es a reduction in tension despite the realizations that the item is secure. A less common form of OCD includes hoarding, which is the excessive saving of typically worthless items. Ordering is a subcatagory where persons feel compelled to place items in a designated spot or order. This person fears a sense of being overwhelmed and impending anarchy if items are not placed exactly as they are arbitrarily determined. Another form of OCD is perfectionism, in which persons feel compelled to habitually check for potential mistakes or errors that might reveal their own faults or might jeopardize the person’s stature at work. The next branch discussed will be the purely obsession OC. The objective in this classification involves the escape or avoidance throughout “excessive mental behavior” of noxious and unwanted thoughts. Persons with the Pure-O classification also can experience what seems to them to be threatening ideation involving the potential that they might do harm to others or that merely the idea of having the threatening thought suggests something evil or depraved about their identify, capability of selfworth. Superstitiousness might take a great significance in OCD. The last branch involves a somewhat more complex and difficult to that form OCD, and that is responsibility OC (hyperscupulosity). Here, the person’s concern is not for themselves, but directed toward the well-being of others. Typically, significant others are thought of as the predominant focus on which to prevent harm from comeing. More obscure forms of OCD involve body dysmorphia. Body dysmorphia is a condition where a person becomes excessively focused on some body part, which they perceive to be grossly disformed. Another sub-classification of OCD involves an olfactory obsession in which persons are entrenched in the idea that some part of their body is emitting a noxious aroma. This form of OCD involves a preoccupation with the potential o...