What Does ERP Therapy for OCD Actually Look Like? A Session-by-Session Guide
By Bradley Wilson, LMFT | The OCD Treatment Center
If you’ve spent any time researching OCD treatment, you’ve probably come across the term “ERP.” You might have read that exposure and response prevention is the “gold standard” for treating OCD. Maybe a therapist recommended it, or you stumbled across it at 1 a.m. during a particularly rough night. Either way, you’re here because you want to know: what does ERP therapy actually look like in practice?
I get it. When I was struggling with OCD myself, the idea of “exposure therapy” sounded terrifying. I pictured something extreme like being thrown into my worst nightmare and told to just deal with it. That’s not what happened. And as someone who went through ERP as a patient before becoming a licensed therapist who now treats OCD every day, I want to walk you through exactly what to expect in ERP therapy session by session, step by step, so it feels a lot less mysterious and a lot more manageable.
What Is ERP Therapy? (And What It Isn’t)
ERP stands for Exposure and Response Prevention. It’s a specific type of cognitive-behavioral therapy designed for OCD. Here’s the short version: you gradually face the situations, thoughts, or images that trigger your obsessions (that’s the “exposure” part), and then you practice not performing the compulsions you’d normally use to neutralize the anxiety (that’s the “response prevention” part).
Let me be clear about what ERP therapy for OCD is not. It’s not flooding and nobody (at least not here at The OCD Treatment Center) is going to drop you into your worst fear on day one. It’s not just “facing your fears” in some vague, white-knuckle way. And it’s definitely not something you are able to best do on your own from a YouTube video. ERP is a structured, gradual process guided by a trained specialist who understands OCD inside and out.
The research behind ERP is strong. A meta-analysis published in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry found that approximately two-thirds of patients who received ERP experienced significant improvement in their symptoms, and roughly one-third were considered fully recovered. According to the International OCD Foundation, patients achieve an average 60% reduction in OCD symptoms, along with reductions in general anxiety, depression, and functional interference. Those numbers are remarkable for a condition that can feel so intractable.
What a Typical ERP Session Looks Like
One of the biggest barriers to starting ERP is not knowing what to expect in ERP therapy so let me demystify it. While every session is tailored to the individual, most follow a similar rhythm. Keep in mind this timeline is very general, and everyone (therapist and client) moves at their own pace.
Check-In (5–10 Minutes)
Your therapist will start by asking how your week went. What came up? Did you notice any new triggers? How did your between-session practice go? This isn’t small talk, it’s strategic. Your therapist is gathering information to calibrate the session to where you are right now.
Reviewing Homework (5–10 Minutes)
ERP involves practice between sessions (more on that below). Your therapist will review what you tried, what felt hard, and what surprised you. If something didn’t go well, that’s not a failure, it’s useful data. We learn as much from the exposures that felt impossible as from the ones that went smoothly.
The Exposure Exercise (20–30 Minutes)
This is the core of the session. Together, you and your therapist will do an exposure, meaning you’ll intentionally engage with something that triggers your OCD. This could be imaginal (picturing a feared scenario), in vivo (touching something, going somewhere, or doing something that triggers anxiety), or even interoceptive (creating physical sensations that mimic anxiety).
Here’s what matters: your therapist is right there with you. They’re coaching you through it, normalizing what you’re feeling, and helping you resist the urge to perform a compulsion. You’re not white-knuckling it alone. The anxiety will rise and then, given enough time, it will come down on its own. That’s the lesson your brain needs to learn.
Processing (5–10 Minutes)
After the exposure, you’ll debrief. What did you notice? Was the anxiety as bad as you expected? What happened when you didn’t do the compulsion? This reflection helps consolidate what you learned and builds confidence for the next exposure.
The Exposure Hierarchy: Your Personalized Fear Ladder
Before you start doing exposures, your therapist will work with you to build an exposure hierarchy which is sometimes called a “fear ladder.” This is a ranked list of situations that trigger your OCD, organized from least anxiety-provoking to most.
You and your therapist create this together. You rate each item on a scale of 0 to 100 based on how much distress it causes (this is called a SUDS rating—Subjective Units of Distress). Then you organize them into a ladder.
For example, someone with contamination OCD might build a hierarchy like this:
- 20/100 — Touching a doorknob at home without washing hands immediately
- 35/100 — Touching a doorknob at a public building
- 50/100 — Sitting on a park bench and then touching your face
- 65/100 — Using a public restroom without excessive hand-washing
- 80/100 — Touching a trash can lid and waiting 30 minutes before washing
- 95/100 — Touching the floor of a public restroom
You always start at the bottom and work your way up. Nobody begins with the hardest item on the list. As lower-level exposures get easier, you gain the confidence and skills to tackle the ones higher up. The ladder is also flexible and you and your therapist may adjust it as you progress.
What ERP Homework Looks Like Between Sessions
Exposure and response prevention explained in one sentence: you learn to sit with discomfort instead of running from it. But that learning doesn’t happen only in your therapist’s office, ERP homework is where real-world change takes root.
Between sessions, your therapist will ask you to practice exposures on your own. These are always based on what you’ve already done in session and are nothing new and nothing you haven’t been prepared for. The goal is repetition. The more you practice resisting compulsions in everyday life, the faster your brain updates its threat assessment.
Homework might look like:
- Touching a doorknob at your office and waiting 15 minutes before washing your hands
- Writing down an intrusive thought and reading it back to yourself twice a day
- Driving your usual route without turning around to “check”
- Leaving the house without performing your checking ritual
Your therapist will ask you to track your anxiety before, during, and after each practice. This data helps both of you see patterns and progress. And if something feels too hard, you bring that to the next session. The homework is designed to be challenging but manageable, not overwhelming.
How Intensive ERP Differs from Weekly Sessions
Most people are familiar with the traditional therapy format: one session per week, typically over several months. For many people with OCD, that works well. A standard course of weekly ERP usually runs about 12 to 20 sessions.
But some people need or want something more concentrated and that’s where intensive ERP comes in.
Intensive ERP condenses the treatment into a shorter timeframe with multiple sessions per week, sometimes daily. At The OCD Treatment Center, we offer a 3-week intensive program with 45 hours of one-on-one ERP therapy. That includes in-office sessions, community-based exposures (going out into real-world environments where OCD shows up), and even home visits.
Research supports the intensive format. A systematic review published in Frontiers in Psychiatry found that intensive CBT is associated with rapid, robust improvements and similar long-term outcomes compared to weekly therapy. Longer session durations also correlate with more favorable treatment outcomes, according to a 2022 meta-analysis published in ScienceDirect.
Intensive ERP tends to be a strong fit for people who:
- Want faster results and can commit the time
- Have tried weekly therapy without getting the traction they need
- Have severe OCD that is significantly impairing daily life
- Are traveling from out of the area and need a condensed format
- Simply prefer to tackle it head-on rather than spread it out over months
Whether weekly or intensive is right for you depends on your situation, severity, and personal preferences. Both are effective. The best format is the one you’ll actually complete.
How to Know When ERP Is Working
Let me set realistic expectations: you will not feel “cured” after your first session. ERP is a process, and progress is often gradual. But there are clear signs that it’s working.
Here’s what to watch for:
- Your anxiety during exposures starts to decrease. What once felt like a 70/100 now registers as a 40.
- You spend less time on compulsions. Maybe you used to check the stove five times; now it’s once or twice.
- You start doing things you’ve been avoiding (you go to that restaurant, touch that surface, drive that route.)
- Intrusive thoughts still show up, but they bother you less. You can notice them and move on instead of spiraling.
- You begin to trust yourself more. The doubt that defines OCD loosens its grip.
For weekly ERP, most people start to notice meaningful change within 12 to 20 sessions. For our 3-week intensive program, many clients see significant shifts within the first one to two weeks because of the daily repetition and immersive structure.
It’s also worth noting that ERP doesn’t just help with OCD symptoms. Research has shown that ERP can reduce depressive symptoms by 44.2% and anxiety symptoms by 47.8% on average. When OCD stops running your life, everything else gets a little easier too.
Ready to Take the First Step?
If you’re considering ERP therapy for OCD, the first step isn’t an exposure exercise, it’s a conversation. At The OCD Treatment Center, we offer a free consultation to help you understand your options, ask questions, and figure out whether weekly sessions or our 3-week intensive program is the right fit for you.
I know how hard it is to make that first call. I’ve been on the other side of it. But I can tell you from both personal and professional experience: ERP works. And you don’t have to keep living the way OCD is telling you to.
Call us at (949) 398-8350 or visit our website to schedule your free consultation today.
Related Reading:
Types of OCD Treatment: What It Is, How It’s Done, and Therapy Options
Our 3-Week Intensive OCD Treatment Program
Eddy et al., meta-analysis cited in Indian Journal of Psychiatry (PMC6343408): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6343408/
International OCD Foundation, ERP Treatment Guide: https://iocdf.org/ocd-treatment-guide/erp/
Feusner et al. (2022), cited in ScienceDirect meta-analysis on ERP effectiveness: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S016517812200453X
Selles et al. (2021), Frontiers in Psychiatry (PMC8165233): https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8165233/
Learn MoreOCD in Your 20s: Why It Hits Hard and What You Can Do About It
By Bradley Wilson, LMFT — Founder, The OCD Treatment Center
If you’re in your late teens or early 20s and OCD just showed up out of nowhere or is something that was always quietly there suddenly got a lot louder, I want you to know two things right away. First, you’re not alone. This is one of the most common times in life for OCD to start or escalate. Second, it’s not random. There are real, scientific reasons this is happening right now. And once you understand them, the path forward gets a lot clearer.
I’m Bradley Wilson, and I founded The OCD Treatment Center after going through this myself as a young adult. OCD hit me hard during a time when I was supposed to be figuring out my life, and it felt like nobody around me understood what was happening. I went on to become a licensed therapist specializing in OCD, and now I work with young adults every day who are going through exactly what I went through. So let me walk you through what’s actually happening and what you can do about it.
Why OCD Peaks in Late Teens and Early 20s
This isn’t just your imagination or bad luck. Research consistently shows that OCD has two peak onset periods: one in childhood (roughly ages 7–12) and another in late adolescence to early adulthood, around age 20. A major review in Frontiers in Psychiatry confirmed that the second peak of OCD incidence occurs in the early 20s, with the mean age of onset for adult-onset OCD falling between 22 and 24.
So if OCD showed up or got significantly worse right around the time you left home, started college, landed your first job, or entered your first serious relationship, that’s not a coincidence. Your brain is still developing during this period. The prefrontal cortex, which plays a role in managing intrusive thoughts and regulating anxiety, doesn’t fully mature until your mid-20s. That means you’re dealing with some of the biggest life transitions you’ll ever face with a brain that’s still under construction.
Add to that the sheer volume of stress that comes with this stage of life (academic pressure, financial uncertainty, identity questions, new social environments, romantic relationships) and you’ve got the perfect conditions for OCD to emerge or intensify.
This is important: none of this is a personal failing. It’s neurobiology meeting life change. You didn’t cause this, and you’re not weak for struggling with it.
How OCD Shows Up in College and Early Career
OCD in young adults doesn’t always look like what you see in movies. It’s not just hand-washing or checking locks. For many college students and young professionals, OCD shows up in ways that are easy to dismiss or misidentify. Studies have found that OCD symptoms may be even more prevalent among college students than in the general population, with some research estimating rates of 3.8% to 6.7% among university students.
Here’s what it might actually look like in your day-to-day life:
You’re sitting in a lecture, and an intrusive thought pops into your head that might be disturbing, violent, or sexually inappropriate. You know it doesn’t reflect who you are, but you can’t stop replaying it. You spend the next 45 minutes mentally arguing with yourself instead of taking notes.
Or maybe you sent a text to a friend and now you’re reviewing the conversation over and over, convinced you said something offensive. You check your phone 20 times looking for reassurance that they’re not upset.
Maybe you’re in a relationship and suddenly you’re plagued by doubts: Do I really love this person? What if I’m with the wrong person? What if I’m not attracted to them enough? The doubts feel all-consuming and nothing you tell yourself makes them stop.
Or your perfectionism around schoolwork has gone from “being a good student” to something that controls you. You rewrite emails five times before sending them. You recheck assignments so many times that you miss deadlines. Every task takes three times as long as it should.
You might be avoiding certain social situations entirely, not because you don’t want to go, but because being around people triggers intrusive thoughts you can’t handle.
Here’s what makes OCD in young adults particularly tricky: many of you are what we’d call “high-functioning.” From the outside, you look like you’re keeping it together. You’re getting good grades, holding down a job, maintaining friendships. But internally, it’s a war zone. You’re spending hours each day on compulsions that nobody else can see (mental rituals, constant reassurance-seeking, avoidance patterns) and you’re exhausted from it.
Why Young Adults Wait to Get Help
On average, it takes over seven years for someone with OCD to receive an accurate diagnosis. Seven years! So for someone whose OCD starts at 20, that means they might not get the right help until they’re nearly 30.
Why the delay? There are several reasons, and almost all of them are fixable:
You don’t know it’s OCD. Most people think OCD is about being neat or organized. When your OCD is actually about horrifying intrusive thoughts, relationship doubts, or existential fears, it doesn’t match what you’ve seen on TV. So you assume something else is wrong with you or worse, that the thoughts mean something about who you really are.
You think everyone deals with this. “Everyone has weird thoughts sometimes, right?” Sure. But not everyone has the same thought on repeat for six hours. Not everyone builds elaborate mental rituals to neutralize anxiety. There’s a line between a passing intrusive thought and OCD, and if you’ve crossed it, you probably already know something feels different.
Stigma, especially for young men. Guys in their 20s are often told to tough it out, that mental health struggles are a sign of weakness. This is flat-out wrong, and it keeps a lot of young men suffering in silence for years longer than they need to.
You saw a non-specialist who missed it. This happens all the time. You finally work up the courage to talk to a therapist, and they tell you it’s “just anxiety” or “just stress.” OCD requires specialized assessment. A general therapist who doesn’t work with OCD regularly can easily miss it.
You’re too busy. Between classes, work, social obligations, and just trying to survive young adulthood, prioritizing mental health feels like a luxury. But OCD doesn’t get better by ignoring it, it typically gets worse.
What Effective Treatment Looks Like for Young Adults
The gold standard treatment for OCD is Exposure and Response Prevention, or ERP. This is true regardless of your age, the type of OCD you have, or how long you’ve been dealing with it. ERP works by gradually and systematically exposing you to the thoughts, situations, or images that trigger your anxiety and then helping you resist the urge to perform compulsions in response.
The evidence behind ERP is strong. About 50–60% of patients who complete ERP show clinically significant improvement, and research has found that ERP can reduce depressive symptoms by 44.2% and anxiety symptoms by 47.8%. On average, patients achieve about a 60% reduction in OCD symptoms through ERP therapy.
For young adults specifically, there are a few things that make treatment work well:
- Flexibility. Treatment needs to fit around your life. If you’re in school or working, weekly sessions can work well, showing up for one hour each week, doing your exposures in between, and building momentum over time.
- Intensive options. For some young adults, a weekly pace isn’t enough, especially if OCD is severe or you’re in a crisis. That’s where intensive treatment programs come in. Programs like our 3-week intensive offer 45 hours of one-on-one therapy in a compressed timeframe. Many college students do intensive treatment over winter or summer break. Research has shown that intensive CBT is associated with rapid, robust improvements and produces similar long-term outcomes compared to weekly therapy.
- Treatment that’s relatively brief. Compared to many other mental health conditions, OCD treatment through ERP can produce meaningful results in a fairly short timeframe. You’re not signing up for years of open-ended talk therapy. ERP is structured, goal-oriented, and designed to get you back to living your life.
One thing I always tell young adults: getting treatment now, rather than waiting, is one of the best decisions you can make. The longer OCD goes untreated, the more entrenched compulsive patterns become. Early intervention makes treatment faster and outcomes better.
The OCD Treatment Center’s Approach
We built The OCD Treatment Center with young adults in mind. Our core demographic is 18 to 32, and the majority of the people we work with are in exactly the stage of life this article describes: college, early career, figuring things out, and trying to do all of that with OCD in the way.
I didn’t get into this work by accident. I personally struggled with OCD as a young adult. I know what it feels like to sit in a classroom and not hear a word the professor says because your brain is locked on a thought you can’t shake. I know what it feels like to wonder if something is seriously wrong with you. And I know what it feels like to finally get the right treatment and realize you can get your life back.
That personal experience shapes everything we do here. Our team understands this demographic because we’ve lived it, and we treat OCD every single day.
Here’s what treatment looks like with us:
Weekly sessions for those who need consistent, ongoing support alongside their regular schedule.
A 3-week intensive program that includes 45 hours of one-on-one ERP therapy completed during in-office sessions, community-based exposures (going to the places that trigger your OCD and working through it in real time), and home visits. This program is ideal for students on break, young professionals between jobs, or anyone who needs accelerated progress.
Virtual options for those who live in California but can’t make it to our Newport Beach office in person.
We’ve helped over 350 clients and completed more than 175 intensive programs. We serve the Orange County area including Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Irvine, Costa Mesa, Santa Ana, Laguna Beach, and we regularly work with clients who travel to us specifically for the intensive program.
Take the First Step
If OCD showed up in your 20s and you’re not sure what to do next, start with a conversation. You don’t need to have it all figured out or even a previous diagnosis. You just need to talk to someone who gets it.
We offer a free consultation where we’ll help you understand what you’re dealing with, whether it’s OCD, and what your treatment options look like. No pressure, no commitment, just clarity.
Call us at (949) 398-8350 or visit theocdtreatmentcenter.com to schedule your free consultation today.
You don’t have to keep white-knuckling your way through this. OCD is treatable, the science is clear, and the right help exists. You just have to reach for it.
1 International OCD Foundation, “Who Gets OCD?” https://kids.iocdf.org/what-is-ocd-kids/who-gets-ocd/
2 Frontiers in Psychiatry, “Developmental Considerations in Obsessive Compulsive Disorder” https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8269156/
3 Taylor & Francis, “Prevalence of Obsessive-Compulsive Symptoms” https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/28367138.2025.2577644
4 International OCD Foundation, “About OCD” https://iocdf.org/about-ocd/
5 Psychology Research and Behavior Management, “Exposure and Response Prevention in the Treatment of OCD” https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6935308/
6 ScienceDirect, “The effect of exposure and response prevention therapy on OCD” (2022) https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S016517812200453X
7 Frontiers in Psychiatry, “Intensive CBT for OCD” https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8165233/
Learn More5 Signs Your Current OCD Treatment Isn’t Working (And What to Do Next)
By Bradley Wilson, LMFT — Founder, The OCD Treatment Center
If you’ve been going to therapy for OCD and things aren’t getting better, or maybe they’re even getting worse, I want you to hear something clearly: you are not the problem.
I know what it feels like to sit across from a therapist and wonder why nothing is changing. To do the homework, show up every week, try to explain what’s going on in your head, and still feel stuck. It’s exhausting. And it’s easy to start blaming yourself. Maybe I’m not trying hard enough. Maybe my OCD is just too severe. Maybe I’m broken.
You’re not. In many cases, the reason OCD treatment isn’t working has nothing to do with you and everything to do with the type of treatment you’re receiving. Most therapists (even good ones) aren’t trained to treat OCD effectively. That’s not a knock on them. It’s a gap in how therapists are trained. OCD is a specialty, and treating it requires specialized tools.
Here are five signs that your current treatment isn’t the right fit and what to do about it.
Sign 1: Your Therapist Doesn’t Use ERP
This is the single biggest reason OCD treatment fails. ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention) is the gold standard treatment for OCD. It’s the approach with the most research behind it, and it’s what every major OCD organization recommends as a first-line treatment. Research shows that 50–60% of patients who complete ERP show clinically significant improvement, and roughly two-thirds of those who engage in treatment experience meaningful gains.
If your therapist says they do CBT but isn’t including structured exposures, that’s a problem. General CBT without ERP doesn’t address the OCD cycle. Many well-meaning therapists treat OCD the same way they’d treat generalized anxiety using relaxation techniques, coping strategies, and talk therapy. Those approaches can be helpful for other conditions, but for OCD, they miss the mark.
Ask your therapist directly: “Are we doing ERP?” If they’re not sure what that means, or if they describe their approach as “just talking through your thoughts,” it may be time to look for someone who specializes in evidence-based OCD treatment.
Sign 2: You’re Only Doing Talk Therapy
Here’s something that surprises a lot of people: talking about OCD can actually make it worse.
When therapy consists entirely of discussing your obsessions, analyzing where they came from, or exploring the “why” behind your thoughts, it can become a compulsion in itself. If you spend your session reviewing intrusive thoughts in detail, seeking reassurance from your therapist about what those thoughts mean, or trying to figure out whether your fears are “rational,” you’re doing exactly what OCD wants you to do. You’re engaging with the content of the thoughts instead of changing your relationship with them.
Effective OCD treatment requires behavioral change. That means actually doing exposures that are deliberately confronting the situations, thoughts, and feelings that trigger your OCD, and then resisting the urge to perform compulsions. Understanding why you have OCD can be interesting, but insight alone doesn’t break the cycle. Action does.
If your sessions feel like you’re mostly talking and very little doing, that’s a sign the approach needs to change.
Sign 3: You’ve Been in Therapy for Months with No Measurable Progress
ERP isn’t a years-long process before you start seeing results. When it’s done correctly, you should start noticing some improvement within the first 8–12 sessions. That doesn’t mean you’ll be symptom-free, but you should see signs of movement. Things like being able to sit with an intrusive thought a little longer without compulsing, or noticing that a previously triggering situation feels slightly more manageable.
If months have gone by and your OCD is the same or worse, that’s worth paying attention to. It doesn’t necessarily mean ERP doesn’t work for you. In fact, it may mean you haven’t truly received ERP yet. Many people think they’ve “tried ERP” when what they actually received was general talk therapy with an occasional mention of exposure.
True ERP is structured. It involves building a fear hierarchy, systematically working through exposures, tracking your progress with validated tools, and adjusting the plan as you go. If that doesn’t sound like your experience, you may benefit from a more intensive, structured approach.
Sign 4: Your Therapist Seems Uncomfortable with Your OCD Themes
OCD latches onto the things you care about most and it exploits your deepest fears. That means OCD often generates the most disturbing, taboo, and distressing thoughts imaginable. Themes such as harm OCD, sexual orientation OCD, pedophilia OCD, incest OCD, or religious OCD exist precisely because they’re the thoughts that horrify you the most.
A good OCD therapist knows this. They don’t flinch. They’ve heard every theme, and they understand that these intrusive thoughts are not reflections of who you are. They’re symptoms of a disorder.
But if your therapist changes the subject when you bring up your intrusive thoughts, looks visibly uncomfortable, seems shocked by what you’re sharing, or worst of all, suggests that your thoughts might mean something about your character, they likely don’t have the specialized OCD training needed to help you.
You deserve a therapist who can sit with the darkest content of your OCD without blinking. That’s not because they don’t care, it’s because they understand what OCD is and how it works. They know the thoughts aren’t the problem. The cycle is the problem.
Sign 5: You’re Doing Reassurance-Seeking in Session
This one is subtle, and it’s incredibly common. You’re sitting in session and you ask your therapist something like:
“But do you think I would actually do that?”
“Am I a bad person?”
“Do you think this means something is really wrong with me?”
And your therapist responds: “No, of course not. You’re a good person. Those are just thoughts.”
That might feel good in the moment. But it’s feeding the OCD cycle. Reassurance is a compulsion. When your therapist provides it, they’re inadvertently reinforcing the idea that you need external validation to feel okay and that you can’t trust your own judgment. And the relief from reassurance is always temporary. The doubt comes back, and you need more.
A trained OCD therapist would recognize reassurance-seeking the moment it happens and redirect you rather than answering the question. They might say something like, “It sounds like OCD is asking that question. What would it look like to sit with the uncertainty?” That’s not cold or uncaring, it’s therapeutic. It’s helping you build the muscle to tolerate doubt, which is the core skill OCD recovery requires.
What to Look for in an OCD Specialist
If any of the signs above sound familiar, it doesn’t mean you’re out of options. It means you need the right specialist. Here’s what to look for:
- Trained in ERP specifically, not just general CBT. ERP is a specialized protocol, and training in it matters.
- Experience with your specific OCD subtype. Whether it’s harm OCD, contamination, relationship OCD, or something else, it is best when your therapist has direct experience treating it.
- Comfortable discussing any theme without judgment. No flinching, no shocked expressions, and definitely no suggesting your thoughts are a reflection of reality.
- Uses structured exposure exercises. Not just talking about your fears, but actively working through them in a planned, graduated way.
- Measures progress with validated tools. Good OCD treatment tracks where you started and how you’re improving, often using measures like the Y-BOCS (Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale).
You shouldn’t have to guess whether treatment is working, a specialist will make it clear and measurable.
Ready for a Different Approach?
If any of these signs sound familiar, it might be time for a second opinion.
At The OCD Treatment Center, every therapist specializes in OCD and uses ERP as the foundation of treatment. Myself, the founder, Bradley Wilson, LMFT, overcame OCD before dedicating my career to helping others do the same. We’ve worked with over 350 clients and completed more than 175 intensive treatment programs. We know what effective OCD treatment looks like because we’ve lived it and delivered it.
We offer a free consultation to review where you are in your treatment and help you figure out what might work better. Whether that means weekly sessions, our 3-week intensive program, or simply a professional perspective on your current plan. We’re here to help.
Call us at (949) 398-8350 or visit www.theocdtreatmentcenter.com to schedule your free consultation today.
Learn More