OCD being violent depends on the individual and what exactly you're doing wrong by them. There are often triggers and things that are sacred, and they juxtapose each other.
My girlfriend has OCD and her bed is "clean", a full body shower is required to become as clean as it, and if you touch it while unclean she will clean the bed with a spot of rubbing alcohol. Now since her bed is the sacred thing, her trigger would be anything not clean touching the bed, flies, and ants. The rationale behind the ants and flies is, "They secrete a chemical trail everywhere they go, and they're just filthy and disgusting."
Now since the bed is her only comfort zone, it is very important to her, (which can be more dangerous than someone with many comfort zones/actions) and if I end up sitting on her bed by accident, luckily this has not happened, there's no doubt in my mind she would punch me a good number of times (not in a joking manner), and become angry and upset.
There can be better or worse cases, and on a side note, there is an interesting overlap between OCD and Depression, because of the nature of the chemical imbalance (I believe the chemical is almost identical, if not), and the same medicines are used to treat it (from what I've been told by persons with either or both).
It seems to me, that her triggers are unclean things, blood, smileys, and general grime. I am unsure what exactly what about these triggers causes them, but maybe Diana can explain.
Her comfort zones seem to be the number 5, namely the repetition of actions 5 times, and washing things to clean them, which is a pretty common theme.
I don't really see how anyone could mess with the number 5, or her counting/repetition, but I imagine if she ran into the psycho and he was covered in blood and she knew it was him, she would likely clean his face, spin in a circle five times, or murder his face off, depending on how extreme the anxiety is.
Ergo, I don't think Diana is a threat to the town any more than I was/am, there's worse out there.
Bookmarks