Angus McGee
Gold Member
Had an "interesting" talk with a well-meaning, but far too blunt and uninformed friend at church this week.
Up until this point, every single person in my church has been supportive, and very much an "I'm very sorry you are going through that." attitude when I told them about what a struggle it has been for my wife and I since she suffered her PTSD relapse.
Then I met this guy's eye. He's a police officer in a suburb here in Portland. He asked how things were going, and I told him that it's been difficult, but we're getting by. Taking it one day at at time sort of thing...
He then asked "Is she seeing someone else?"
"Uh, no. She got her own apartment so that she can isolate, and focus on her therapy and heal so she can come home."
"Hmm.. How is she with your son?"
"She's great with him." (He's 1.5 years old, and she watches him three days a week.)
"How can she be so good with him, and not with you?"
"It's the PTSD. She can cope with watching a 1.5 year old a few hours a week, but she really needs her own place, at least temporarilly."
I don't think he bought it. Frankly, I don't care. In fact, he said her needing to be isolated was a cop-out.
So not cool.
As all of you know, PTSD is like no other disorder. Unless you've been through it, or love someone who has, you have no idea of what it does to your brain. Logic and common sense reasoning has to be thrown out the window. I know what the truth is. I've seen the impact her relapse has had on her. I've got enough negative thoughts going through my head. I certainly do not need more.
Later that night, I talked to my 16yo daughter about that conversation, and she said something I hadn't thought of. The reason she is so good with him, and he doesn't impact her PTSD is because he can't hurt her, either physically or emotionally. He's barely saying "Dada." Much less something that would impact someone suffering from PTSD.
Up until this point, every single person in my church has been supportive, and very much an "I'm very sorry you are going through that." attitude when I told them about what a struggle it has been for my wife and I since she suffered her PTSD relapse.
Then I met this guy's eye. He's a police officer in a suburb here in Portland. He asked how things were going, and I told him that it's been difficult, but we're getting by. Taking it one day at at time sort of thing...
He then asked "Is she seeing someone else?"
"Uh, no. She got her own apartment so that she can isolate, and focus on her therapy and heal so she can come home."
"Hmm.. How is she with your son?"
"She's great with him." (He's 1.5 years old, and she watches him three days a week.)
"How can she be so good with him, and not with you?"
"It's the PTSD. She can cope with watching a 1.5 year old a few hours a week, but she really needs her own place, at least temporarilly."
I don't think he bought it. Frankly, I don't care. In fact, he said her needing to be isolated was a cop-out.
So not cool.
As all of you know, PTSD is like no other disorder. Unless you've been through it, or love someone who has, you have no idea of what it does to your brain. Logic and common sense reasoning has to be thrown out the window. I know what the truth is. I've seen the impact her relapse has had on her. I've got enough negative thoughts going through my head. I certainly do not need more.
Later that night, I talked to my 16yo daughter about that conversation, and she said something I hadn't thought of. The reason she is so good with him, and he doesn't impact her PTSD is because he can't hurt her, either physically or emotionally. He's barely saying "Dada." Much less something that would impact someone suffering from PTSD.