried lots of potential solutions.  In hindsight, I wish I'd spent that time trying to improve the problems instead of trying to work around them.

    It does seem like your intrusive thoughts are the biggest issue to you taking the next step here.  It is part of OCD but more difficult to manage because the compulsions are mental.  I know we've discussed it before but there really is no 'help' that anyone can give you for this, it simply doesn't exist.  The thoughts themselves are just thoughts, the problem is your reaction to the thoughts and the intolerable fear that you will actually act on them...every time you focus on the thought or believe it might be true you're just fuelling the OCD.  The only way to break the cycle and take away that fuel is to just 'allow' the thought, without trying to justify it, and without trying to actively avoid it by thinking of something else.  There is no other method of dealing with them, there's no exposure therapy like there is for handwashing etc.  You will always have intrusive thoughts, everyone does, some more than others, but ultimately you have to accept that they will always be there, and you just have to learn to live with them, they should pass much more quickly when you've achieved that, and stop the seemingly unending tormenting anxiety caused by them.  So HOW do you do that?  Well, if I could answer that, I wouldn't have so many myself lol!  It is hard and it will be a slow process, but as long as you keep working on it and chipping away at it, and not slipping back into the 'old' ways of giving the thoughts meaning again, it will improve over time.  Most 'anxiety' CBT therapists don't understand OCD so you're unlikely to get any real help with it from the NHS. 

    In 2, 3, 5 years time you may pick up a knife to cut a slice of cheese and get an intrusive thought about harming yourself with it...appreciate and understand that it is just a thought and will pass shortly...and by the time you've sat down with your cheese, crackers and whisky in your own arm chair in your own flat, the thought will have passed and you'll be focussed on your nice, quiet evening in.  :)


  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    Hi - I just wanted to say sorry for not replying yet, I’ve been occupied with Christmas/family and am currently up with stomach problems so can’t give the full attention I’d like to my reply but just wanted to say I do appreciate the posts, haven’t forgotten them and intend to reply properly soon

    Thanks :) 
  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    edited December 2021
    Hi @woodbine

    Thank you. I actually have a doctors appointment in the new year so I have done that and will take it down to my appointment and see what they say. Hopefully they will be able to advise.


    @overlyanxious

    Thanks for the post. I’m glad you think I’d be able to manage on my own, as I know you know my problems quite well.

    One of the things that makes me think I’d struggle is that I find it difficult being left alone at home for more than a couple of hours. I sometimes get left at home for a few hours, when my Dad is at work and my Mum has an appointment, and after maybe 90 mins - 2 hours I start to really struggle with the obsessive thoughts that I’m going to harm myself in some way.

    That is a good point about working. Maybe I need to get better first rather than find a job I can do in my current situation. Or at least maybe get a little better, if not completely, then find a job with a small amount of adaptation. I was thinking perhaps there would be some kind of office/bookkeeping work done from home, maybe with a trip to the office 1-2 days a week (couldn’t drive myself but could get parents to drive me or, if I worked on it, maybe get a taxi if it wasn’t every day), would probably have to get over the phone issues as well though!

    I think you are right about the talking therapy - I have tried all sorts of talking therapy on the NHS and none have worked but still wonder whether there is a medicine or something that can take the thoughts away, even a bit. Not saying you are wrong just I don’t want to give up hope :D I have noted the thoughts get less after alcohol. I’m not suggesting alcohol as a solution but my point here is that shows there is a chemical in existence that does work on the thoughts. Because of that, perhaps there would be other chemicals (medication), specifically ones that I can take that don’t impinge on daily functioning like alcohol does and still allow driving etc?

    To be honest I’d take something even if it didn’t allow me to drive as long as I wasn’t so knocked out that I couldn’t function. I remember as a teenager my thoughts were misdiagnosed as psychosis and I was given some medicine that really sent me dizzy, sadly it didn’t work though.


    @teddybear12 thanks for the kind words, the stomach settled down after a few trips to the toilet!! I think maybe nerves plus the rich Christmas food got a bit too much.

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger
    Hi @bekindalways and thanks for the nice message.

    The GP appointment has come and gone now (I probably should have updated this thread, sorry about that) but I did exactly what you suggested and wrote down a whole page of information for the doctor.

    She was helpful and supportive but I think ultimately was worried to do anything because last time she altered my medication and my psychiatrist got very unhappy that another doctor was interfering.

    My psychiatrist doesn’t seem to do anything to try to help. He has promised medication and therapy in the last 6 months or so and I am yet to receive either. I appreciate there is Covid going on so the therapy may take a while but not sure that affects the medicine. I am especially disappointed as he said there is medicine that could help me, but I need to cut down my alcohol intake for it to work, and to come back once I’d done that. I did so and reported back and he then said he wasn’t willing to give me the medicine.

    You make a good point about not rushing in too quickly with my goals and I will keep that in mind. I’ve had the issues for many many years so it doesn’t matter if it takes time to work on them. Truth be told I feel lucky in a way to have problems that potentially can get better.

    Thanks again and I will keep the thread updated if anything changes :)

  • chiarieds
    chiarieds Community member Posts: 16,007 Disability Gamechanger
    Hi @66Mustang - is there not a case to be made with your GP, that, altho your psychiatrist said there's medication that they would be willing to prescribe if you cut down on alcohol, having done so, the psychiatrist is no longer willing to prescribe?
    I can only speak from personal experience, but I did have one specialist, who was initially helpful, become unwilling to say what he felt as, in his words, ''he was unwilling to step on another Drs toes'' (I feel this should actually be named a syndrome that some Drs, rather than their patients, have). Altho not mentioned as such, this attitude hindered our family getting a diagnosis for several years.
    So, now with no conflict of interest, perhaps worth a further discussion with your helpful & supportive GP. As she knows you best, she may be willing to let you try the medication that may indeed help.
  • chiarieds
    chiarieds Community member Posts: 16,007 Disability Gamechanger
    edited January 2022
    Hi @bekindalways - about notifications, click on your profile picture/avatar, then 'Edit profile.' This will show a list, including 'Notification preferences.' Tick those you want to receive by email &/or pop up. Make sure you 'Save general preferences.' Hopefully that will sort that, if not, contact the Scope team.
    Edit: I 'think' it's the 'Notify me when people comment on discussions I've participated in' that you're asking about.
  • leeCal
    leeCal Community member Posts: 7,550 Disability Gamechanger
    edited January 2022
    Hi @66Mustang, hope you’re well. As regards interfering thoughts, I think I’ve mentioned before that I also have them in a similar way to yourself. My biggest fear is of harming someone else rather than myself and I handle it by not giving the thought credence, ie I try to ignore it and concentrate on what I’m doing or what is being said to me instead. This is my attempt to disempower the thought and mostly it works. Ie the thought passes meekly away. If this works as I say it probably does so because I either blank the thought or distract myself by concentrating on something else, as in listening to exactly what  is being said to me or exactly what I’m doing. Having done this persistently over years I have quite a degree of control over the thoughts.

    difficult to explain exactly about this issue but I hope I’ve made some sense. I have even blocked negative thoughts by mentally saying a Hail Mary before now, very effective actually.

    i wish you well 🙂

    “This is my simple religion. No need for temples. No need for complicated philosophy. Your own mind, your own heart is the temple. Your philosophy is simple kindness.” 
    ― Dalai Lama XIV

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger

    @bekindalways

    Thank you for the message.

    I do sometimes try to distract myself not with something I like but with something I don’t like. For example I usually avoid reading arguments on the internet as they cause me (very minor) anxiety but when the thoughts are bad I will read them to distract myself, almost using one problem to drown out another. It seems a bit like a win-win as it’s a bit of exposure to the thing that causes me anxiety, and also drowns out the thoughts.

    I was thinking maybe that this can be used to my advantage, for example one day when my parents are both away the thoughts may get bad and I will think about going for a walk on my own (something I can’t do at the moment due to anxiety) as this will 1) be easier as the thoughts will be louder than the anxiety of going out and 2) possibly take my mind off the thoughts. Almost like playing both issues against each other.

    My concern about the alcohol was not that some medicines aren’t to be mixed with alcohol, I appreciated that; it was that the doctor promised me medication if I cut down my alcohol, then when I did cut down, he went back on his words. I found that to be a bit of a betrayal if you pardon the dramatic word.

    As for the notifications not working have you made 100% sure you’ve entered your email correctly? That could be why none of them are working despite you ticking all the boxes? I can’t think of anything else sadly.

    Thanks again :)

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger

    @chiarieds

    Yes that’s a very good point, I should have mentioned but thought my post was getting a bit long: I did share those concerns with the GP and, although she didn’t want to prescribe any meds herself, she is actually writing to the psychiatrist to give him a bit of a reminder/kick up the backside! She wants me to give him another chance before we explore what other options we have.

    I do think the problem of conflict of interest is very real. I think it happens everywhere, but it’s one thing when you have 2 mechanics in disagreement over how to “treat” a car but when it’s a patient suffering as a result, not an inanimate object, it’s a bit different. I think there should be some kind of code to follow whereby the patient comes before professional pride (maybe there is already).

    I don’t want to be completely negative about my psychiatrist, he does see how my issues cause me big problems and I think he does want me to improve, he just doesn’t seem very dynamic. 

    Thank you :)

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Community member Posts: 13,367 Disability Gamechanger

    @leecal

    Thanks for the advice.

    I have read two distinctly different methods on dealing with the thoughts. Some people say to try to block them out and make them go away, others say to aim to accept them and “listen” to them, while not allowing them to bother you.

    I was listening to a snippet from a lecture by a philosopher a couple of days ago who said in order to be fearless you first have to be willing to be scared and allow the fear to occur as if you try to just block the fear out it won’t work.

    I hope you don’t think I’m arguing with you, just suggesting there seems to be 2 schools of thought and I don’t know which one to choose :D perhaps take something from each, I guess?

    I think you are right about not allowing the thought to have any credence because they are valueless thoughts in the first place. If I was driving or using a knife dangerously then some negative thoughts about what may happen would be useful to get me to stop, but when I’m just trying to get along the thoughts have no use at all.

  • leeCal
    leeCal Community member Posts: 7,550 Disability Gamechanger
    @66Mustang I think you try either depending on what works at the time. Sometimes just blocking with an alternative thought might work and sometimes not. I remember from psychology being shown how to use an elastic band to the wrist and pinging it when you have a negative thought for example. This is a type of aversion therapy, very simple but does work if you ping it hard enough. The only drawback is that if you’re not alone when you do it then it’s obvious to another that you’re having a negative thought I guess but it may be worth a try when alone. 

    “This is my simple religion. No need for temples. No need for complicated philosophy. Your own mind, your own heart is the temple. Your philosophy is simple kindness.” 
    ― Dalai Lama XIV

  • chiarieds
    chiarieds Community member Posts: 16,007 Disability Gamechanger
    Can only say you do indeed have a good GP @66Mustang - her writing to your psychiatrist shows she's open to listen to him, which is very professional, & likely should be what happens initially. However, if he isn't proactive, it seems like she may then consider being so.
    I've tried looking online in the medical literature about intrusive thoughts, & unfortunately there's not much I could find that would conclusively say try one way or another. I reckon, as with many modalities, it's all a bit of trial & error.
    As you & leeCal have said, I 'think', when you have an intrusive thought, you should perhaps not necessarily acknowledge it, but say, OK, I'm having this thought, but I'm not going to act upon it, & nothing bad is going to happen, so let it pass. My feeling is that there's not exactly acceptance there, nor denial either.....so perhaps the middle-road.
    Remember you're a good person, & build upon that. Lacking perhaps in some self confidence, if that's OK to say, I can only see working on that may also be helpful.

Brightness