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I Need Other Perspectives, Please

  • Post starter Post starter Deleted member 33052
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Deleted member 33052

As some of you know, my marriage is something of a clusterf*ck at the moment. I have PTSD, my husband doesn't. He is passive-aggressive. He triggers me. He doesn't mean to. I have an explosive temper and he is afraid of angry outbursts (what were we thinking?!?). In order to avoid my angry outbursts, he will lie, or tell half-truths, or dance around the issue du jour. My instincts tell me he's not being honest, which compromises my need for safety, which triggers me.

I was diagnosed only a year ago. I've always known that my upbringing affected me severely, but I couldn't understand why I had no control over this hair-trigger temper. I was deeply ashamed, which made me vulnerable to manipulation. Unfortunately, I pretty much accepted that as my penance, basically.

So, back to the marriage. My husband, Colin, is a nice person. He really is. I believe his passive-aggression is the result of cowardice. Here, my perception is probably skewed, though. If I were raised in a *normal* family, I might be terrified of me, too.

Colin is also self-absorbed and emotionally lazy. This, he admits. Because of this, he has a difficult time understanding my symptoms. When I tell him that for me everything is either black or white, and there's nothing in between, he hears the words, but doesn't accept them. When I tell him that his teeny, tiny little lies threaten my sense of safety, he doesn't get it. He's a writer, btw. Creative, curious, intelligent. You would think he would more of an effort to understand.

Now, I had isolated for almost a year. I was a wreck. He cooked, he cleaned, he checked on me. He brought meals to the bedroom for me if I couldn't face the world. I thought he was being supportive. Now, looking back, I think he was reveling in the role of martyr... :(

I haven't even gotten to the issue that drove me to start this thread, but I'm tired, and confused, and feeling kind of sad. So I will sleep on it, and try to finish it tomorrow....
 
Now, I had isolated for almost a year. I was a wreck. He cooked, he cleaned, he checked on me. He brought meals to the bedroom for me if I couldn't face the world. I thought he was being supportive. Now, looking back, I think he was reveling in the role of martyr...
If memory serves me correctly, he was f*cking around on you... so he was trying to please you so he could go f*ck another.

I don't care what anyone says... I don't understand why you're still with him. You will never trust him fully again, not like you did before the last issues. He can be the nicest guy in the world... doesn't change a thing.

IMHO, you're making excuses. You had your out, you jumped back in thinking things would change. That I don't get. You should have continued onward and out from the relationship. It is toxic... and here you are, still living with the problem.

My wife has been in menopause for years. We both do lots of shit for each other... neither one is f*cking someone else, more importantly, real guys don't make excuses and go f*ck someone else because their wife is struggling at a given time and they're missing out on sex.

Everything beyond that reasoning for me, is excuses.

My two cents -- I'm out! :D:coffee:
 
Thank you all for your feedback. He wasn't f*cking around - during the year that I spent isolating (and he spent living in the basement), he slowly convinced himself that we were separated. Prior to my diagnosis, things were pretty bad for us, to the point that we were both miserable. After the diagnosis, though, I was very excited because I thought that understanding my behavior would help us to work through our problems.

Ten months into my isolation, he told me he was leaving. I was stunned. It was the last thing I had expected to hear. As stunned as I was, my reaction left him dumbfounded. He believed - had convinced himself - that we were already separated and wasn't expecting that reaction. Eventually, he found a woman with common interests (more than he and I have, in fact) and the began to talk via email. The day he told me he was leaving was one week after he had met her for lunch, and the day before he had made plans to meet her again.

Being paranoid and triggered, I demanded his phone and table, made him unlock them, and I read every text and email between the two of them. I also made him show me his page on the dating site.

As I mentioned, he's a coward. He'd begun planning to leave around six months prior to that. He couldn't handle the thought of being alone, so he joined a dating site.

Everything's all mixed up here! :arghh; I have to get ready for EMDR though, so I have to leave it for now. Thank you all for your support. This is going to be long, but I really need informed perspectives.
 
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