• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Relationship Pushing boundaries

  • Post starter Post starter Deleted member 44030
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Can you clarify how he vilifies your mother? I’m confused at this point.





Putting your mother down?

Not cool, time to set boundaries.

Stating that he can’t accept your mother and finds it hard to be around her?

He’s expressing how he feels. He deserves to be heard. If he doesn’t want to be around her, simple solution (which still sucks, but it is what it is), keep them separated.
 
Snowflakes, I find it hard to enforce consequences, I wouldn't know where to start. I have little lev...

It’s not about him, this is about you. You define what behavior you will accept from others and what you will do if those boundaries are crossed. Boundaries aren’t unique to living with someone with PTSD.

If he doesn’t accept your mother and doesn’t want to be around her then give him the option of either being respectful towards your mother when she visits or leave the room and find somewhere to go when she visits. I assume it’s your house too. You can certainly have a boundary where your mother is treated respectfully when you and your mother are together. If he crosses it, then you and your mother enjoy your time together elsewhere.

Having PTSD is not an excuse to be an asshat. If he insists on being an ass and treating you and/or your mother disrespectfully then ignore him and you and mom enjoy life together elsewhere. Sure your mother doesn’t feel welcome in your home but that’s not your fault.
 
Imagine if he didn't have ptsd and he told you he didn't like your mom. What would you do? Tolerate it? Tell him to suck it up and deal? Move out? Ok - maybe not that extreme but you get what I mean. There are lots of people who don't like their mom in laws. I'm not terribly fond of hubbys mom but I am civil to her when she is in our home and I expect the same from her.

Maybe a conversation about why he doesn't like her is needed? What did she do? What did he do? How can they both get past it?
Sometimes it's ptsd and sometimes its just regular old relationship drama. But because we are all wrapped up in the ptsd stuff it becomes the goto excuse. Even when it really isn't.....
 
What does your relationship with your mom look like? Is she at your house too much for comfort? If there is conflict between your husband and mother, he may not feel safe in the one place he deserves to feel safe. Not feeling safe? More lashing out.
 
what do you do when that happens...

If I care about them at all, and wish to remain in a relationship with them, I speak up.

How I go about that, tells anyone paying attention how far my boundaries have been crossed.

As long as I’m talking? I’m at a soft limit. Because talking -for me- says they’re worth talking to. Whether that’s a half laughing casual thing (the equivalent of slapping fingers away from cake frosting), or a full on toe to toe argument, or a softly spoken warning. Actually... That’s pretty much in order of how upset I am. Which also tells you how far over the line someone has gone.

Hit one of my hard limits? Unless I owe you a debt, I say nothing. Because there’s nothing to say, I’m done. If I owe you a debt, I’ll generally make it clear I’m honoring that account, and this is a one time pass... of very limited duration. Meaning keep pressing me, even right now in the moment, and finis. I really don’t play around. I might regret what we once had, might mourn what could have been, but I’ve regretted and mourned a helluva lot harder things. Might sound cold, but they’re still alive, so they can’t even begin to compete. I’m not one of those people who blows up, leaves, regrets it, comes back. When I’m done, I’m done.

I don’t have very many hard limits. Of those that I do, most of them have a very wide stretch of DMZ before you get there, that people will be well aware of crossing. Because I do speak up. Each time. Every time.

Soft limits, I’ve got a f*ckload of. And I have learned about myself that I can exist for about a year inside that zone before I pull the cord. I’m not willing to do that for most people. Flickering up against my boundaries? Pfft. No worries. That shit happens. That’s just life & living with someone. Living inside crossed boundaries? Has a time limit, where I will fight like hell to get us OUT of that situation, before I hit my max tolerance.

New relationships for me get the least tolerance. Something is only a year or two old? I’m not going to pour as much energy into as an established relationship. Inside a year or two, it’s still learning where people are coming from and if our boundaries can coexist together, or if we’re always gonna be stepping on toes.
 
Last edited:
Can you clarify how he vilifies your mother? I’m confused at this point

He puts her down to her face. Basically telling her she doesn't know sh*t about anything. Whereas he finds himself omnipotent and all- knowing. I am not exaggerating at this point.

Doesn't matter if it's a long or short visit. There's always tension. I never experienced this in any previous relationships.

I know this might not be about ptsd. I find it hard to tell it apart from who he is as a person sometimes.

I think his behaviour is triggered by her because he knows she is important in my life, so she's percieved as a threat. Maybe he sees something in her that reminds him of his abuser.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
@jellyfish "He puts her down to her face. Basically telling her she doesn't know sh*t about anything. Whereas he finds himself omnipotent and all- knowing. I am not exaggerating at this point. "

- sorry, couldn't quote ya when it wasn't in a normal post -

Absolutely not! That's not PTSD and not acceptable and very abusive! I would tell him that if he does not stop putting her down (most especially to her face but even to you) then he will soon find himself single! If he doesn't like her he can find himself another place to go if she comes over or not go with you to see her! He can find another place to be physically then around her. But that behavior IS NOT PTSD nor is PTSD an excuse to be abusive, ever!
 
@jellyfish "He puts her down to her face. Basically telling her she doesn'...
Hi, sorry I seem to have written my reply in a quote:oops:

I feel like a coward for not demanding more respect, but at the same time I feel like I should take into consideration that his behaviour might stem from trauma.

I feel protective of my mom, who is the soft, emotional type of person.
 
I feel like a coward for not demanding more respect, but at the same time I feel like I should take into consideration that his behaviour might stem from trauma.

It doesn't matter. I used to verrbally and emotionally abuse. It stemmed from trauma. It doesn't matter. My own therapist said it was abusive, inexcusble, and not ok. He did help me to stop it from happening but it still was not ok and they were completely justified if they left me on my ass. PTSD or trauma is no excuse to abuse people. Nope. It just isn't.
 
I agree with lostforgottensoul. I spent years in abusive relationships soaking up damage because I thought they were lost and they needed my help. Nobody knew them or loved them like I did. I couldn't bear the thought of 'abandoning' them to their own inner demons, even if it meant I suffered by staying.

Sure, they were lost, and they definitely needed help. Professional help. More than that, they needed to stand up and help themselves, to put in the work to deal with their traumas so they weren't the ones abandoning me to their inner demons.

I have the capacity to be abusive. I have at times been abusive towards my SO. It shames me to say it, but it's true. The difference between me and the abusers in my past is that once I recognized the capacity in myself to hurt others like that, I couldn't not do anything and everything in my power to make sure that I don't make anyone suffer the way I did. I find it so disgusting, so fundamentally abhorrent to who I want to be that it's become one of the hardest things to forgive myself for.

What I'm trying to say is that, no trauma is so profound that it gives him the right to treat the people around him like garbage. With trauma, a lot of us have times where it happens. It sucks, and we hate it, but we're working towards change for the better. If you don't see him working on himself, if he seems set in his ways and like you should just deal with it because that's the way he is, then you need to take a long hard look to see if you're a supporter or an enabler who is heading down the road towards being a victim.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom