Hi PW & P10,
Thank you SO much for all you have shared. It will take some time to digest it all. My husband is committed to getting the PTSD treated, and is seeing a therapist whom he likes (and I start seeing next week). He is not, however, what you'd call "proactive" tho. I found the therapist -set up the first contact - do all the research on treatments and PTSD etc. Which is odd, because usually on other things he is. How much do I push? (By which I really mean to say something like - "how hard CAN I kick him in the ass? Assuming I muster the energy to do so?")
My daughter is seeing Dr Levy - who comes highly recommended for kids who have been around trauma/traumatized parents (there is way more of that in this city than one would hope.) She likes her a lot! They are having a conversation (via bears I believe) about what to do about being angry when there is no reason to be angry. Note to self: follow up with the bears :O_o:.
My husband's PTSD is from growing up in an very violent family (both parents and a step parent were violent to the kids,) and he then had two disastrous marriages. I will bring up the idea of a "safe room" for him. He retreats to the bedroom very often, but we could make it better I am sure. Husband is not a combat veteran (though he served in the Navy ) but has, I think the "military mind" as both his parents were military (his mom would have been career Navy had she not married his dad, and his dad was military school and Army.) He has a very strong sense of rules/order so maybe he and I should talk about some protective rules of engagement. He is not, I think, in danger of becoming physically abusive, but he is emotionally abusive when he is "in it." I seem to be able to avoid the worst of it by just disengaging... although that still takes a tremendous toll emotionally and mentally on me. Daughter can do no right when he is bad however. He never picks on her for nothing, or for things that are totally ok - but he is over the top with the intensity of his response. I am, under normal circumstances, more permissive and softer than he is (though we are both, when sane, well within the bounds of authoritative - as opposed to authoritarian or permissive - parenting.) So I have schooled myself to let him be him with her... but then when he is NOT him exactly, it is really really hard to know when and how to get in between. Maybe a rule of engagement would help here. It will have to be frightfully clever tho.
The idea of a" line" between the anxiety/activation and being "in" an episode is one that I wonder about - As a practical matter it seems there must be SOMETHING he could notice - but then sometimes he wakes up "in it". And once he is" in," I am the very devil and cannot be trusted, so I can't sound the alarm. Have to think/talk more on this.... It would be SO USEFUL if he could notice when he is going over the edge.
I worry about our daughter - what we are modeling for her? What she is taking in as "normal" - she's not at all stupid or insensitive - so even if he is not "fighting" with me, the hostility is palpable. I have moved her and myself mostly out of our house in the country (and into a rental we are fixing up in town) so it is a bit easier to manage, and we have some safe and secure space for the two of us. But of course she wants to go home. As do I, for whatever that's worth. But things seem to get more out of control and easier to trigger up there, so for the moment, we will continue to "camp out" in town. :cautious:
I cried a few tears for your little boy. :cry: My grown up girl is married to a career Army guy, so I'm afraid its in our future as well. Families serve too. Thank you both for blazing the trail - it gives me hope that we might win through.
Wow, that was a lot more than I meant to write. :unsure:
Thank you both again. Sincerely. From the bottom of my heart. Love to you both and your kids too.
Eleanor