Weemie
Diamond Member
I have PTSD with Secondary Psychosis and schizoid. When I am psychotic, I am still me. I am just me in a psychotic episode. All I am is my brain, and my brain is sometimes psychotic and sometimes not. The question you appear to be asking is whether such a person should be held responsible for their actions. To be honest, that's a question for a lawyer, not a spouse.If someone is having a schizophrenic, dementia or psychosis episode, they’re kind of… ‘them but not them
What's up to you is to determine how much you are willing and able to put up with. Who's "fault" it is simply doesn't matter as much as what actually happens, and how capable you are of dealing with what happens. When I am sane, I can completely understand if others choose not to interact with me because of prior insane behavior. Which has included throwing, raging, screaming, reverting to the developmental stage of a 4 year old, trauma dumping on strangers, attacking people, etc etc etc.
I may not be legally responsible for what I do while I'm insane, but as a human being in relationships with other people, that is less relevant. Whether or not it is my character is not relevant. Are you satisfied in a relationship where someone could potentially act like that for the rest of your lives? That is what you really have to figure out. Some people are fine with that, others have less resilience to it. Both are equally valid.
(Personally, I do not engage in romantic relationships with others for precisely these reasons, but another may not have as much insight, or may be less harmful enough to try.) There are reasons why people do things, there aren't excuses or justifications. Whether I'm legally sane doesn't change the fact that I can be abusive, and it is not fair to suggest that anybody is obligated to endure such behavior.
Likewise, it's up to me to put as much preventative measures in place as possible so that I don't hurt other people whether because of PTSD, psychosis, personality disorder, my "character", or whatever else.