yes
Yes
HOCD, or Homosexual Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, is a type of OCD where a person experiences intrusive thoughts about their sexual orientation. It does not change a person's actual sexuality, but can cause distress and confusion about their identity. It is important to seek help from a mental health professional to address these concerns.
Unfortunately, no, it's not. :(
In some case yes!! It can often be known as severe chronic disabling OCD which is very profound!! I hope this helps!! Please rate best answer and recommend! XxX
Sorry, there is no OCD website as it is not a real school
HOCD is a type of Pure Obsessional OCD. It is more of mental things, when things constantly repeat over and over again. Inside the mind, and you have extreme anxiety and avoid anything that would trigger that thought. When someone has HOCD, it's when they have a fear of being with the opposite sex or the same sex (Straight person afraid of being gay, and a gay person afraid of being straight) It may seem ridiculous but it can be very bad for the person and can lead to severe depression. Usually these people are not homophobic and vice versa, but the mind repeats itself many hours of that day, as if it's trying to convince you. Even if the sufferer knows it's not true, and repeating does not stop. There is other forms of Pure-O. Relationships, Religion, Violence etc. Look Pure-O online and you will find more info.
The OCD (Original Cell Density) can be calculated using the formula: OCD = CFU / Volume. In this case, with 256 CFU in 10 µL of urine, the calculation would be: OCD = 256 CFU / 0.01 mL = 25,600,000 CFU/mL. Therefore, the Original Cell Density of the urine sample is 25.6 million CFU per milliliter.
OCD - Obsessive Cleaning Disorder! :) Not really though, because their really isn't a name for a person who likes to clean a lot. They might have some REAL OCD, but either way, it works.
a lot of people (i hav ocd)
He doesn't really have OCD
He's not techniqually smart he just has a very extreme case of OCD so he notices everything.
Yes. I was watching a show about OCD, and one of the interviewers had OCD towards her family, thinking they were "contaminated."