This is why comparing individuals is fruitless.
I noticed that nearly all sufferers on this boards seem to have anger management issues. My guy does not. Not at all. The opposite is the case. He does not even act angry where anger would be the right reaction.
It's not that nearly all sufferers have anger management issues. That's simply not true. It's that
all sufferers have a minimum of two forms of trauma-related arousal or reactivity, from a list including: irritability or aggression, risky or destructive behavior, hypervigilance, heightened startle reaction, difficulty concentrating, difficulty sleeping.
As far as I know of your spouse, he has hypervigilance, difficulty sleeping, and perhaps a heightened startle reaction. Only two of those are needed to complete this portion of the diagnosis.
My guy does not isolate as much as others. He retreats to his room, but would never walk out on me.
Good for you, and good for him. He is comfortable with you and secure in the marriage. But he retreats to his room. So, he isolates. How much is too much? Again: Generalizations. Don't. Apply.
He does not guilt trip or gaslight me.
As has been pointed out, those aren't criteria for PTSD. And, as I'm sure you know from reading the sufferer boards, how many times does the subject of "that's not PTSD, that's just bad partnering" come up? Lots.
My guy able to form close bonds with other people. In fact far closer bonds than most other people I know, would do everything for his loved ones.
Inability to form bonds isn't at all part of the PTSD profile. Both this, and the emotional manipulation in guilt-tripping and gaslighting, are symptoms of disordered personalities, attachment disorders, and some other diagnoses. Now, some of the people here who have PTSD diagnoses also have other mental illnesses with those symptom sets. But that's crossover, which is not the same as criteria.
My husband did not yell at me, did not hit me, did not walk out on me and does not gaslight“. It would not be thread-worthy, would it?
Why not? I really can't think of a reason why it wouldn't be, and it would certainly be more forthright than this conversation.
I can promise you, you're not the only supporter who reads these boards and thinks..."My loved one is not as bad as many of these stories. What does that mean? Am I just lucky, or do they not have PTSD?" What you read on an internet forum is often the extremes. And easily 50% of the supporters who come here, they only suspect that their partner might have PTSD. They are looking for a way to make sense of behavior that they are observing.
You know, my husband struggles with anxiety, with crowds and noises and other things and have to say it confuses me how few threads I ever see on this.
On the sufferer side, you'll find lots and lots of these threads. On the supporter side...I'm not really surprised there aren't more. It's not always the most visible or most problematic symptom set, in terms of what the supporter experiences.
But it's great that you are attuned to it. Does it have a negative impact on you, that he experiences these things? Or are you wondering how to help him more? Or...?
I just want to come back to this:
He does not even act angry where anger would be the right reaction.
I've read a few threads of yours, where your husband has not reacted to a circumstance as you thought he should. And if I could give you one clear piece of advice, it would be: stop having expectations for his behavior. Not because he has PTSD - but because he's a person, and he is demonstrating his own personality and his own behavior. You are trying to pathologize his
personality. I think that you are the one who wants to react with anger, sometimes. But you don't allow yourself to. Maybe because you think it's not a woman's role, or not a wife's role. Or, you want to see him react with anger because you associate showing anger with strength, with masculinity - and you want your husband to be a strong man. But
your beliefs about where and when anger would be appropriate are
your beliefs. They don't have to be his. They might not be his.
So. There have been a number of posts on this thread. What are you thinking, now, about his PTSD?