Hi Frankie,
I am one of those new Carers desperate to make sense of all that has happened recently. My husband has not even been "officially" diagnosed with PTSD but he shared that his therapist has started to discuss this with him and treat him with meditation. At this point, I'm almost completely shut out. One day I thought we were building a beautiful future together and the next, I was the root of all his problems and the marriage was to fault for all of his unhappiness. It was as if he just completely turned on me. But he feels that his "emotional turmoil" has nothing to do with why he's leaving the marriage. He refuses to work on it saying he's in capable of being married. Which I'm beginning to understand.
At first, I tried to be compassionate, kind, and understand what is happening because I knew this was not the man I married.
You say that " even if he is living with an uncontrolled PTSD, there is nothing I can do if he doesn't want it."
I am really struggling with just letting go. I can't help but feel that I should try and do something to help him. I don't even know if he recognizes what he's doing. Sometimes he's so sorry and says he must go on his journey alone and can't bring me into this. And at other times he blames me for all his unhappiness saying the biggest mistake in his life was ever marrying me.
I know I have to "let him go." But how does one do this? In the letting go process I have to give him a divorce. He said perhaps we should just separate for awhile instead. I asked if in this case he'd be willing to work on the marriage. He said no. It would only be for my benefit to separate for awhile. There is no benefit if we don't have a chance. It will only drag it out longer. Or should I give it time and hope that he gets the help he needs.
He uses such finality as to why he's walking away from the marriage. Reasons like "I will not be a good mother." We are fundementally wrong for each other. He is "in love" with someone else (someone who he has met online via a cancer support group and has NEVER met in person).
So I seek advice on how to treat him while we untangle our lives so I do not keep getting hurt over and over again. I was seeking validation that what he was doing is wrong, irrational and his reasons were untrue. These boundaries everyone speaks of...what are they? I've started to take control and to email him that how he is treating me is not OK. That it is not OK to just walk away from a marriage and have an emotional affair. I have refrained from becoming angry because deep down, I know something so much more is going on that what he is saying.
I feel like a piece of garbage that he's just casting aside and has no emotion about it. He's leaving me. Has been having an emotional affair, has said such hurtful things about our past loving relationship like it was all a lie - but in the end, he's the one walking out and blaming me as he goes.
In the end..how do I accept and let go?
Should I at least pass on what I know to be true of his behavior and PTSD to his family? He has them all "fooled" that his mental state is fine. If only they knew what he says to me. It is far from fine.
This resonates with me...
'PTSD played a major role in him leaving, he is now not the man I knew....I had no choice but to move on. This is something new carers coming here in despair really have to think about...."when is it time for me to move on" cause we know and a new carer should really understand is that no matter how much we try to help them, ultimately it is up to them."
But how do you move on? And what if he's not getting the proper help. Do I just walk away from him still?
Thx for any advice on this. The more I read, the more I understand. It's just all so tragic.
I am one of those new Carers desperate to make sense of all that has happened recently. My husband has not even been "officially" diagnosed with PTSD but he shared that his therapist has started to discuss this with him and treat him with meditation. At this point, I'm almost completely shut out. One day I thought we were building a beautiful future together and the next, I was the root of all his problems and the marriage was to fault for all of his unhappiness. It was as if he just completely turned on me. But he feels that his "emotional turmoil" has nothing to do with why he's leaving the marriage. He refuses to work on it saying he's in capable of being married. Which I'm beginning to understand.
At first, I tried to be compassionate, kind, and understand what is happening because I knew this was not the man I married.
You say that " even if he is living with an uncontrolled PTSD, there is nothing I can do if he doesn't want it."
I am really struggling with just letting go. I can't help but feel that I should try and do something to help him. I don't even know if he recognizes what he's doing. Sometimes he's so sorry and says he must go on his journey alone and can't bring me into this. And at other times he blames me for all his unhappiness saying the biggest mistake in his life was ever marrying me.
I know I have to "let him go." But how does one do this? In the letting go process I have to give him a divorce. He said perhaps we should just separate for awhile instead. I asked if in this case he'd be willing to work on the marriage. He said no. It would only be for my benefit to separate for awhile. There is no benefit if we don't have a chance. It will only drag it out longer. Or should I give it time and hope that he gets the help he needs.
He uses such finality as to why he's walking away from the marriage. Reasons like "I will not be a good mother." We are fundementally wrong for each other. He is "in love" with someone else (someone who he has met online via a cancer support group and has NEVER met in person).
So I seek advice on how to treat him while we untangle our lives so I do not keep getting hurt over and over again. I was seeking validation that what he was doing is wrong, irrational and his reasons were untrue. These boundaries everyone speaks of...what are they? I've started to take control and to email him that how he is treating me is not OK. That it is not OK to just walk away from a marriage and have an emotional affair. I have refrained from becoming angry because deep down, I know something so much more is going on that what he is saying.
I feel like a piece of garbage that he's just casting aside and has no emotion about it. He's leaving me. Has been having an emotional affair, has said such hurtful things about our past loving relationship like it was all a lie - but in the end, he's the one walking out and blaming me as he goes.
In the end..how do I accept and let go?
Should I at least pass on what I know to be true of his behavior and PTSD to his family? He has them all "fooled" that his mental state is fine. If only they knew what he says to me. It is far from fine.
This resonates with me...
'PTSD played a major role in him leaving, he is now not the man I knew....I had no choice but to move on. This is something new carers coming here in despair really have to think about...."when is it time for me to move on" cause we know and a new carer should really understand is that no matter how much we try to help them, ultimately it is up to them."
But how do you move on? And what if he's not getting the proper help. Do I just walk away from him still?
Thx for any advice on this. The more I read, the more I understand. It's just all so tragic.