I too was diagnosed quite late in life, having first experienced OCD at 8
years of age. When the OCD got worse in my early twenties I began to
oscillate between periods of overt ritualistic behaviour and severe
depression during which I became 'immobile' and, on rare occasions,
suicidal.
Three separate psychiatrists failed to diagnose OCD (or if they did they
weren't letting me in on the diagnosis) and I eventually endured four years
of psychoanalytical therapy which was of no value to me at all (having
lightened my bank account of $10,000).
It was only when I read a book on the subject that I realised what I had. I
then sought help from a specialist OCD unit in Britain. The rituals have not
greatly improved with treatment but the depression is under much better
control.
The key to my modest success has been Cipramil (only 10 mg daily), cognitive
therapy and, most importantly, reading other people's accounts of the
disease.
I believe every patient should become an expert in their own illness. A
thorough knowledge of OCD is the key to tackling the daily symptoms endured
by sufferers. Of course, reading medical literature on the subject can
become a obsession in itself (fueling endless ruminations) but it is
patronising of physicians to assume that self-help measures cannot be
undertaken by OCD sufferers.