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Jimmy1

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Once again I will state that I am not a psychologist or a psychiatrist, or a therapist or counsellor, but I am a PTSD sufferer. So I will give you my opinion.

I apparently started suffering symptoms of Combat related PTSD in 2002 after I returned from East Timor; however, I was not officially diagnosed until 2007 after my return from Iraq.
My marriage did not survive this, and I was not able to maintain any sort of a relationship until just recently when I met Margaret. There is actually a comment written from my psychiatrist stating I was unable to maintain a meaningful relationship.

What I am trying to get at is this. When a person suffers from PTSD and has an 'episode', 'gets sick', 'the cows are out', or whatever else you want to call it, the don't shut down. What is happening is their head just cannot take any more sensory input. When the cows get loose with me everything pisses me off. I can't handle birds chirping, the squeak of a chair, a ceiling fan, the way people are driving (too fast, too slow, stopping too soon)or even just the way someone is speaking. And because I am miserable I sometimes want to make everyone else's day miserable.

When I was home in the early days, I would continue to yell and say nasty things until everyone was crying. Once my ex-wife said 'Are you happy now, you have everyone buy the youngest (who was 7) crying. I said no, found him and smacked his arse till he did.
For a long time I held this in as shame. I hated myself for it.

Another thing I used to do was just prior to go on military exercises and operations, I used to think that if my wife and children did not like me, they would not miss me when I went away, so I used to start fights and make them upset the week leading up to me going away.

I did a PTSD program here in Australia and have been on my medication for approximately 5 years now, yet I still have tough times when sensory overload takes over. Like now for instance. The cyclone has just been past and there is heaps of stress in the air. Margaret still has no power and won't have for a couple more days. Christian has been off school and won't be going back tomorrow due to no power. So I am over everything.

What I am trying to say to to you partners and girlfriends of guys with PTSD on this site is that we do care. But when we are not with it, it may feel like we don't, and we may say nasty things, but its only because its a defence mechanism. Think about a porcupine, when it feels threatened, it puts its spikes out, a turtle shrinks into its shell.

Then again, to be brutally honest, I went through a period I call my tomcat period. I really did not care for women. They were playthings. I hurt quite a few women during that period and once again its something I am not proud of.

Now however; I have someone I really, really love and care for, yet when the cows are out, I can be selfish and still want to go and hide.

So you girls, please don't push your guys into meeting you, otherwise you might get bitten.

Well, more mindless rambling. Hope it made some sense.

Jimmy
 
One more thing Jimmy.... You said that it really isn't a shut down, its just a sensory overload. After I digested that I thought about it, I realized that my BF had actually eluded to that very thing many times beginning mid-January. He even said he has to stay off Facebook for a while because it's too much stimuli coming at him.

It really does make it so much easier when you understand what is going on.

Thank you for your wisdom. Much love!!
 
You keep bringing up Jan. and that is when can he came home. I don't know what he went through there is something called survivor regret. I do not know much about it personally but it is like one those topics that always comes up when i would change threrapist or shrinks. That would definetly add to return aniversarry. TEX
 
Yes - I really do think January is a trigger for some reason for my BF. I don't think it is one that he recognizes yet. When I talked to him last week I mentioned that January seems to be a tough month every year and asked him if he thought his return from Afghanistan (Jan 26, 2004) is a trigger for that anniversary. Not sure what he saw or did over there as he doesn't talk too much about it. He was an Army officer with special ops - so it could have been anything. I didn't meet him until May 2008, so I don't know how he was then and he was diagnosed with PTSD shortly after his arrival home. He says before he got treated at the VA and put on meds he always wanted to drive on sidewalks to avoid roadside bombs. (he didn't but he wanted to) He had a break down of sorts and got put in the VA psych ward.

Something to talk about after this shut down....

I can tell you this, he is much improved in the 3 1/2 years that I have known him. Before he was not able to communicate what he was feeling and now he can do that. I guess it's baby steps forward with PTSD.
 
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