Thank you for your input and perspective. Live long and prosper (sorry could resist).
:D
Ms Spock,
My wife did move out and it feels as though she is drifting away from our relationship. I feel you may have a point with her initially choosing a relationship with me for my "savior" qualities. My therapist called my nature a "hero" type, always trying to save the day.
Ah well. You were brave to go to therapy.
She is now directing all the blame of our problems on me, bringing up past issues (years old). I feel she is so angry because she is not in control of her thoughts. Isolating herself from me attempts to silence the negative emotions she has fixated on and has learned from her past abuse.
It is so hard. I feel for you both. But you can't keep paying for her ptsd.
I deserve to live as much as she does and my ability to love and trust her errodes each day. Every relationship has problems, its how we work on relationships together that decides the strength and outcome of that bond. I believe in family first, unfortunately when issues appear in some peoples lives they can disfunctionally withdraw from things in order to focus on their survival alone.
And that is an awful place to be - to be isolating to survive (been there and done that, which is why I decided to never have children,) and being the one trying so hard to make it work with all your might. (I was in that role in my last relationship, that is two years of my life I will never get back.)
I have my faults and plan to go to therapy not only for my wife, but myself during these tough times. I know at some point my daughter and I must leave the family we had and perhaps start over. I know my wife loves our daughter, now I just wait to see what else she loves.
You and your daughter are a family now. If you wife continues to have contact with your daughter that is great. Age appropriate explanations with the "If you mother didn't have contact with you, it isn't you, but your mother is sick type" of conversation, could, in some circumstances be a good thing to slip in there so if her
mother is absent for awhile she can have a framework to base it on.
I would imagine that your wife does love you but is unable to give that to you at this time, or maybe at any time. Lots of modelling best practice for your daughter as you take good care of your self, start friendship networks out side the ptsd and activities and hobbies that enlarge your and her worlds.
I am sorry, it is so painful to love someone who doesn't know how to take in the good stuff or is so in her ptsd that nothing from "now" is real, only the ptsd events are real.
You can't base whether you are "loveable" on whether your wife remains or stays as she isn't in a logical or stable or any type of space. You have to find yourself loveable and give your self that love and you daughter, once again, will receive much from watching you doing best practice for yourself in self care.
I know you are in a state of flux, and I know you don't know what will happen in the future, but it could be good for you and your daughter to start some routines which continue whether or not your wife is there. You and your daughter are loveable, whether or not your wife is there with you two.
Thank you for your perspective and thoughts. Live long and prosper (sorry Ms Spock I couldn't resist).
\\// Live Long and Prosper! JohnJohn! It was agreeable to read you.