Behavioral & Mental Health Conditions Series *Updating In January
Course overview
Lesson Overview

11.9 Reducing Checking and Repeating Behaviors: Checking behaviors feel necessary because your brain insists something is wrong or unsafe unless you repeat the action again and again, but each repetition only teaches your mind that checking is required to feel okay. You begin reducing checking by choosing a limit, like checking a lock once and then walking away even though anxiety rises. You take small steps—delaying a check, reducing how many times you repeat, or changing the routine so OCD doesn’t feel in control. It’s uncomfortable at first, but when nothing bad happens, you prove to your brain that fear was lying. Reducing checking frees time, energy, and mental space, allowing you to trust your memory and instincts more than OCD commands.

About this course

A structured and empowering learning path that helps individuals understand, manage, and balance complex behavioral and mental health patterns. Through guided topics on OCD, ADHD, anxiety, trauma, depression, and other conditions, this series teaches self

This course includes:
  • Guided behavioral and emotional training

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