Didn't alluded to anything .
I stated the obvious.
No you didn't. You dodged a request to freaking prove what you said, and you are resorting to dragging the thread out in the hope that I leave it.
Pathetic.
False !
You're not important enough to care about ,
However you have yet again proved your hyper inflated faux self-aggrandizmentlol
True! you continue to post in the vain hope of walking away with a false "win".
Give it up, my OCD can beat your probable OCD any day of the week.
as always, false .
this is not a competition so there is nothing to win, you thinking that it is further proves me correct.
as to being ocd not a chance ...
I don't and have never had any of the symptoms listed below
What are the symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder?
The following are the most common symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder. However, each child may experience symptoms differently. Symptoms may include:
- An extreme preoccupation with dirt, germs or contamination
- Repeated doubts (for example, whether or not the door is locked)
- Obtrusive thoughts about violence, hurting, killing someone or harming self
- Preoccupation with order, symmetry or exactness
- Persistent thoughts of performing repugnant sexual acts or forbidden, taboo behaviors
- Troubled by thoughts that are against personal religious beliefs
- An extreme need to know or remember things that may be very trivial
- Excessive attention to detail
- Excessive worrying about something terrible happening
- Aggressive thoughts, impulses and behaviors
Compulsive behaviors (the repetitive rituals used to reduce anxiety caused by the obsessions) can become excessive, disruptive and time-consuming, and may interfere with daily activities and relationships. Examples of compulsive behaviors may include:
- Repeated handwashing (often 100 or more times a day)
- Checking and rechecking repeatedly (i.e., to ensure that a door is locked)
- Following rigid rules of order (i.e., putting on clothes in the very same sequence every day, keeping belongings in the room in a very particular way and becoming upset if the order becomes disrupted)
- Hoarding objects
- Counting and recounting excessively
- Grouping or sequencing objects
- Repeating words spoken by self (palilalia) or others (echolalia); repeatedly asking the same questions
- Coprolalia (repeatedly speaking obscenities) or copropraxia (repeatedly making obscene gestures)
- Repeating sounds, words, numbers or music to oneself
- Spending long periods of time touching things, counting thinking about numbers and sequences