Obsessions are episodes of thoughts, images, or sensations that enter a person's mind and cause intense feelings of worry, anxiety, or tension if they are unable to get rid of them. Such ideas can be unpleasant, suspicious, threatening, or, conversely, have a sublime or idealistic content. They tend to be repetitive and can occur in a variety of situations, ranging from everyday activities to more complex contexts such as work or social life.
The causes of obsessions can be different: from stress and conflicts at work to hereditary factors, psychological disorders, as well as some physiological conditions of the body, such as neurome imbalance
*Idea*** is a mental, intuitive concept or figurative expression born in the human mind. This is a complex phenomenon that is a product of human thought and reflects a system of views, attitudes, ideas formed on the basis of personal experience and emotional mood. Thanks to ideas, an image of an object or phenomenon is formed, assessments and conclusions are made based on the perceived ideas.
***Ideoma*** (Greek eidos “view”) is a phrase that replaces a word or several words with one lexical unit. That is, initially there was a certain concept, and later, for ease of communication, they began to replace it with a phrase (or an entire phrase). Moreover, in phrases of this type, any mention of a specific word is accompanied by its replacement with some kind/definition, for example: “facial expression” is replaced by the word “mask”, the phrase “conversation on a topic” is replaced by “discussion”. In this way, we make associative perception work so that the person understands you better.
**According to C. Rogers**, **ideas are obsessive** for the following reasons:
1. Our personality and our character are connected with our ideas, so the violation of ideas leads to a violation of our sense of personality. For example, if a person's beliefs contradict his experience, then