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I feel numb

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Lost23

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So I know I have PTSD but I can't bring myself to go get it diagnosed. My partner has it and I came to the conclusion a long time ago that it has spilled over to me. I avoid talking to people, I feel numb, i forget things within minutes, I get extreme anxiety when i am around people especially when I'm around my husband (he's just too blind to even see it), I am easily angered and frustrated (its like jekyll and hyde), sometimes i feel like running away or drinking myself into a dark pit where no one will find me. No one understands how I feel because I can no longer express myself.

I use to be such a great awesome woman! People would come to me for advice and I would give it. I was the life of the party and now I'm dull. I was exciting and fun and now I'm boring and lost. My husband was in the military so I have been his caregiver for years now....Now, I feel like I need a caregiver to support me! When he's around, I have no emotions, why?
 
Okay for one, PTSD can't spill over... it's not contagious like that.

It is possible to develop the disorder from being abused by someone with it, but even then the cause isn't living with them, but separate abuse.

All you describe could be any number of things. That only a qualified diagnostician can point correctly.

Caregiving fatique is very real and a thing on its own. It could well be caregiver burn out, what you're describing.
 
Welcome to the community :D

The upside to what follows? If it were an easy/simple answer to your Q... you’d undoubtedly have already solved it. Looking for answers, means what you’re dealing with isn’t easy/simple to begin with. So here’s a place to start, at least?

1. What does getting diagnosed mean?
If you have PTSD? (And good news / bad news... that’s still an “if” at this point, because PTSD shares symptoms with a lot of other disorders. I mistook my ex husbands brand of crazy for the one I was most familiar with... for a long time. Even highly trained diagnosticians often have a hard time DDX’ing, and need months with their client to be sure... so whilst those of us with the disorder can & often do “spot” others who have it? We can also easily be wrong, seeing what we expect to see, instead of what we don’t even know to look for.) But back to “simply” (ha! :hilarious: Just climb Everest. Simple, right? Sure! :facepalm: Maybe from the outside. But when you’re the one looking at doing it, suddenly it’s not so “simply”) getting diagnosed.

- talking about the traumas that caused it (and avoidance is a maaaaajor symptom, that expresses in a lot of different ways, but avoiding thinking/talking about your trauma is about as straight up as it gets.)

- dealing with the fact that the person you’ve loved best, trusted most, devoted yourself and your life to to, has either tried to kill you, assaulted you, abused you, raped you, or some combo of the above (Again, IF you have PTSD. There are other disorders and conditions that follow other kinds of trauma. PTSD, for better or worse, is only associated with a fairly narrow window into all-things-bad). That’s 12 kinds of hard, especially if -like most people- you’ve held onto a belief that you would never be one of “those” women (so it challenges your very identity, in addition to the fact that life threatening trauma &/or sexual assault does a number on most people’s sense of themselves and the world), adds a level of fear that if it’s faced it means the end of the relationship, or public scorn if it doesn’t end the relationship, or, or, or, or... a clusterf*ck of painful hard choices to make, and actions to take or not take, beliefs/feelings/confusion & conflicting beliefs/feelings/confusion... that would gut any rational person facing them.

- In the midst of feeling about as presentable as a drowned rat, almost the exact opposite of the person you liked yourself best as, and about as enthusiastic about spilling your guts (metaphorically) to strangers and being asked to spill your guts (literally). :wtf: ? Having to face (and follow through on) making a series of appointments with a therapist, doctor, and possibly several specialists (to rule out physiological causes OR complications)... just to tell you somehing you don’t want to know, about somehing you don’t want to talk about, in order to have to face a series of decisions you -probably- don’t want to make (not just relationship Q’s, but treatment, etc.).

- And those 3 items are just the start of a list that looks like Santa’s.

Yeah. Can’t imagine why anyone wouldn’t want to do this ;)It IS worth it. Not the least of which is because finding out, for sure, what’s going on gives you options. But that’s all they are. Options. No decisions have to be made, now... or for that matter, ever. You really don’t even have to talk about your trauma history, to start therapy, to get help with what you’re struggling with. Does that delay diagnosis? Sure. But it also gives real tangible help with what your biggest problems are, right here and right now. A Dx will get you your best help, but not only is any port in a storm, better than none, but a diagnosis can take some serious time to really be secure in... and that’s actually a good thing. In the meantime, real/solid/tangible help is still help

When he's around, I have no emotions, why?
Disassociation is a protective measure, whether you have PTSD, or not.
It also runs the gamut from
- completely normal (like professional distance)

- Common consequence; if you’ve gotten locked into a caregiver role, and shut your emotions off in order to be able to perform at a certain level and not take things personally, or be too scared/angry to live your life or be able to do what needs doing... the professional distance? Needed/wanted/normal. Not being able to turn it on/off at will? Getting “stuck”, or erratic? Problem, that happens to most people from time to time, in most intense jobs (including things like parenting, and needing time to yourself to shut the “Mom” part off and be the “you” that includes mom, but doesn’t cut other people’s food for them, or instruct others people’s behaviour)... and still a highly manageable one. It happens. We catch it. Don’t like it. Shuffle our lives around a bit for more balance, and back into the fray! :D

- to the unhealthier next step in that spectrum, that doesn’t just self resolve with a few minor changes made here & there... Burnout. Compassion fatigue. (Or my personal favorite: Exhaustipated. Too tired to give a shit.)

- to the to common sense but still a problem (when you’ve been hurt, over and over, and over? Hardening your heart to being hurt again is just something most rational people do.

- to the pathological (ie stretches past the normal range of professional distance, past getting “stuck”, past burnout, past hurt & hard lessons, into symptom-of-a-serious-problem-land. <<< Which doesn’t mean that any of the others aren’t problems, or aren’t serious problems. But, by the time something rises to the level of symptom? We’re past walk it off, past make a few changes, and into looking at some seeeeerious work to get things back in hand, again.

So... why are you numb around your husband? Could be for a lot of reasons. With a lot of different solutions. Any of those listed above, plus several others, and a not-short list of medical reasons (hormones, concussion, sleep dep, etc. etc. etc. AND a short list of chronic running in the background infections or conditions, that can just stomp on emotions, because your body is busy fighting a marathon).
I use to be such a great awesome woman! People would come to me for advice and I would give it. I was the life of the party and now I'm dull. I was exciting and fun and now I'm boring and lost.
<grin> Good news? My personal experience says that if I’ve done it once? I can do it, again! Rather than things I loved about myself being lost forever, they’ve become goals to achieve, and revel in bringing them back into my life, piece by piece, bit by bit, until I’m not who I used to be... but who I WANT to be.

Again, welcome to the community. :)
 
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Okay for one, PTSD can't spill over... it's not contagious like that.

It is possible to develop the disorder from being abused by someone with it, but even then the cause isn't living with them, but separate abuse.

All you describe could be any number of things. That only a qualified diagnostician can point correctly.

Caregiving fatique is very real and a thing on its own. It could well be caregiver burn out, what you're describing.

I believe i have suffered emotional abuse from my husband. It use to be physically abuse but now its only emotional.
 
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