Handle Emetophobia

Family Accommodations Are Keeping Your Phobia Alive | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 9

1 h 6 min · 10. juni 2026
episode Family Accommodations Are Keeping Your Phobia Alive | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 9 cover

Description

What happens when the people who love you most are accidentally helping your emetophobia stay alive? In this episode of Handle Emetophobia, Katie and Ally talk about family accommodations—the ways spouses, parents, friends, and loved ones can unknowingly reinforce emetophobia and OCD through reassurance, avoidance, other safety behaviors, and attempts to reduce anxiety. We discuss: • Reassurance-seeking and why it never truly satisfies anxiety • How accommodations become part of the fear cycle • The challenges family members face when trying to support recovery • Parenting children with emetophobia • The difference between helping and enabling • Why loved ones sometimes need to be willing to make us uncomfortable • How families can become powerful allies in recovery This episode is equal parts practical, funny, honest, and challenging. If you've ever asked someone, "Do you think I'm sick?" or "Do you think this food is safe?"—or if you've been the person answering those questions—this conversation is for you. Recovery isn't about staying safe. It's about learning that you can handle uncertainty—and helping the people around you learn that too. You can handle it.

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10 episodes

episode Family Accommodations Are Keeping Your Phobia Alive | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 9 artwork

Family Accommodations Are Keeping Your Phobia Alive | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 9

What happens when the people who love you most are accidentally helping your emetophobia stay alive? In this episode of Handle Emetophobia, Katie and Ally talk about family accommodations—the ways spouses, parents, friends, and loved ones can unknowingly reinforce emetophobia and OCD through reassurance, avoidance, other safety behaviors, and attempts to reduce anxiety. We discuss: • Reassurance-seeking and why it never truly satisfies anxiety • How accommodations become part of the fear cycle • The challenges family members face when trying to support recovery • Parenting children with emetophobia • The difference between helping and enabling • Why loved ones sometimes need to be willing to make us uncomfortable • How families can become powerful allies in recovery This episode is equal parts practical, funny, honest, and challenging. If you've ever asked someone, "Do you think I'm sick?" or "Do you think this food is safe?"—or if you've been the person answering those questions—this conversation is for you. Recovery isn't about staying safe. It's about learning that you can handle uncertainty—and helping the people around you learn that too. You can handle it.

10. juni 20261 h 6 min
episode I Didn't Want Kids! | Being Afraid Of Having Kids Because Of Emetophobia | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 8 artwork

I Didn't Want Kids! | Being Afraid Of Having Kids Because Of Emetophobia | Emetophobia Recovery | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 8

Can you be a good parent if you have emetophobia? In this episode, Katie and Ally tackle one of the biggest questions many people with emetophobia quietly wrestle with: pregnancy, parenting, and raising children while living with a fear of vomiting. They discuss fears around morning sickness, labor, stomach bugs, sick kids, and the reality of how emetophobia can affect family life. They also share personal stories about pregnancy, motherhood, safety behaviors, mom guilt, recovery, and what happens when the thing you're most afraid of becomes part of everyday life. This is an honest conversation about fear, values, uncertainty, and why recovery matters—not just for you, but for the people you love. If you've ever wondered whether emetophobia should determine whether you have children, this episode is for you. Topics discussed: * Pregnancy and emetophobia * Morning sickness fears * Parenting with OCD * Stomach bugs and sick children * Safety behaviors in motherhood * Mom guilt and anxiety * Exposure and response prevention (ERP) * Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) * Recovery while raising kids Because the goal isn't to stay safe. The goal is to learn that you can handle life—even when it's uncertain. 💛 Join the HANDLE Community: https://handle.mn.co/ Dr. Max Maisel on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drmaxocd/ OCD SoCal: https://ocdsocal.org

3. juni 20261 h 8 min
episode The Goal Is Not to Stay Safe | Emetophobia & Safety Behaviors | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 7 artwork

The Goal Is Not to Stay Safe | Emetophobia & Safety Behaviors | Handle Emetophobia Ep. 7

In this episode of Handle Emetophobia, Katie and Ally talk about one of the biggest things keeping emetophobia and OCD alive: safety behaviors. From chewing gum, taking Zofran, avoiding situations, distracting ourselves, mentally preparing for worst-case scenarios, and trying to prevent nausea at all costs — we unpack the many ways fear convinces us we need these behaviors to stay safe. We discuss: * Safety behaviors and compulsions * Acceptance vs. control * Exposures vs. “experiments” * Parenting with emetophobia * Fear of airplanes, stomach bugs, and public vomiting * The placebo effect and anti-nausea medication * Why recovery requires willingness instead of certainty The conversation is honest, funny, emotional, and deeply relatable for anyone struggling with emetophobia, OCD, panic, or health anxiety. The goal of recovery is not to stay safe. The goal is to learn that you don’t need to be.

27. maj 20261 h 0 min
episode How To Start Recovery From Emetophobia | Episode 6 artwork

How To Start Recovery From Emetophobia | Episode 6

“How do I actually start recovery?” We’ve been getting this question constantly lately, so in this episode we sat down and talked honestly about what beginning recovery REALLY looked like for us. Katie shares what it was like realizing she’s now weaning off therapy after a year of ERP work, while Ally talks about just beginning OCD therapy and feeling completely overwhelmed by how big recovery can seem at first. We walk through: • the OCD/emetophobia cycle • triggers, feared stories, and safety behaviors • reassurance seeking and mental compulsions • why exposures aren’t usually the first step • how delaying compulsions helped us • the importance of values and finding your “why” • acceptance, uncertainty, and willingness • why recovery is uncomfortable… but worth it We also get very real about parenting with emetophobia, health anxiety, avoiding discomfort, and the fear of vomiting itself. And maybe most importantly: The goal of recovery is not to stay safe. The goal is learning that you don’t need to. If you’re feeling hopeless, overwhelmed, or unsure where to begin, we hope this episode helps you take your first step.

20. maj 20261 h 3 min
episode Emetophobia Got Me Fired! feat. Karl from Ireland | Episode 5 artwork

Emetophobia Got Me Fired! feat. Karl from Ireland | Episode 5

In this episode of Handle Emetophobia, we sit down with Karl from Ireland — one of the members of the HANDLE community — to talk about what recovery actually looks like in real life. Karl shares how emetophobia led to years of isolation, job loss, panic, avoidance, reassurance seeking, and dependence on anti-nausea medication. Then he walks us through a major turning point: starting a new job, hearing that multiple coworkers had been “wiped out” by the stomach bug, and choosing to STAY instead of RUN.  We discuss: * Cost-benefit analysis in recovery * Why avoidance doesn’t actually keep us safe * The hidden costs of safety behaviors * Acceptance, uncertainty, and values-based living * Recovery wins that feel impossible… until they happen We also laugh a lot about magpies, movie triggers, weird OCD logic, and why emetophobes somehow become experts at detecting when someone might throw up. If you’ve ever felt trapped by emetophobia or OCD, this episode is a reminder that recovery is hard — but staying stuck is harder. You can handle it.

13. maj 20261 h 14 min