Hi everyone,
I’m reaching out because I’m having a really hard time in my marriage, and I’m trying to make sense of how much of it is connected to my past trauma.
I grew up in a very abusive home. I’m the oldest of four, and my father was physically abusive—but only toward me. For years, I endured it alone. My mother never intervened, even when it happened behind closed doors. I had to apologize on my knees for things I didn’t even do. It left deep wounds.
My dad passed away six years ago. By then, I had somewhat made peace with him—he was still difficult and argumentative, but I had created enough space with my own life to feel safer. I started therapy after he died, and it helped me process a lot of the pain. But after getting married, some old patterns and reactions started resurfacing, and it’s been incredibly confusing and distressing.
My husband also grew up in an abusive home—his father belittled and mocked him. As a result, he’s very sensitive to raised voices and tends to assert himself through control and dominance, especially during conflict.
I don’t rage with anyone else the way I do with him. It’s not something I’m proud of—I'm deeply ashamed of it—but sometimes I feel like he pushes me to a breaking point. He often expects me to stay calm, be soft, and meet his emotional needs, but when I ask for the same understanding or space, it’s not reciprocated.
One major turning point came just before I gave birth to our son. There was a conflict with my family around a vacation they planned without including us. My husband pushed me to confront them even though I felt emotionally overwhelmed and asked to wait until after the birth. When I couldn’t handle it, he accused me of not caring about him, and it escalated to the point where I had to cut contact with my entire family. Since then, this issue has become a constant point of conflict, especially regarding my sister, who eventually apologized. I started to talk to her through Whatsapp and still include my husband and ask if they eventually will appologize to him - since he is so vocal about it. He wants a written appology before he can move forward in any way. While I understand how deeply hurt he is, it feels as if he makes everything about himself even if he says it's about my protection.
Lately, things have gotten even harder. He insists on knowing where I am at all times and calls it a “favor” when he watches our children. When I try to communicate boundaries or express how certain things affect me, he tells me I’m being unreasonable or emotional. He often brings up my past or compares me to my mother, despite me asking him many times not to. He even discusses our conflicts with his mother to get validation, which leaves me feeling even more isolated and blamed.
I am in therapy and working with a psychiatrist to heal from my past and understand my reactions better. I know that raging is not okay. I'm not trying to excuse it—but I am trying to understand where it’s coming from and how to respond differently. Has anyone else experienced something similar—feeling like unresolved trauma shows up in your current relationship in overwhelming ways?
I feel like I’m constantly walking a tightrope between shame, anger, and sadness. I desperately want to heal—for myself, my children, and my marriage. But I often feel like I’m failing, and that the pain from my past makes me unworthy of being heard, understood, or even loved.
Thank you for reading this. It means more than I can say.
I’m reaching out because I’m having a really hard time in my marriage, and I’m trying to make sense of how much of it is connected to my past trauma.
I grew up in a very abusive home. I’m the oldest of four, and my father was physically abusive—but only toward me. For years, I endured it alone. My mother never intervened, even when it happened behind closed doors. I had to apologize on my knees for things I didn’t even do. It left deep wounds.
My dad passed away six years ago. By then, I had somewhat made peace with him—he was still difficult and argumentative, but I had created enough space with my own life to feel safer. I started therapy after he died, and it helped me process a lot of the pain. But after getting married, some old patterns and reactions started resurfacing, and it’s been incredibly confusing and distressing.
My husband also grew up in an abusive home—his father belittled and mocked him. As a result, he’s very sensitive to raised voices and tends to assert himself through control and dominance, especially during conflict.
I don’t rage with anyone else the way I do with him. It’s not something I’m proud of—I'm deeply ashamed of it—but sometimes I feel like he pushes me to a breaking point. He often expects me to stay calm, be soft, and meet his emotional needs, but when I ask for the same understanding or space, it’s not reciprocated.
One major turning point came just before I gave birth to our son. There was a conflict with my family around a vacation they planned without including us. My husband pushed me to confront them even though I felt emotionally overwhelmed and asked to wait until after the birth. When I couldn’t handle it, he accused me of not caring about him, and it escalated to the point where I had to cut contact with my entire family. Since then, this issue has become a constant point of conflict, especially regarding my sister, who eventually apologized. I started to talk to her through Whatsapp and still include my husband and ask if they eventually will appologize to him - since he is so vocal about it. He wants a written appology before he can move forward in any way. While I understand how deeply hurt he is, it feels as if he makes everything about himself even if he says it's about my protection.
Lately, things have gotten even harder. He insists on knowing where I am at all times and calls it a “favor” when he watches our children. When I try to communicate boundaries or express how certain things affect me, he tells me I’m being unreasonable or emotional. He often brings up my past or compares me to my mother, despite me asking him many times not to. He even discusses our conflicts with his mother to get validation, which leaves me feeling even more isolated and blamed.
I am in therapy and working with a psychiatrist to heal from my past and understand my reactions better. I know that raging is not okay. I'm not trying to excuse it—but I am trying to understand where it’s coming from and how to respond differently. Has anyone else experienced something similar—feeling like unresolved trauma shows up in your current relationship in overwhelming ways?
I feel like I’m constantly walking a tightrope between shame, anger, and sadness. I desperately want to heal—for myself, my children, and my marriage. But I often feel like I’m failing, and that the pain from my past makes me unworthy of being heard, understood, or even loved.
Thank you for reading this. It means more than I can say.