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The
Top 10 Compulsive Behavior Symptoms
Category: Personal Development: Basic
(BA3)
The following ten behaviors are probably the most
common of what could be categorized with "Obsessive-Compulsive"
disorders. Many of them are "curable," but the person
who has any of these compulsions should seek *professional* help
in dealing with their particular problem area.
1. "Checking" Behaviors.
Worrying if you turned off lights or stove, locked the
door, etc. Excessive daily checking and re-checking of these types
of things is a compulsive behavior.
2. Needing to Buy Something Each Time You
Go Shopping.
Lack of ANY willpower when it comes to buying when out
shows compulsive behavior. This often leads to severe financial
and business problems unless the person is financially very well
off.
3. Gambling For Recreation, But Continually
Losing & Going Into Debt.
Many people gamble for fun, and when they lose all their
money they go home or quit. Compulsive gamblers keep going and borrow
money, sell items to get money to gamble etc. They are "addicted"
to gambling.
4. Substance Abuse/Addiction.
When alcohol, recreational drugs, or tobacco are so much
a part of your life that without them you are agitated, afraid,
anxious, or do not feel "yourself," then you have a compulsion
to use those substances,even though they are harmful to your physical
and emotional wellness.
5. All Work & No Play.
If you are a person who ALWAYS feels they have to be working
or doing something "productive," such as your business
work or other projects that are not considered "recreation,"
then chances are good you are compulsive about work. These people
often are called "Type A" people, but a true compulsive
workaholic will literally work until they fall asleep or are no
longer able to function.
6. Compulsive Relationship Behavior.
Examples of this are the man or woman who *must* be in
a relationship, sometimes with only one special person, or they
feel lost. If the relationship is terminated by the other party,
the compulsive "lover" will stalk, call incessantly, and
do all kinds of legal and illegal things to get close to or "get
back" the person they feel they must have in their life to
be "whole." It is similar to the "Fatal Attraction"
movie character Glen Close played.
7. Compulsive Lying.
This person, not unlike the gambler, or the alcoholic,
has little or no control over the lies he or she tells. To the compulsive
liar, lies come out of the mouth as easily as truths, usually with
little or no forethought to why or what the consequences will be.
8. Compulsive Eating.
Eating disorders are well known by now, and the subject
of numerous books and talk shows. The compulsive eater is a person
who simply CANNOT say no to food! They may have just eaten a dinner,
but they go back for more until they are either sick and must "purge"
the food, or until they get so sick they cannot eat any more. Most
people with severe overweight problems are compulsive when it comes
to eating.
9. Sexual Compulsions.
Men and women who bounce from one bed to the next and
MUST have an ongoing sexual relationship or very frequent sex no
matter with whom or what the situation, are addicted to sex, and
would be classified as having a sexual compulsion. These people
unfortunately put themselves at high risk for getting sexually transmitted
diseases, unwanted pregnancies, and very unhealthy personal and
professional lives.
10. Compulsive Exercising.
Sometimes tied into competitiveness, sometimes to a weight
or *perceived* weight problem, and sometimes simply another example
of compulsive behavior, some people exercise to the extreme, often
endangering their health. Some runners and "marathon"
zealots may live to exercise. They do it for much longer than suggested
by health experts, they do it harder than suggested, and they do
it more frequently as well. It often interferes with their social
and business life, and in women and men can cause unhealthy changes
in the body's normal "rhythms," the person's body fat
percentage, and can cause many "sports related" injuries
to the knees, legs, hips, and other major joint and muscle areas.
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