Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP):
If anxiety or OCD has been running the show, ERP is a research-backed approach that helps you take your life back—one step at a time.
ERP is about gently and gradually facing the thoughts, situations, or feelings that trigger your anxiety, while resisting the urge to use the rituals, safety behaviors, or avoidance that usually follow. This gives your brain a chance to learn something powerful: that you can handle discomfort, and it doesn’t have to control your choices.
We go at your pace, starting with smaller challenges and working our way up together. Along the way, you’ll learn skills to stay present, ride out anxiety, and choose actions that align with your values—not your fears.
ERP isn’t about “getting rid” of thoughts or feelings—it’s about changing your relationship with them, so they lose their grip. Over time, the things that once felt impossible become more manageable, and life starts to feel bigger, freer, and more your own.
Common questions about exposure therapy for OCD
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ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention) is the gold-standard treatment for OCD. It helps you gradually face your fears while resisting the urge to do compulsions, so your brain learns that the feared outcome is unlikely—or tolerable.
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Unlike talk therapy, ERP is action-based. You won’t just discuss your fears—you’ll practice facing them in a supported, strategic way to retrain your brain and reduce OCD’s grip.
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No. ERP is collaborative and based on your consent. You’ll never be forced to do anything unsafe or unethical. The goal is to feel uncomfortable, not unsafe.
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It’s normal to feel anxious at first. But exposures are done gradually and with support. Over time, your anxiety decreases—this is how your brain learns you're safer than OCD says you are.
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You don’t have to share every detail. You can share only what feels necessary and manageable. ERP works even if you describe themes or general fears instead of specifics.
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Many people begin noticing changes in 8–12 weeks, though it varies. Progress depends on consistency, your goals, and how much practice you do between sessions.
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ERP is structured to reduce OCD symptoms over time. Occasionally, symptoms spike briefly before improving—but that’s actually a sign the brain is learning.
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Yes. ERP is effective across all OCD themes (contamination, harm, relationship, sexual, religious, existential, etc.). OCD themes vary, but the process of treatment is the same: face the fear and drop the compulsion.
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That’s the second half of ERP. After facing a fear, you practice not doing the compulsion (like checking, ruminating, confessing, etc.). That’s how the brain rewires.
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OCD is chronic, but with ERP, most people see major relief and can get back to living with far less interference. The skills you learn can support you long term.