do you have any thoughts on distinguishing being accountable vs confessing vs maintaining privacy in ocd? for example, one of my main sources of ocd guilt right now is past ai use, even though i'm strictly anti-ai now. i keep feeling like i need to make an apology to my anti-ai friends because this behavior was hypocritical when i used it. though at the same time i don't feel comfortable admitting this to them and it's something i would rather leave in the past. ocd makes it hard to know what the right thing to do is while also making sure to not give into compulsions; it feels impossible to juggle.
so 'accountability' is a word that gets misused a lot: accountability means a willingness to accept and learn from mistakes and recognizing that they can't happen again. it does not mean constant self flagellation for a mistake or sharing it with everyone to allow people to shame you forever for it. for example, when my relative was experiencing drug addiction and it escalated to physical harm and emotional manipulation, he went to rehab, issued sincere apologies to everyone he hurt and never fell back into that pattern. it's unreasonable to expect anything else from him, in my opinion, and anyone that does doesn't want 'accountability', they want blood
and what you're describing to me sounds like you changed your mind on something harmful after being presented with more information which is a very normal human experience! OCD would have you believe it's not but, changing your beliefs for the better is much more common than some corners of the internet might have you believe. you're not born with all the information, sometimes you're gonna make mistakes on your way to figuring out the 'right' thing to do. OCD would also have you believe that when you don't constantly confess to people that you used to have different beliefs or behaviors than the ones you hold now, you're 'lying'. not the case!
being open about your past can be helpful to yourself and others; for example, my relative now works with victims of addiction and is in a position to say, 'i've been exactly where you are, i'm not talking out of my ass here, i'm trying to help you', and that kind of relatability and ownership of one's past is very helpful in both getting people to trust him in his line of work and creating a non-judgemental environment for the people in his care. but! my relative is under no obligation to announce his past wrongdoings to everyone he meets, because they're simply not relevant in a lot of situations. he is no longer the person that made those mistakes. there's no sense in punishing him anymore for them
tl;dr - having one belief system and then changing to another when presented with new information is not 'hypocritical', it is a very common human experience. but it is one that OCD is likely to latch onto and convince you that it's not! my best advice is: own your past mistakes that you've grown and learned from when you feel it's relevant, but they are your business and yours alone. do not feel obligated to share them if you don't have to 🩷














