- Post starter
- #13
Wow Eleanor, that is a very interesting point. That makes a lot of sense.
I've been thinking a lot about what you said about it possibly being connected to his childhood. Now that I think about it, before we knew about ptsd, he would come up with excuses to get around some things. I always referred to H as someone who "worries too much".
For example: last summer, our son used to bring friends over. When H was at work, if they played in the house, I thought of the noise as the sweet sound of kids having fun. When H was home, it soon became the rule that "when daddy is home, you have to play outside with your friends". He had a few reasons. One was the noise, but I shrugged that one off, so he gave another one. His other was that he didn't want them to get hurt when they are in our care.
Thinking back, I really didn't understand why he had all these excuses for not having ppl over. I think he may have put up with some ppl simply because I didn't understand...maybe he didn't either.
H was diagnosed while this girl was staying with us. I know and understand why things got worse from her stay. He did agree to have her stay, but soon began to avoid home because she was here (especially when she started acting weird/subtly mean toward him). I think we have both started to have a better understanding of him since this. But we have yet to understand the route of it all.
This specific thing confuses me because we have always talked about adopting or making our home a place where ppl can freely come and go as they want or need. His mom cared for about 20 kids when he was a kid. He recalls this as a positive (always having a ton of kids to play with and grow up with). Now I wonder if there is any connection to how he views things now and this from his past. Or maybe it's something entirely different. He thinks his father brought kids home for his mom to care for as a way of controlling her. So she would not work and would not leave as she would never leave the kids.
I've been thinking a lot about what you said about it possibly being connected to his childhood. Now that I think about it, before we knew about ptsd, he would come up with excuses to get around some things. I always referred to H as someone who "worries too much".
For example: last summer, our son used to bring friends over. When H was at work, if they played in the house, I thought of the noise as the sweet sound of kids having fun. When H was home, it soon became the rule that "when daddy is home, you have to play outside with your friends". He had a few reasons. One was the noise, but I shrugged that one off, so he gave another one. His other was that he didn't want them to get hurt when they are in our care.
Thinking back, I really didn't understand why he had all these excuses for not having ppl over. I think he may have put up with some ppl simply because I didn't understand...maybe he didn't either.
H was diagnosed while this girl was staying with us. I know and understand why things got worse from her stay. He did agree to have her stay, but soon began to avoid home because she was here (especially when she started acting weird/subtly mean toward him). I think we have both started to have a better understanding of him since this. But we have yet to understand the route of it all.
This specific thing confuses me because we have always talked about adopting or making our home a place where ppl can freely come and go as they want or need. His mom cared for about 20 kids when he was a kid. He recalls this as a positive (always having a ton of kids to play with and grow up with). Now I wonder if there is any connection to how he views things now and this from his past. Or maybe it's something entirely different. He thinks his father brought kids home for his mom to care for as a way of controlling her. So she would not work and would not leave as she would never leave the kids.