Leighlee87
Silver Member
I need to vent. Majorly.
So, my husband and I met with a marriage counselor a few years ago. I didn't feel like she did a whole lot for us, but whatever, things improved as life circumstances improved. It was shortly after I left marriage counseling that I began with the therapist I am seeing now. She is amazing. She has years of experience treating trauma and also works a lot with eating disordered clients. So, she has been an excellent fit.
More recently, I pushed my husband to go see someone for a bit because I know that my ptsd (which developed 3 years ago) has put added pressure on our family, and he seemed to be struggling a bit. So, he decided to go see the same person we saw for marriage counseling. He seems to like her.
Last session, I finally opened up for the first time about some of the issues going on in my marriage. Mainly that there are some major boundary issues when it comes to touch and anything sexual. Basically, my husband doesn't get what he needs in terms of touch or intimacy so he has learned that if he continually gropes me even though I'm begging him not to, I'll eventually relent and have sex just so that he will stop touching me. Or, he'll do things like touch me when I'm sleeping. With a history of abuse behind me, this ends up being pretty traumatic. So, my therapist asked if I would go with my husband to his therapist and discuss this because she needed to be aware of what was happening. She basically said I was repeatedly being raped and only retraumatizing myself each time it happened. I've never really put the 'r' word with his behavior, but I guess it might be considered that. Either way, it's completely destroyed our relationship.
Okay, so I work up the nerve to go, and rehearse what I want to say--how the dynamics between us work, the issue with him craving touch (his love language) and my fear of it, and the serious downward spiral it has created, and that he needs to stop, and even then I don't know how to fix what has been damaged. I hardly got into talking about it, and she quickly changed directions asking that we discuss something else, and that this would be better dealt with by taking my husband to meet with my therapist. Early in the discussion when I was explaining that when I back away from him he sees it as rejection and in response will usually grab me and refuse to let me go. Her response was "because he isn't getting anything he needs." Fast-forward in the conversation, and she states that the reason he is always grabbing at my body is because he's adhd and impulsive, then she insisted on changing topics.
It left me feeling like the problem was mine. Because I have a messed up background, because I have issues with touch. That if I were normal, then I wouldn't have any problems with what my husband does. That if I could meet his needs none of this would be happening in the first place. So, I should take him to see my therapist, so that she can help us figure out how to interact without being triggered, and he can better understand why my responses are the way they are and how to help. What isn't happening, is that he isn't being counseled on the fact that his behavior crosses major lines whether he is married to me or anyone else. He needs to be seeing his counselor about this, not mine.
I'm so angry. I walked away feeling like everything that was happening was my fault. She literally backed him the entire time, and when things began to head in an uncomfortable direction she decided we needed to talk about something else.
So, my husband and I met with a marriage counselor a few years ago. I didn't feel like she did a whole lot for us, but whatever, things improved as life circumstances improved. It was shortly after I left marriage counseling that I began with the therapist I am seeing now. She is amazing. She has years of experience treating trauma and also works a lot with eating disordered clients. So, she has been an excellent fit.
More recently, I pushed my husband to go see someone for a bit because I know that my ptsd (which developed 3 years ago) has put added pressure on our family, and he seemed to be struggling a bit. So, he decided to go see the same person we saw for marriage counseling. He seems to like her.
Last session, I finally opened up for the first time about some of the issues going on in my marriage. Mainly that there are some major boundary issues when it comes to touch and anything sexual. Basically, my husband doesn't get what he needs in terms of touch or intimacy so he has learned that if he continually gropes me even though I'm begging him not to, I'll eventually relent and have sex just so that he will stop touching me. Or, he'll do things like touch me when I'm sleeping. With a history of abuse behind me, this ends up being pretty traumatic. So, my therapist asked if I would go with my husband to his therapist and discuss this because she needed to be aware of what was happening. She basically said I was repeatedly being raped and only retraumatizing myself each time it happened. I've never really put the 'r' word with his behavior, but I guess it might be considered that. Either way, it's completely destroyed our relationship.
Okay, so I work up the nerve to go, and rehearse what I want to say--how the dynamics between us work, the issue with him craving touch (his love language) and my fear of it, and the serious downward spiral it has created, and that he needs to stop, and even then I don't know how to fix what has been damaged. I hardly got into talking about it, and she quickly changed directions asking that we discuss something else, and that this would be better dealt with by taking my husband to meet with my therapist. Early in the discussion when I was explaining that when I back away from him he sees it as rejection and in response will usually grab me and refuse to let me go. Her response was "because he isn't getting anything he needs." Fast-forward in the conversation, and she states that the reason he is always grabbing at my body is because he's adhd and impulsive, then she insisted on changing topics.
It left me feeling like the problem was mine. Because I have a messed up background, because I have issues with touch. That if I were normal, then I wouldn't have any problems with what my husband does. That if I could meet his needs none of this would be happening in the first place. So, I should take him to see my therapist, so that she can help us figure out how to interact without being triggered, and he can better understand why my responses are the way they are and how to help. What isn't happening, is that he isn't being counseled on the fact that his behavior crosses major lines whether he is married to me or anyone else. He needs to be seeing his counselor about this, not mine.
I'm so angry. I walked away feeling like everything that was happening was my fault. She literally backed him the entire time, and when things began to head in an uncomfortable direction she decided we needed to talk about something else.
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