- Moderator
- #1
Nicolette
Supporter Admin
I have been here for a number of years now and seen Carers come and go. Some of them have come here in desperation looking for someone to identify with and try and find a solution for the chaos they feel in their lives plus trying to understand what PTSD is.
For starters PTSD is a sometimes cruel and debilitating illness which can turn the loveliest person into a monster who you don't even recognise. It can send the lives of both people (the Sufferer and the Carer) into turmoil.
What I want to point out is this. Sympathy and tippy toeing around on egg shells does not help a Sufferer plus it pulls a Carer down to such a level where they lose perspective and begin to think that love can cure all or lose their self esteem.
Well, PTSD is not curable but it is manageable. The person who has to do this is the Sufferer and the best thing a Carer can do is support them but keep strong healthy boundaries. Being sympathetic and making too many allowances or excuses for behavior and labeling it as PTSD actually enables the Sufferer.
Quite frankly it becomes depressing to read how a Carer is suffering and when experienced members offer advice (which the new Carers are not yet ready to hear) and they go off threatening to leave the forum saying how we don't have any idea.
Think about this for a moment.......if I have a really good relationship with a Sufferer for almost 3 years now and Carers such as Amethist or ISupportHer have marriages which have lasted years then we must be doing something right. So, if we say something you don't like, before you go off running as you didn't get the sympathy you were looking for, perhaps sit with what was said and give yourself time to digest it.
I have followed the journey of many Carers and Frankie and Shoka both come to mind as they have learned that by using PTSD as an excuse for their Sufferers to get away with more they actually created a bad situation for themselves. It took them time but they then actually turned around and now understand what was being said to them at the start.
We are here to help and offer our experience....that is all we can do and it is up to you what you take on board. But when you come here feeling desperate and like your life is falling apart don't forget to give a second thought to what has been said to you even if it initially seems harsh.
For starters PTSD is a sometimes cruel and debilitating illness which can turn the loveliest person into a monster who you don't even recognise. It can send the lives of both people (the Sufferer and the Carer) into turmoil.
What I want to point out is this. Sympathy and tippy toeing around on egg shells does not help a Sufferer plus it pulls a Carer down to such a level where they lose perspective and begin to think that love can cure all or lose their self esteem.
Well, PTSD is not curable but it is manageable. The person who has to do this is the Sufferer and the best thing a Carer can do is support them but keep strong healthy boundaries. Being sympathetic and making too many allowances or excuses for behavior and labeling it as PTSD actually enables the Sufferer.
Quite frankly it becomes depressing to read how a Carer is suffering and when experienced members offer advice (which the new Carers are not yet ready to hear) and they go off threatening to leave the forum saying how we don't have any idea.
Think about this for a moment.......if I have a really good relationship with a Sufferer for almost 3 years now and Carers such as Amethist or ISupportHer have marriages which have lasted years then we must be doing something right. So, if we say something you don't like, before you go off running as you didn't get the sympathy you were looking for, perhaps sit with what was said and give yourself time to digest it.
I have followed the journey of many Carers and Frankie and Shoka both come to mind as they have learned that by using PTSD as an excuse for their Sufferers to get away with more they actually created a bad situation for themselves. It took them time but they then actually turned around and now understand what was being said to them at the start.
We are here to help and offer our experience....that is all we can do and it is up to you what you take on board. But when you come here feeling desperate and like your life is falling apart don't forget to give a second thought to what has been said to you even if it initially seems harsh.