Amelia’s Inspiring Journey Overcoming OCD & Anxiety with Matt Codde
Sep 24, 2025
If you’re battling OCD or anxiety, you’re not alone. In a recent interview with Matt Codde, founder of Restored Minds and expert on OCD and anxiety recovery, Amelia shared her brave story of transformation. Her decade-long struggle, and ultimate breakthrough, is a testimony to the power of proper support, mindset, and recovery techniques.
Below, we’ll break down key takeaways from Amelia’s conversation with Matt Codde, shedding light on what real recovery looks like and how it’s achievable for anyone.
Amelia’s Story: Decades of Silent Struggle
Amelia was a “high-functioning” student—great grades, many friends, active in extracurriculars. Outwardly, she seemed to have it all together. Internally, she was fighting a relentless battle with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), although she didn’t know the name for it at the time.
“I can trace my first loop back now to the second grade,” Amelia revealed.
By college, her OCD spiraled into all-consuming rumination—relentless, intrusive thoughts occupying every waking moment for three years straight. While medication offered some relief, it never solved the core problem. Like many, Amelia normalized the distress and exhaustion, believing maybe everyone struggled this way.
The Hidden Cost of High-Functioning Anxiety
OCD and anxiety don’t always “look” like illness. Amelia navigated life’s milestones—but exhaustion, disconnection, and stress were her daily reality. She describes falling asleep in seconds not out of peace, but sheer mental exhaustion from internal turmoil.
A powerful realization: “I wasn’t present. I was having conversations in my head all the time. I didn’t have a single conversation in those three years where I wasn’t running a dialogue in the back of my mind.”
The Turning Point: Finding the Right Program
Desperate to save a relationship (rather than just for herself), Amelia found Matt Codde’s Restored Minds and the TBC Program. She’d tried five therapists, but none provided lasting relief or addressed the root cause.
What made Matt Codde’s approach different? Two things stood out for Amelia:
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“It’s never about the content.”
Matt’s insight that the obsession’s “content” isn’t the real issue—whether it’s scrupulosity, contamination, relationship anxiety, or something else—was pivotal. -
Working with the Nervous System & Emotional Release.
Rather than talk therapy or reassurance (which actually fuels OCD), the program focused on emotional release and nervous system regulation, allowing Amelia to finally process and let go of anxious energy.
“Your story is never just for you. There’s a ripple effect,” Matt emphasized.
Facing Fear, Finding Freedom
Progress wasn’t always linear. Amelia describes an intense period when “everything came up to release”—a pressure cooker of emotions and thoughts. But as she committed to the process, profound change happened:
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Her mind quieted.
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She realized, “All these obsessions are just… nonsense. It’s so clear it was never about that.”
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She became present, lighter, and vastly less reactive.
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Self-valuing replaced self-fixing. She stopped believing she was broken.
The skills she gained—acceptance, emotional resilience, and nervous system regulation—allowed her to face life’s challenges with courage instead of fear.
Life After OCD: More Than She Imagined
Amelia describes recovery as “so much better than I ever imagined.” She thought she wanted only to stop ruminating, but she gained so much more: presence, clarity, courage, and freedom from fear’s cage.
Notably, life changes followed:
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She became a yoga sculpt instructor (something fear would never have allowed before).
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She’s less perfectionistic, more self-compassionate, and open to challenges.
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Emotional spikes are rare and manageable. Triggers now invite healing, not panic.
“Recovery isn’t about never feeling bad—it’s about having the skills to move through it,” Amelia shares.
Key Lessons for OCD & Anxiety Recovery
1. You’re Not Alone.
What you’re experiencing is real. Even people who “seem fine” may be suffering alongside you.
2. It’s Not About the Content.
Stop chasing answers or reassurance about your intrusive thoughts—they’re a symptom, not the cause.
3. Real Recovery Is Possible.
With the right knowledge, tools, and commitment, it is possible to step out of fear and into a life you can feel, enjoy, and fully inhabit.
4. The Only Way Out Is Through.
Emotions demand to be felt, not fixed. Recovery comes by facing, experiencing, and releasing, not by running or resisting.
5. The Program Matters.
Find expert guidance from professionals like Matt Codde who understand the true roots of OCD and anxiety.