So many of you have done the therapy, white-knuckled through ERP, downloaded the apps, maybe even journaled until your hand cramped.
And still, you’re stuck. Exhausted. Wondering, “What the hell am I missing?”
If that’s you, you’re not broken. You’re not doing it wrong. You’ve just fallen into the sneakiest OCD/anxiety recovery trap out there. And nobody talks about it enough.
The Trap: Chasing Certainty
Here’s how it shows up:
You pause before hitting send on an email because you can’t stand the thought of one typo.
You hover by your kid’s door at night, needing “just one more” check they’re breathing okay.
You run through your exposure in your head, whispering to yourself, “Did I do it right? Am I sure?”
Every single one of those moments has the same culprit: the craving to be sure.
That craving is the glue that holds the OCD/anxiety cycle together.
Here’s the hard truth: every time you try to solve the thought, soothe the fear, or get to 100% certainty, your brain learns the opposite of what you want it to.
It learns:
“This fear must matter. Otherwise, why would we spend so much time on it?”
And then, like a gossip who just found a new juicy rumor, your brain brings it up again. Louder. Stickier. More frequent.
That’s why you feel like you’re running in circles. Because you are.
What To Do Instead
Here’s the shift: recovery isn’t about finding certainty. It’s about learning to live without it.
Try this next time you catch yourself in the trap:
1. Pause and Notice.
Call it out: “This is the certainty trap.” Naming it helps you step back.
2. Swap the Script.
Instead of “I need to know,” say: “I can’t know, and that’s okay.”
3. Practice Tolerance.
Sit with that doubt for 30 seconds. No fixing, no Googling, no checking. Just let it be there while you keep living your life.
It’s uncomfortable, yes. But it’s also how your brain finally learns: I can handle this without solving it.
I wish someone had told me this when I was clawing my way out of the cycle. That it wasn’t about crushing every intrusive thought or finding the “right” coping skill.
It was about breaking the certainty trap.
And that’s exactly what we’re doing together on September 4th in my live event: