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Prospect Of Parenting - How Has This Helped You?

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@ptsdspouse2b the fact that you and your man are putting so much thought and intent in to parenting shows what great parents you will be. It is just like any relationship in life, the more you put in the effort, the better the relationship. If only every child had parents that cared so much and took the responsibility so seriously. I wish you the best as you continue on this journey. :hug:
 
My early childhood from birth to eight was chaotic.. was physically, emotionally, psychologically & sexual abused. I was exploited and neglected, I lived with my 3 younger siblings in my mother's cesspool string of housing trust homes that she only ever spent time in to sleep through endless days. I have some vivid memories, but largely those memories have long been unavailable to me.

My brother and I went to live with our grandparents permanently when I turned eight, grounded community minded people steeped in the church and their family. It was modest, simple living & that's what we needed - I think the memories I still have of my earlier life stand out from the dramatic contrast alone.

I had a lot of therapy in my teenage years, I acquired many life skills that were highly developed in comparison to my peers against the odds. Did well academically, was well liked and admired by those around me. Being hypervigilant in my formative years was a necessity for survival, but in turn became the source of one of my strongest characteristics - an uncanny ability to read others on a multifaceted and deep level, partnered with a sound understanding and compassionate approach towards any person at all. It never occurred to me I could be triggered into a place that compromised my abilities to fulfill my sense of purpose and fail in caring for others... until I became a mother myself.

My children are 4 & 6. I was doing well in being a strong and stable mother for them while their dad was FIFO & I had no family to support me in their care or to offer guidance. But I was very conscientious and read A LOT. Ironically, the only thing that really inhibited my ability to make a complete secure attachment with them was my terror at making a grave parenting mistake unwittingly as a result of my own early experiences with the mother role, so I could never let myself off guard and constantly monitored myself and my children with this poignant anxiety.

Their dad and my then best friend began an intimate relationship right under my nose in our home when the kids were 2&3. I had to discover it by hearing them myself. She then systematically exploited my triggers and a slander campaign alienating me from all the people around me within her influence, pushed me out of our home. She fed him lies and fuelled his anger and hurt to pit against me, to make sure I could not be a threat to her goals. That flared all PTSD and crippled my ability to feel safe or connect with anyone. Isolated myself and the children, who I tried to shield from my anguish by putting on a brave face that would slip with a contrasting surge of energy when I was stretched thin which confused and unsettled them. Detached and calm on the one part, then triggered trauma response on the other. My son has learned maladaptive behaviour based on what I modelled in those heavy times where I was terrified and very alone. I am now doing parallel parent child trauma therapy with him. And there never seems to be an end to the layers.

Realising the affect I had on my children at the peak of my PTSD rampaging, once it began to subside in intensity, cut right to the core of me - I punished and tormented myself with guilt and shame, which just made me worse for another big chunk. I don't know if I will ever stop the pain of acknowledging the damage it caused my children but I'm finally able to conscientiously diminish my reactions in the behaviour that escalates this horrible cycle of damage and detrimental guilt bombarding myself.

My children have taught me more than I could have hoped to learn without them, healed childhood wounds and made me address attachment disorder In The Only Way I Could Facilitate Healing Them. . Through being their mother. I love them with all that I am, and I will never stop trying my utmost to be the parent they need and deserve. I have to constantly remind myself that this is enough, no more can I possibly do.

Long story short ahem.. (sorry bout the heavy outpour ) is that you can believe yourself ready, get a handle on your PTSD symptoms and resolve some of the core issues of your childhood trauma enough to be assured in progressing to parenthood with someone you love and trust. But it is these hardwired internal processes that will come to the fore when parenting confronts you from the opposite side of your traumatised experience with it, and all you can do is prepare best you can . Build a strong social support network, have a good therapist relationship established. We CAN become great parents and raise healthy and balanced children.. though, like the other many aspects of life with PTSD, is tremendously challenging and extensive life long work. Xxx
 
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We were so oblivious to the imminent disaster coming that would forever change our lives... the grenade exploded on Saturday night, when my four year old girl drops it as her she was exhausted from carrying it secretly for so long.
She has been unsettled for a couple months. I thought thus was due to her dad beginning fifo again and not seeing them for 3 months which caused my little boy to struggle emotionally and react with challenging behaviours which was demanding of much of my energy.
my little girl stayed with her godparents just down the road every Thursday night so I could have some mum and son time to work on our attachment. She loves them to pieces, especially her godfather Rob who has been like a father to me for 17 years, meeting just after my own father sexually abused me and being a rock of support ever since.
She had been complaining of ear pains. Two trips to the doctor last week with no medical explanation. Our doctor suggested her pains were somatic and the cause was emotional pain she might be struggling with. Told me to gently engage in conversation regularly to encourage her to share what was bothering her.
Saturday night she was crying in pain, and became hysterical. It wasn't her ear. She bravely admitted that her godfather had been abusing her for some time - and what was truthfully causing her physical pain was injury as a result of his abuse.
We are going through the medical and legal process now.
I don't know if I can live with this but I have to, my family needs me.
 
Their dad and I previously arranged that he have them first week in school holidays, then return them to me for the second and resettling for school and kindy. After this horrible nightmare, it was the perfect opportunity to pack up our house and move to the next town closer to the school and kindy - we had planned to do so in a couple weeks anyway. Their dad told me when I left yesterday that we'd get through this together as a family, even invited me inside the house for coffee which was never usually an option. Told me I needed to find somewhere close to him instead, 2 hours from where we are now. I didn't much like the idea personally but felt If he was finally ready to be cooperative then it would be hugely beneficial for the kids. Looked at two this afternoon. Wanted to pop in and see the kids on my way back home to pack more. He ended up sending me a 5 page text of how I am to blame this is my fault I failed them and now have no rights whatsoever now he would care for them. He isn't intending to return them to me :'(
 
Wow I'm so sorry @missyj31.

But you do have rights. You're going through the legal processes and I am sure they will be able to tell you where you stand.

Don't let their father bully you and try to take control.

This is not your fault. You haven't failed your children. Please don't blame yourself for a single moment.

I can't imagine how you feel as I don't know how I'd react to something like this if it were my child. But I know I'd never do anything to hurt my own child. Remember you're a good mum - you did try to get medical help and you got your daughter to confide in you as a result. You potentially prevented this continuing or getting worse.
 
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