Important distinction: If you're terrified by intrusive thoughts and desperately don't want to act on them, this is postpartum OCD, a highly treatable condition. If you believe the thoughts are real or want to act on them, seek emergency care immediately, because that indicates psychosis, not OCD.
Expert ERP therapy for intrusive thoughts. You're not a danger to your baby, you're experiencing postpartum OCD. Here's how Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) therapy can help you break free from intrusive thoughts, compulsions, and the anxiety that's stealing your joy in motherhood.
What Is Postpartum OCD (Perinatal OCD)?
Postpartum OCD (also called perinatal OCD or maternal OCD) is a form of obsessive-compulsive disorder that emerges during pregnancy or after childbirth. It affects approximately 3 to 5% of new mothers, though many cases go undiagnosed because mothers are too ashamed to share their thoughts.
The hallmark of postpartum OCD is experiencing unwanted, intrusive thoughts about harm coming to your baby, often involving you as the potential cause of that harm. These thoughts are ego-dystonic, meaning they go against your values and who you are as a person, which is why they cause such extreme distress.
A critical truth: the fact that these thoughts horrify you is proof that you would never act on them. Mothers with postpartum OCD have no higher risk of harming their babies than any other mother. The thoughts are symptoms of anxiety, not predictions or desires.
Common Intrusive Thoughts in Postpartum OCD
Intrusive thoughts in postpartum OCD often involve graphic, disturbing images or "what if" scenarios. These thoughts are unwanted and cause intense anxiety. Common themes include:
- Accidental harm. "What if I drop the baby down the stairs?" "What if I accidentally smother the baby while co-sleeping?" "What if the baby chokes while I'm feeding them?"
- Intentional harm. Intrusive images of hurting the baby (stabbing, shaking, drowning). These are particularly distressing because they feel "violent" but are completely unwanted thoughts, not desires.
- Sexual intrusive thoughts. Unwanted sexual thoughts about the baby during diaper changes or bath time. These cause extreme shame but are anxiety symptoms, not actual desires.
- Contamination fears. "What if the baby gets sick from germs on my hands?" "What if I contaminated the bottle?" Fears about illness, chemicals, or toxins harming the baby.
- SIDS obsessions. Constant worry about the baby dying from SIDS, leading to excessive checking on the baby's breathing or an inability to sleep.
- "Losing control" fears. "What if I lose control and hurt the baby?" "What if I'm secretly a bad person?" Fears about your own mental state or capabilities.
These thoughts do NOT mean you want to harm your baby, you will harm your baby, or you're a bad mother. They mean you're experiencing postpartum OCD, a treatable anxiety disorder.
Common Compulsions in Postpartum OCD
Compulsions are behaviors or mental rituals you perform to reduce anxiety from intrusive thoughts. While they provide temporary relief, they reinforce the OCD cycle.
Observable compulsions:
- Excessive checking (baby's breathing, locks, stove)
- Repeated hand washing or sanitizing
- Avoiding being alone with the baby
- Removing "dangerous" items from the house
- Constantly asking your partner for reassurance
- Googling symptoms or risks excessively
- Taking excessive safety precautions
Mental compulsions:
- Mental checking ("Did I lock the door?")
- Reviewing past events to ensure you didn't harm the baby
- Replacing "bad" thoughts with "good" ones
- Counting or repeating phrases
- Mentally reassuring yourself repeatedly
- Analyzing whether you "really" had the thought
- Trying to suppress or push away thoughts
Compulsions maintain the OCD cycle by temporarily reducing anxiety, which reinforces the belief that the intrusive thought was actually dangerous. ERP therapy breaks this cycle.
ERP Therapy: The Gold Standard for Postpartum OCD
Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) is the most effective treatment for OCD, including postpartum OCD. It's a specialized form of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with decades of research backing its effectiveness.
How ERP works
- Exposure (face the fear). Gradually expose yourself to situations that trigger intrusive thoughts. This doesn't mean actually doing dangerous things; it means tolerating the anxiety of being near triggers without engaging in compulsions. For example, holding a knife while preparing food with the baby nearby (at a safe distance) without performing mental reassurance rituals.
- Response prevention (resist compulsions). Refrain from performing compulsions (checking, reassurance-seeking, mental rituals) when intrusive thoughts arise. This allows anxiety to naturally decrease over time. For example, not asking your partner "I would never hurt the baby, right?" after having an intrusive thought.
- Habituation (anxiety decreases). With repeated exposure without compulsions, your brain learns that the intrusive thought is not dangerous. Anxiety naturally decreases, and the thought loses its power. After two to three weeks of ERP practice, the intrusive thought might still occur but causes minimal anxiety.
ERP teaches your brain that intrusive thoughts are just thoughts, not dangerous, not predictive, and not reflections of who you are. By facing the anxiety without ritualizing, you break the OCD cycle and regain control over your life.
What ERP Therapy Looks Like at Bloom Psychology
Sessions 1 to 3: Assessment and psychoeducation. We'll identify your specific intrusive thoughts, compulsions, and avoidance behaviors. You'll learn how OCD works, why intrusive thoughts occur, and how ERP will help. We'll normalize your experience; you're not alone, and you're not dangerous.
Sessions 4 to 6: Building your exposure hierarchy. We'll create a "fear ladder" ranking your triggers from least to most anxiety-provoking (on a 0 to 100 scale). We start with moderate challenges (30 to 40 anxiety level), not the scariest ones. Looking at a knife might be 30 out of 100; holding a knife near the baby might be 60 out of 100.
Sessions 7 to 12: Active ERP practice. In session, we practice exposures together. You'll face triggers while I coach you through resisting compulsions. We measure anxiety before, during, and after to track habituation. You'll practice exposures at home between sessions, since homework is essential for ERP success.
Sessions 13 to 16: Advanced exposures and relapse prevention. We tackle higher-level exposures as earlier ones become easier. We work on accepting uncertainty ("I can never be 100% certain, and that's okay") and build skills to handle intrusive thoughts if they return in the future.
Weekly sessions are most effective for ERP. Some mothers benefit from twice-weekly sessions initially for faster progress. Most mothers see significant improvement within 12 to 16 sessions.
Postpartum OCD vs Postpartum Depression: Key Differences
| Feature | Postpartum OCD | Postpartum Depression |
|---|---|---|
| Primary symptom | Intrusive thoughts and compulsions | Persistent sadness and low mood |
| Emotional state | High anxiety, fear, hypervigilance | Sadness, hopelessness, guilt |
| Thoughts about baby | Intrusive thoughts of harm (unwanted) | Difficulty bonding, feeling detached |
| Response to thoughts | Terrified, engage in rituals to prevent harm | Guilt about not feeling happy or connected |
| Energy level | Often normal or increased (from anxiety) | Low energy, fatigue, exhaustion |
| Treatment | ERP therapy (specialized OCD treatment) | CBT or IPT therapy plus possible antidepressants |
The two can co-occur: approximately 50% of mothers with PPD also have OCD symptoms. Learn more about postpartum depression symptoms.
Medication for Postpartum OCD
While ERP therapy is the primary treatment for postpartum OCD, medication can be helpful in certain situations.
- SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors). Medications like sertraline (Zoloft), fluoxetine (Prozac), and escitalopram (Lexapro) can reduce OCD symptoms. Many are breastfeeding-compatible. SSRIs take 4 to 6 weeks to show effect and are most effective when combined with ERP therapy.
- When medication is recommended. Severe OCD symptoms preventing you from engaging in therapy, co-occurring postpartum depression, limited response to ERP therapy alone, or a history of OCD that previously responded well to medication.
- Therapy vs medication vs both. Research shows ERP therapy alone is highly effective for OCD. However, combining ERP with medication often leads to faster and more complete improvement. We'll help you weigh the options based on symptom severity, breastfeeding goals, and personal preferences.
Bloom Psychology provides therapy, not medication management. We can coordinate with your OB/GYN, primary care doctor, or psychiatrist if medication is recommended.
Recovery Timeline: What to Expect
- Weeks 1 to 2 — Relief from understanding. Learning your thoughts are OCD symptoms (not reality) provides immediate relief. You'll understand why intrusive thoughts happen and that you're not alone.
- Weeks 3 to 4 — Starting ERP. Anxiety may temporarily increase as you begin exposures. This is normal and expected; it means the therapy is working.
- Weeks 5 to 8 — Noticing improvement. Certain triggers cause less anxiety. Compulsions become easier to resist. You may still have intrusive thoughts, but they bother you less.
- Weeks 9 to 12 — Significant progress. Most mothers experience 50 to 70% symptom reduction. You can handle most daily parenting tasks without excessive anxiety or rituals.
- Weeks 13 to 16 — Relapse prevention. Focus shifts to maintaining gains and building skills to handle intrusive thoughts if they return during stressful times.
- 6+ months — Full recovery. Most mothers achieve full recovery with occasional "check-in" sessions as needed. Skills learned in ERP last a lifetime.
Most mothers report that ERP therapy is life-changing, and many say they wish they'd started treatment sooner.
At Bloom Psychology, we specialize in ERP therapy for postpartum OCD. Dr. Jana Rundle has extensive training in OCD treatment and understands how terrifying intrusive thoughts can be. You don't have to suffer in silence or shame. Learn about our treatment approach or schedule a free consultation.





