Thank you to everyone for your support as I continue through this difficult time.
So last week we were talking about safety, trust, vulnerability and anger. All things I have mentioned above in various entries. You should also know that my husband attends my sessions with me and that we have been married 28 years (together for 33 - we met when we were 18). Now as you would imagine, we are like well settled puzzle pieces in our relationship and I believe that my psychiatrist is really trying to create some motion. H and I do not argue or show strong emotion - never really have.
The Dr. asked me if I love my H. I went into amygdala highjack - which sounds crazy, but I don't usually tell him that I love him. I said "Of course I love him. (turning to my H, I say,) I love you". Then the Dr. asked if I let him love me? Which made me totally uncomfortable and I started rocking in the chair and poking myself with a pen in the leg. After a bit I answered, "To a point" which I was told is not an answer. He then asked my H if he could speculate about why I might have become so uncomfortable. Which he suggests may be related to the lack of love I received as a child, etc. This was like the culmination of the safety, trust, vulnerability and even anger of our discussion. In my own way, I love my H so much that it terrifies me. The concept on not letting him love me is about the vulnerability, safety, trust and anger along with the layers of feeling unlovable and undeserving of love. I hate myself and can't understand how he can love me. I can't believe that he is still with me, especially since my PTSD has completely pulled the carpet out from under me during the last year and a half.
My homework this week has been to let my H know when I am angry with him, but it would mean bring up old resentment which I am holding and I feel really uncomfortable bringing forward, like I should be over it but I am not. It seems immature. As I became ill, he has really stepped up to help me. I think because I have been so independent, I found a man who matched my need with his own and it worked well for us. He also unintentionally helped reinforced certain perceptions about my self-worth in subtle ways that I am sure he is not aware of because he would never knowingly hurt me. For example, when he was unemployed for 2 and a half years and I was working in a very demanding job that had me away from home 11 hours a day, I had to prepare dinner as soon as I got home from work even though he had been home all day. Of course I should have talked to him about helping out, but I didn't even think about it - I just figured that I should be doing everything even though I was exhausted. I would sometimes wonder why he didn't think about helping me, but then figured it was because I wasn't worth it. You see what I mean.
I can anticipate that the Dr. will not be letting me off the hook as there is important work to be done here. This really cuts to the core.
Be well everyone