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best way to deal with someone with an OCD...
46 Answers
should you just go along with it, abiding by their wishes, not complaining etc
or confront it, show them its over the top and petty and go along with it but challenge it too
or just outright challenge it and refuse to do it?
(boyf is ocd about cleaning, but moans a lot about me washing up or wiping down mess or taking plates to the kitchen etc - he will say take your plate out the minute the last mouthful goes in...he watches me cook, huffing about and wiping and moving things into the sink etc, while im still cooking, wants me to wash up even one pan before i eat etc...generally just obsessed with the kitchen, and has a 'way' with everything)
at the moment i do the middle one... i do it but i do it my way and dont jump to orders and pull him up on them...i realise its not his 'fault' exactly but its quite tedious...
am i handling it correctly?
or confront it, show them its over the top and petty and go along with it but challenge it too
or just outright challenge it and refuse to do it?
(boyf is ocd about cleaning, but moans a lot about me washing up or wiping down mess or taking plates to the kitchen etc - he will say take your plate out the minute the last mouthful goes in...he watches me cook, huffing about and wiping and moving things into the sink etc, while im still cooking, wants me to wash up even one pan before i eat etc...generally just obsessed with the kitchen, and has a 'way' with everything)
at the moment i do the middle one... i do it but i do it my way and dont jump to orders and pull him up on them...i realise its not his 'fault' exactly but its quite tedious...
am i handling it correctly?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My bf's Mum is exactly the same way. Everything has to be cleared up the second you have used it. Washed, dried and put away.
In our house it's totally different. We eat, the dishes get piled up in the kitchen for a few hours until someone can be bothered to wash up and then they usually get left to dry on their own.
It's drives me nuts at her house and I always want to have a go and point out that if a bowl is left on the side the world will not end but I suppose as it is her house it has to be respected. If it was someone I lived with I woud leave things on purpose to get on their nerves. But I'm quite childish. ;o)
In our house it's totally different. We eat, the dishes get piled up in the kitchen for a few hours until someone can be bothered to wash up and then they usually get left to dry on their own.
It's drives me nuts at her house and I always want to have a go and point out that if a bowl is left on the side the world will not end but I suppose as it is her house it has to be respected. If it was someone I lived with I woud leave things on purpose to get on their nerves. But I'm quite childish. ;o)
i do tell him to do it himself...but then he moans that i leave everything for him to do...even occasionally 'totting up' how much he did an how much i did...weird...
im the same at mine milly i hate housework so not bothered if theres a few plates or mess...lifes too short...
he hasnt always been like that...at least i dont think so...its since he got his own nice flat...he just loves it being all nice, and hes got a bit fanatical about it.
though his mum knows about it so maybe hes always had tendencies.
im the same at mine milly i hate housework so not bothered if theres a few plates or mess...lifes too short...
he hasnt always been like that...at least i dont think so...its since he got his own nice flat...he just loves it being all nice, and hes got a bit fanatical about it.
though his mum knows about it so maybe hes always had tendencies.
Depends....has he had an actual diagnosis or is that your opinion?
You say his flat as though you don't live together?
Assuming he doesn't change, where is the relationship going, ie can you put up with it?
I mean if you don't live together then you might compromise by saying in your flat your rules, in my pace my rules but what if you move in together.
I don't think you can handle it. You are unlikely to change him and he is unlikely to change you...live with it or walk.
You say his flat as though you don't live together?
Assuming he doesn't change, where is the relationship going, ie can you put up with it?
I mean if you don't live together then you might compromise by saying in your flat your rules, in my pace my rules but what if you move in together.
I don't think you can handle it. You are unlikely to change him and he is unlikely to change you...live with it or walk.
So would I smudge...but I'm constantly wiping and washing up while I'm cooking. Then I fill the sink (luckily a big belfast sink) with hot soapy water and anything I could get washed before I served gets put in there. Then as soon as we finish dinner I load the dish washer...clean up and mop the floor.
If you dont do it he will do it, its a disorder, confronting him and showing him how over the top it is and petty is fruitless, he has probably been this way for most of his life.
he is critical about your ability to clean because this disorder in ingrained and he has no confidence in someone completing these tasks to the same standard as himself. Even if you did do a good job he would struggle to not get involved or be critical of the completed work.
he is critical about your ability to clean because this disorder in ingrained and he has no confidence in someone completing these tasks to the same standard as himself. Even if you did do a good job he would struggle to not get involved or be critical of the completed work.
disorders are disorders; confronting people about them is about as much use as confronting them over having back pain or red hair. You could try compromising, doing things his way or your way on alternate weeks, but if he's genuinely got a disorder rather than just being a control freak, I can't see him managing it.
How much is this actually a problem? I'd be inclined as some have suggested to just let him get on with it; there are worse things than having a compulsive house cleaner. But if it's really irritating you, and he can't change, then I guess you either persuade him to seek treatment or you consisder whether the aggravation is more trouble than the relationshiip is worth.
How much is this actually a problem? I'd be inclined as some have suggested to just let him get on with it; there are worse things than having a compulsive house cleaner. But if it's really irritating you, and he can't change, then I guess you either persuade him to seek treatment or you consisder whether the aggravation is more trouble than the relationshiip is worth.
its annoying at the time, but soon forgotten...til the next meal
if i could just let him get on with it, i would...would suit me no end...but he wont just get on with it...he expects me to pull my weight...and i do...but as has been noted...its still not good enough...he will find fault somehow...
i suppose he can be a bit controling in other ways too...mostly to do with cleanliness though....but i think this is more than that...
he is constantly rearranging furniture, tabletop items, kitchen goods etc etc...
i have tried to get him to buy a cheap worktop dishwasher...itd stop most of the hassle...as he had one in his old place and never moaned about dishes etc..
the hoovering thing stemmed from the new carpets throwing up mountains of brown fluff...it took ages to get rid of it...constantly hoovering for months..and hes never sort of stopped...he only hoovers once day though...but has to do before breakfast or shower etc....
i dotn agree its the same as hair colour or pain..those things are out of your control...but this behaviour can be modified...he can learn to let it go...
if i could just let him get on with it, i would...would suit me no end...but he wont just get on with it...he expects me to pull my weight...and i do...but as has been noted...its still not good enough...he will find fault somehow...
i suppose he can be a bit controling in other ways too...mostly to do with cleanliness though....but i think this is more than that...
he is constantly rearranging furniture, tabletop items, kitchen goods etc etc...
i have tried to get him to buy a cheap worktop dishwasher...itd stop most of the hassle...as he had one in his old place and never moaned about dishes etc..
the hoovering thing stemmed from the new carpets throwing up mountains of brown fluff...it took ages to get rid of it...constantly hoovering for months..and hes never sort of stopped...he only hoovers once day though...but has to do before breakfast or shower etc....
i dotn agree its the same as hair colour or pain..those things are out of your control...but this behaviour can be modified...he can learn to let it go...
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