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Girlfriend Of Marine Diagnosed With PTSD...Glad To Have Found Forum!

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Callie001

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Hi everyone my name is Callie and I am the girlfriend of a current Marine who just finished his tour in Iraq and was diagnosed with PTSD. When he told me it really made me nervous because I don't know much about PTSD or what to do for someone with it. I never thought much of it because he seemed OKAY when he was there but as soon as he got home I heard stories of how he became angry so easily. He says he does not have it and that they made a mistake in diagnosing him. I went out to Barnes and Noble and started reading as many books as I could to gain information about how to act and care for someone diagnosed with this. Every day is a battle with him and he refuses to see or accept what he has and its increasingly hard. I can't tell him that I agree with the doctors because I'm afraid he will lose faith in me that I am indeed on HIS side! He refuses to take the meds he was prescribed. I just need some support and am looking for any advice on how to make my boyfriend feel at ease and comforted. He tells me PTSD is frowned upon in the Military and that he doesn't have PTSD and he never will. I'm confused and hurting for my boyfriend!

Any and all advice is greatly appreciated as I'm new to this entire topic and looking for some positive encouragement!
 
Hi Callie! My name is Tiffany and I just signed up for this site today. I'm not sure I really have any advice because I came here looking to understand PTSD better as well. My husband spend 13 months overseas and has been back for almost a year now. While the FRG explained a lot about PTSD before they came home, I don't believe anyone can prepare you for dealing with/helping a loved one with PTSD. I didn't even acknowledge any of the signs my husband had been showing because I think I was too afraid to deal with it. In turn, for the last 6 months we've just been cohabitating. A few weeks ago I went to check my e-mail and discovered that an unknown e-mail address had been signed in on my computer. Of course, I clicked on the inbox and found out that this e-mail account belonged to my husband and he has been going on dating websites and chatting with women all over the world, including Russia! I was devasted and when he came home and realized that I had found it I told him I wanted a divorce. What really killed me is that he had no reaction or emotions about anything! I would up leaving the next morning and stayed with my Aunt and Uncle. While I was there, they showed me a lot of things that I wasn't seeing. I didn't realize that my husband had been asking for help for months and I was just ignoring it or telling him he was fine. A few weeks later, we're doing alright. We're taking it one day at a time and agreed that if I was to come home he was going to get help. I've been home for 2 weeks and while he has called to make an appointment he hasn't gone to fill out the paperwork to get his first appointment. It's a slow process and sometimes they have to go when they are ready. Before I came home I told my husband that I love him, I know he loves me, but we both need to get help. I told him that we can only take it one day at a time but that no matter what I would always be there for him and wanted to be by his side throughout the whole process. It wasn't until then, when I gave up trying to control what was going to happen did he start to take initivative on his own. He has done research and found contact information for people he can talk to as well as start to realize how his actions affect the people around him, especially me. Some days are harder than others still but everyday we're moving forward. Your boyfriend probably feels the same way my husband feels. My husband told me, "I want to get help, I know I need help, but I have to find a way to get help to where I won't get kicked out of the Army." He said that he is proud of what he has done and wants to make the Army a career. For now, maybe all you can do it try to understand where your boyfriend is coming from and just tell him that you love him. Give him a chance to make the decision to get help, his decision, because if it's not, he won't put all the work into the process of getting better. I hope he comes around soon, and for your sake, keep posting on here. I'm sure it's a big help! Good luck!

Tiffany
 
Hi Tiffany, thanks a ton for the response, it was reassuring to read someone elses story that is similar to the situation I am in. I'm glad your husband agreed to get help or to at least consider it. I'm not sure how the Army handles things but in the Marines my boyfriend said he became angry really quick and had quite a few arguments with other troops and his boss sent him to a therapist where he had to fill out a survey of some sort. He said the questions were really confusing for him, I guess some of them were worded as "do you become angry" and they worded it as "sometimes, always, never, often" and there was about 50 questions almost asking the same thing just in a different way. Is that at ALL similar to what your husband went through? The topic is so touchy with my boyfriend and I'm struggeling to see the big picture. They prescribed him anti depressants. Is anger an issue? mood swings? I guess it varies from person to person. I feel so bad for the troops over there.
Thanks for the advice and reassurance!!!

-Callie
 
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