Introduction: In our daily life, we often hear the words “cleanliness”, “cell phone compulsion”, “late sleep compulsion”, and similar words, when these symptoms appear in our life like a cold. When these symptoms appear in our lives like a cold, we must be unfamiliar with OCD, and OCD is manifested in various forms in every corner of our lives. So do all OCD symptoms need to be treated? Explanation: In general, patients with milder OCD can use only psychotherapy, while patients with more severe OCD can get better results using a combination of interpretive psychotherapy and medication. Patients may also consider using Morita therapy, which is more effective for neurological disorders. For a small number of patients who have not been treated with psychotherapy and medication, neurosurgery may be considered. An American named George once shot himself because he could not stand the compulsion to wash his hands, but the doctor saved him and removed the bullet from the base of his skull. Since then, the medical community has been trying to treat OCD patients through surgery, but so far, surgery has only been used for those patients for whom medication and psychotherapy have not worked, and surgery is only an attempt after treatment has failed, and the efficacy of surgery cannot be guaranteed. Question: Whether OCD is a mental illness or not is still controversial in academic circles, and it is understood that medically OCD is defined as a mental illness. However, this type of mental illness is not a “mental illness” in the traditional sense of the word. Rather, it is a psychological disorder. Explanation: OCD is defined as a type of psychological disorder characterized by recurrent obsessive-compulsive thoughts and behaviors. In other words, OCD is a neurological disorder that belongs to the category of mental disorders, but there are no significant organic changes in the brain of the patient, and it is a mild mental disorder among mental disorders. Therefore, there is no need for patients to panic when they hear that it is a “mental illness”, which is in fact a medical definition. Question: As a mental illness, should OCD be treated with medication or psychotherapy? What are the rules between the two types of treatment? Explanation: Generally speaking, mild compulsive behaviors do not require any treatment. The treatment for more serious OCD is usually a combination of medication and psychotherapy. Medication is mainly used to achieve therapeutic effects by regulating the biochemical mechanisms of the brain, and the drugs currently used to treat OCD are still antidepressants that have a strong selective effect on 5-HT, including paroxetine, sertraline, and chlorpromazine. As for psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, Morita therapy, etc. are used to help patients correct their misperceptions and gradually reduce obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Question: It is understood that obsessive-compulsive behavior is mostly closely related to personality, but patients with OCD do not have organic lesions, so is OCD inherited with personality? Explanation: OCD may start in childhood and there is a family clustering of this disorder, so it is not surprising that when one or both parents have OCD, their children develop obsessive-compulsive symptoms. There is a personality basis for the development of OCD. The distinguishing features of the obsessive-compulsive personality are the pursuit of perfection and excessive detail, and approximately 80% of people with OCD have obsessive-compulsive personality traits. These personality traits and behavior patterns are inherited and gradually permeate the thoughts and behaviors of the next generation, and children are not born with the ability to resist them, so OCD may be indirectly “passed on” to the next generation. The formation of an obsessive-compulsive personality is a result of both innate personality factors and environmental factors. While there is no way to change the innate factors, the acquired factors can be changed through a change in education. It is recommended that parents with obsessive-compulsive tendencies should pay more attention to their children’s family education, create a relatively relaxed environment for their children from an early age, and change the overly strict and stereotypical education style to avoid the “inheritance” of obsessive-compulsive personality to their children by way of family education. The use of neurosurgical treatment should be strictly controlled for the patient. In addition, the use of neurosurgical treatment may cause some unknown damage to the brain. The effectiveness of Morita therapy in treating neurological disorders, especially OCD, has been recognized by academics and patients alike. In short, there are eight words: “Let nature take its course and do what is right”. By going with nature, we patients should respect and adapt to the laws of nature. Faced with the attack of obsessive-compulsive ideas, you can not control nor reason with it, control means mental resistance and reasoning means mental interaction, this will only get more serious and sensitive, is the treatment of OCD taboo. To properly understand the natural, we must first clarify what is “natural”, we know that “the moon has a cloudy, sunny, round and unpredictable sky” this is nature, the earth does not have us humans when it exists, not by our will to shift, we only respect and We only have to respect and accept it to live openly, or else we will only ask for it. Doing what you have to do is doing what you have to do with pain, doing what you have to do, not stopping to think about the idea of compulsion for most of the day, in which case you will always be trapped in the mire of compulsion and cannot get out. This is the biggest misconception that people with OCD are always trying to get rid of their symptoms. In fact, the process of “self-healing” for OCD is not about getting rid of the symptoms, but about the symptoms getting rid of us, which is a passive process. If we do what is natural and ignore the symptoms, it will automatically die out. According to statistics, the cure rate for OCD is currently between 70-75%.