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Luke Combs ‘particularly bad’ OCD state interrupts daily life

Luke Combs shares his fights with obsessive -compulsive disorders and hopes to inspire others with the same state.

“Most of me are doing very well.

The singer “Fast Car” described his kind of obsessive -compulsive disorder, which is and explains an “obscure” form of the disorder. “

He added: “It is really boring to pull yourself out. It takes a lot … You need to know what to do. I am happy to be an expert to get out now.”

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Luke Combs wears black and looks serious on stage

Luke Combs recently opened his “obscure” form of obsessive -compulsive disorder, which can give him repeating and intrusive thoughts. (Getty Images)

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, an obsessive -compulsive disorder or obsessive -compulsive disorder is a disorder in which people have uncontrollable and recurring thoughts or repeated behaviors or both. “Obsessions are repeated thoughts, urge or mental images that are pushy, undesirable and make most people anxious,” explains Nimh.

For combs, “is the variant that I have, particularly angry because there is no external manifestation of it.”

“It’s really boring to pull yourself out … I’m lucky enough to be an expert to get out now.”

– Luke Combs

Combs explained that the physical actions or constraints, which are typically connected to OCD, such as repeated flicking of light switches or other repetitive behaviors, all occur internally.

“So for someone like me you don’t even know that it is going on.”

Luke Combs appear in the NFL half -time show

Combs said his “variant” of the obsessive -compulsive disorder has no behavioral phenomena, but is everything internal that makes it difficult for people to know that it happens. (Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

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But the 35-year-old has worked to cope with his symptoms as they flare up.

“The way to get out of it is that it doesn’t matter what the thoughts are at all. They give the thoughts of what the thoughts are, irrelevant and only on, they have more of them,” said Combs.

He continued: “It just learns to go, ‘it doesn’t matter what the thoughts are.” I just have to accept that she happens and then just go: “Whatever, age. It is strange, sucks, hate it, drive me crazy, but then you are at some point … the less that you worry about why you have the thoughts, at some point they go away.”

The thoughts range from “intrisively violent thoughts” to thoughts about religion and themselves and say “It focuses on things that have no answer.”

Luke combs in a black shirt and a light baseball cap with a microphone and a blue solo cup

Some of the thoughts on which the combs get stuck are “things that have no answer” that the flare continues to refuel. (Monica Murray/Variety about Getty Images)

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“This is what fears that you can never get an answer and you absolutely want an answer to everything that bothers you.

The obsessive -compulsive disorder can flare up on stage, and “if it hits, man, it can be consuming.”

Combs admitted that a “really bad flare” for weeks “45 seconds per minute” can last.

The singer “If it rains” believes that at 12 or 13 years he experienced it first and empatheted it in children who have similar experiences.

Luke Combs smiled on stage

Combs said that the flare -off of his obsessive -compulsive disorder can occur on stage, and some thoughts can take “45 seconds per minute for weeks”. (Getty Images)

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“It kept me back in my life so often, where you try to achieve something, you do it really great, and then you have flare up and it is how … it only ruins your whole life for six months. And you are again where you started.”

“I have the tools now … if it happens now, I’m not afraid of it.”

Luke Combs appear

Combs hopes that he can serve as inspiration for others, experience the OCD and start in mental health in the future. (Terry Wyatt/Getty Images)

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Combs hopes that others can make mental health towards others through the OCD, in the hope that his work from flare-ups shows that “it is possible to live on their lives and be really successful and to have a great family and to realize their dreams and deal with things with which they do not have to deal with what I hope to eat, regardless of my musical success.”

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