I don't know whether this is a PTSD symptom, or a personality trait, but considering the complication of PTSD and depression in this situation either way...
I know we have all seen the effects of sufferers beating themselves up and sabotaging their own efforts at having good relationships, jobs, etc. But it is common for them to deliberately build themselves up first? My Sgt has a habit of talking air castles to me that started in Afghanistan, over those long email chains in the watches of the night. 'When I get out, I am going to have a little house, maybe in New England,' 'When I get out, I am going to get a job as a police officer/fireman/Border Patrol/TSA/CIA,' 'When I get out I am going to sail the Pacific,' 'When I get out........'
You know those little dreams people dream when their reality is too ugly to face - who knows if anything will come of them. Sometimes the dream itself is enough to keep you going.
Well, he got hurt. And got sent home. And got 'kicked' out of the Corps (he swears he is a better Marine with one arm than the rest of them are with two). And moved home to his busted, economically depressed home state. The jobs are depressing and far and few between. He is miserable, and drowning in his own head. And has started talking again. He says every couple of weeks he is doing this, he is doing that - he is visiting me, he is visiting Europe, he is going to see his buddies - nothing ever comes of it.
This time, he is going to move to my town and become a firefighter. He is doing it, he swears. He is checking out the exam, he has vet friends here, we have great jobs for a guy with his experience, it's a great town, I have a Marine friend on the force who likes him and will help him out, etc.
Now, I know there is a 75% chance he will find some reason to crash his own dreams again. But in the meantime, my heart is all torn up; there is no way in hell he can pass the physical. His right arm is trash. So is his left hip. He needs more surgery. I want to encourage him in anything that he wants to do - I mean, he is a pretty bad ass, capable guy, and really needs to do something he loves, and get out of this rut he is in. He is so excited right now. But if he goes all out on this, and they tell him; 'Sorry, son - you can't hack it,' it is going to crush him. He feels so useless.
What do I do?
I know we have all seen the effects of sufferers beating themselves up and sabotaging their own efforts at having good relationships, jobs, etc. But it is common for them to deliberately build themselves up first? My Sgt has a habit of talking air castles to me that started in Afghanistan, over those long email chains in the watches of the night. 'When I get out, I am going to have a little house, maybe in New England,' 'When I get out, I am going to get a job as a police officer/fireman/Border Patrol/TSA/CIA,' 'When I get out I am going to sail the Pacific,' 'When I get out........'
You know those little dreams people dream when their reality is too ugly to face - who knows if anything will come of them. Sometimes the dream itself is enough to keep you going.
Well, he got hurt. And got sent home. And got 'kicked' out of the Corps (he swears he is a better Marine with one arm than the rest of them are with two). And moved home to his busted, economically depressed home state. The jobs are depressing and far and few between. He is miserable, and drowning in his own head. And has started talking again. He says every couple of weeks he is doing this, he is doing that - he is visiting me, he is visiting Europe, he is going to see his buddies - nothing ever comes of it.
This time, he is going to move to my town and become a firefighter. He is doing it, he swears. He is checking out the exam, he has vet friends here, we have great jobs for a guy with his experience, it's a great town, I have a Marine friend on the force who likes him and will help him out, etc.
Now, I know there is a 75% chance he will find some reason to crash his own dreams again. But in the meantime, my heart is all torn up; there is no way in hell he can pass the physical. His right arm is trash. So is his left hip. He needs more surgery. I want to encourage him in anything that he wants to do - I mean, he is a pretty bad ass, capable guy, and really needs to do something he loves, and get out of this rut he is in. He is so excited right now. But if he goes all out on this, and they tell him; 'Sorry, son - you can't hack it,' it is going to crush him. He feels so useless.
What do I do?