Does it? Consider it to the person that's doing it. He's obsessing about a series of keypresses, repeated at least 100 times, which can lead to a brief burst of pleasure "DING"...followed by more stress and more repetitions.khaimera said:The_root_of_all_evil said:Does the word "grinding" come to mind here?
Sort of, except that grinding has a logical consequence or purpose to it. OCD, not so much.
And he's going to have to pick a place to complete all these repetitions as well.
This is the real problem, whether the thought needs removing or repairing - and whether it's nature or nurture (two more whole threads that could be done).More difficult here. CBT comes in to understand why the thought appears in the first place, and attempts to pacify that thought.CBT then comes in to help the client learn to handle the obsessive thought so that the compulsion is no longer needed.
I disagree totally on this one. The "why" the thought is there is always a combination of learned behavior and beliefs adopted from childhood or adult experiences. CBT does not concern itself with why, thats one of its main differences form odler more tradional forms of therpay. CBT asks if the thought is useful or rational, and then works to replace the thought with a new one, which is then repated until its adopted fully.
But I'd never say "Always" in psychiatry. "Mostly" is the best we can do at the current level of understanding. Sometimes a pipe is just a pipe.