02-02-2016, 03:28 PM
well, there's all kinds of obsessions, but if we're talking about obsessive-compulsive type disorders, in the more clinical sense, then to me that indicates an orange-ray issue. The reason is that orange-ray deals with self-acceptance, and if something about oneself cannot be integrated, then 'looping patterns' form around the issue, which stop the mind from actually getting closer to the problem. It's like everytime the mind starts getting closer to thinking about the 'real issue', it gets caught up in the protective encircling psychological pattern. This can play out as washing one's hands- to stop thinking possible 'danger' (disease, illness, unseen threats). The Aviator (movie about Howard Hughes shows this connection very clearly).
Or any other types of repeating behaviour - whether it's a physical action, or the mind just rolling around in looped patterns/scenarios, without ever resolving, or leading to an actual experienced outcome. That's because the pattern is defensive in nature, and not about trying to resolve something. It's meant to keep the mind from actually getting to the real issue, which is too 'hard' to accept or acknowledge. So it becomes a personal acceptance issue. The actual thing that can't be 'accepted' can actually be quite benign, and non-harmful - to an outsider. But to the person - it has some threatening component, that threatens their currently constructed worldview, and so it has to be filed away, and not seen or approached with the conscious mind. It, however, will throw up constant reminders that it exists. Hence the triggering of the defensive patterns depending on the severity of the 'blockage'.
Or any other types of repeating behaviour - whether it's a physical action, or the mind just rolling around in looped patterns/scenarios, without ever resolving, or leading to an actual experienced outcome. That's because the pattern is defensive in nature, and not about trying to resolve something. It's meant to keep the mind from actually getting to the real issue, which is too 'hard' to accept or acknowledge. So it becomes a personal acceptance issue. The actual thing that can't be 'accepted' can actually be quite benign, and non-harmful - to an outsider. But to the person - it has some threatening component, that threatens their currently constructed worldview, and so it has to be filed away, and not seen or approached with the conscious mind. It, however, will throw up constant reminders that it exists. Hence the triggering of the defensive patterns depending on the severity of the 'blockage'.