- Post starter
- #13
Meadowsweat,
My wife has not been diagnosed with ptsd and this and everything I say is a layman's attempt to make heads or tales of the situation, since my wife has not decided to seek assistance from a clinical psychologist.
But, these are the facts.
1-She had been physically and mentally abused by her first husband 20 years ago. An only recent full disclosure to me on the severity of the abuse.
2-She recently (Christmas) saw a guy that looked like this first husband and had a panic attack, where a friend had to escort her and take her home.
3-She told me she was unhappy and thinks I say and will act just like the first husband. So much so that when I told her I started going to domestic abuse counselling she asked me if I was going to start to hit her. (A question that to me was way outside the situation)
Now I certainly don't know what my wife has, but what I do believe is this. An experienced trauma likley has conditioned her to avoid all conflicts with her spouse, because in her mind disagreement equals violence. This compels her to loose her voice and suffer in silence, as she has done for years because loved ones didn't know her "language."
She felt like her voice and feelings didn't matter, because she learned through negative reinforcement it didn't.
Ptsd, like ADD and all other clinical terms from DSM-IV (soon to be dsm-v) are not all exact and fit every situation. Besides, everyone wants to categorize and lable things.
To the point, I don't know if she has ptsd but I know she has been hurt and it has and is effecting her. She has told me she doesn't want to feel this way, but she can't forget the past and right now I remind her of it.
She has a right to be whomever she wants to be, like we all do. I am just fighting and supporting her the best I can so she can find who that person is. I am here to give myself strength in a time where the wife and mother I love is no longer with us. I may not fit some definition either, just like she may not have ptsd, but what we all share here and in the real world is emotional pain from sources that are not truly within all of our control. We need to control our own lives and I don't believe my wife has had a fair chance at that.
I want my wife, daughter and myself to be happy. Together or apart we all deserve to be who we want to be and not be swayed from an otherwise free choice because of a past pain, trauma or memory that haunts us.
My wife has not been diagnosed with ptsd and this and everything I say is a layman's attempt to make heads or tales of the situation, since my wife has not decided to seek assistance from a clinical psychologist.
But, these are the facts.
1-She had been physically and mentally abused by her first husband 20 years ago. An only recent full disclosure to me on the severity of the abuse.
2-She recently (Christmas) saw a guy that looked like this first husband and had a panic attack, where a friend had to escort her and take her home.
3-She told me she was unhappy and thinks I say and will act just like the first husband. So much so that when I told her I started going to domestic abuse counselling she asked me if I was going to start to hit her. (A question that to me was way outside the situation)
Now I certainly don't know what my wife has, but what I do believe is this. An experienced trauma likley has conditioned her to avoid all conflicts with her spouse, because in her mind disagreement equals violence. This compels her to loose her voice and suffer in silence, as she has done for years because loved ones didn't know her "language."
She felt like her voice and feelings didn't matter, because she learned through negative reinforcement it didn't.
Ptsd, like ADD and all other clinical terms from DSM-IV (soon to be dsm-v) are not all exact and fit every situation. Besides, everyone wants to categorize and lable things.
To the point, I don't know if she has ptsd but I know she has been hurt and it has and is effecting her. She has told me she doesn't want to feel this way, but she can't forget the past and right now I remind her of it.
She has a right to be whomever she wants to be, like we all do. I am just fighting and supporting her the best I can so she can find who that person is. I am here to give myself strength in a time where the wife and mother I love is no longer with us. I may not fit some definition either, just like she may not have ptsd, but what we all share here and in the real world is emotional pain from sources that are not truly within all of our control. We need to control our own lives and I don't believe my wife has had a fair chance at that.
I want my wife, daughter and myself to be happy. Together or apart we all deserve to be who we want to be and not be swayed from an otherwise free choice because of a past pain, trauma or memory that haunts us.