• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

In Need Of Guidance And Some Good Advice...

Status
Not open for further replies.
Hello all!

I am a carer to my husband. He was diagnosed with PTSD before we met, we dated for less then a year when he asked me to marry him, of course I said yes! During our dating and very short engagement he had is ups and downs but nothing that we could not figure out together and he was getting treatment on his own (taking his meds and seeing a social worker every other week).

Shortly after we married he got accepted into a program to get a service dog as a type of treatment for his ptsd. The dog has been helpful but not with out struggles of its own. The dog has had a positive reaction with my husband has really helped him continue to get better but it has also had a negitive reaction on our relationship. The dog is very jealous of my relationship with my husband and that has resulted in my husband altering our relationship to make the dog happy. This means that we rarely kiss or show affection for each other, we don't sit next to each other at home when watching tv, and the dog sleeps in between us every night (even though he has his own bed) which usually results in me being literally pushed out of bed and moving to a different room to sleep.

What I am really looking for advice on and about is the following...
-in the past 6 months my husband has stopped seeing his social worker (claims he doesn't need it), and gotten off all of his medications by his own choice. Since he has done this he has become quite the drinker (half a bottle of wine or 3-4 beers a night!) when he NEVER drank before.
-his temper has become explosive. He has never physically hurt me but we have many holes in our walls and furniture because if it and he also has started to verbally attack me, calling me all sorts of awful things and kicking me out of the house on occasion.
-this summer he was gone for 2 months as a part of his job (it was an optional trip and I didn't support it because we hadn't been married very long, I didn't want to be separated and because with everything else going on I didn't think that it was in his best interest to go). While he was gone he asked me for a divorce saying that I ruined the marriage and make his life a living hell. I informed him that I loved him and didn't want a divorce that we could work through whatever our issues were. He was nasty to me the whole time he was gone leaving me mean voice mails, txt messages and emails. When ever we talked he tried to pick fights and then I would nicely tell him that I was not able to talk about whatever it was he wanted to discuss but that we could at a later time and then I would get off the phone (I was trying to diffuse and not make the situation worse).
-upon returning home he has be nothing but a gentleman. Neither of us has said a word about what happened while he was going, it feels as though he wants to pretend nothing happened
-i did snoop through his phone and found out the he had cheated on me while he was gone (for the whole 2 months), and now I am at a loss!

** Even his family has noticed the difference and feel that something is wrong, even though they don't know what has been happening in our home.

I do not know what to do about any of it! How can I approach him about these things? Is all of it because he stopped taking his meds? how can I get him to get some help? What do I do about his cheating? I don't feel as though I can trust him at all (he had cheated on previous wife and he blames the ptsd for it but promised me early on that he would never to it to me). Should I stay or should I go?

I am at a complete loss, my whole world has turned upside down for the 12th time this summer, and have no idea where to turn but here. Any thoughts at all on what to do or how to approach would be helpful!

Thank you!
 
Hi and welcome to the forum.

Sorry to hear your having such a rough time with all this, it is never easy, and even harder when they seem to be in total denial of what is going on in their own minds.

I am going to be honest with you from the start.

You say he cheated on past wives and then blamed his PTSD for doing it. Sorry but this is a pile of rot, that was an excuse not a reason. He really does need to take responsibility for his own actions and stop blaming everything but himself. You cannot force him to go to therapy or take his medication, but you can insist he treats you with the respect you deserve.

As for staying with him, that is entirely up to you which way to go with this. There would be a lot of changes made, if I stayed with a man who cheated on me, PTSD or not. So if you take the PTSD out of the equation, then you have a normal man who cheats, because he wants to, no other reason.

As for the dog, it sleeps in its own bed and is taught that you too are part of the relationship, and it learns to respect both of its owners. Taking notice of both of you, you tell it to get down from in between you (Nicely) and that is what it does immediately.

I hope you can look at this from all angles before you decide what to do.

Take care of yourself, it is important.

Amethist
 
I want to stay with him, I love him, but at the same time I am not sure I can ever trust him again. Cheating is not acceptable to me and that was something that I made very clear while we were dating. I am nervous to approach him about it because currently he cannot see fault with himself. Everything he does is right for one reason or another and my having an issue with it (whatever it may be) is my fault, I have some how caused what ever it is and deserve it. Personally I don't think anyone deserves the to be cheated on. I know that if I stay some changes need to be made but I am not sure how to approach this conversation with him. I need for him to admit what he did and that it was wrong for him to do (which is not in his current personality to do)... Is that asking to much? Any advice on how to get him to see my side of it?
 
Perhaps if you spoke to a relationship counsellor or a local pastor/minister and had some counselling with you and your husband in a safe place so that you can bring up the subject of his infidelity. That may help with the problems in your relationship. Also, I wouldn't leave the poor treatment of you while he was away unspoken, unless you tell him its unacceptable what is to stop him from doing it again? I totally agree with amethist, insist on respect.

A friend of mine trains guide dogs (for the blind) and I just texted her and she says that dogs need to sleep on the floor or somewhere else (not in a bed) otherwise it gives them too much power and may interfere with their training. It could also be a problem if you have children later on and the dog could get jealous.
 
My dear,

I will be honest.

In my opinion the behaviour of your husband has nothing to do with PTSD. I mean, I am not saying that he doesn't suffer PTSD, but there is nothing in medical literature that illustrate this kind of acts in relation with PTSD.

Take care.
 
Hello and welcome to our group!

I have military related PTSD (although non-combat related). If I may speak as a burnt out Vet and not a psychologist or psychiatrist, I agree with Amethist, Dot and Seraphim. However, I differ from Seraphim in that the initial counseling should be for you alone.

The cheating and behavior during deployments is not PTSD related. I've had many failed relationships due to my PTSD but never have I cheated on a woman or become emotionally or physically abusive. In my case, when I hit a "bad stretch" I shut down and don't communicate with anyone but my psychologist or psychiatrist. but even then, I try to explain that to my girlfriend that I'm hitting a rough patch and I may act introverted and that it's not her.

PTSD or Post Traumatic Stress (and there is a difference) are not an excuse. They are a set of symptoms. I can go into a litany of specifics but cheating is not one of them.

There is a saying in the military (independant of which branch) that goes: "What happens TDY, stays TDY". I have been on plenty of TDY's and never cheated and I have always disagreed with that saying. It's a lot of BullS**t. Basically, it is an excuse to "play around" when you are overseas or on remote, stateside. Nothing more.

In my opinion, I would get counseling, but get it for yourself first. You need distance and an have an objective observer. Once you decide on whether the relationship is salvageable, you can go into couples counseling or "cut bait".

I have my own opinions and instincts about this relationship but given my background and lack of training (as I'm jaded due to my own issues), I will only suggest counseling for yourself first and then you can decide.

I the mean time, call on all or any of us! We are here for you!

My heart is truly with you.

Gene
 
I confronted my husband about what has been going on, and confronted might be the wrong word. I was nice, supportive and understanding which made him extremely upset. He left the house and filed a restraining order on me. We went to court about it the other day in which the judge gave my husband a talking to about wasting the courts time and dismissed the order. My husband then informed me that he had already talked with a lawyer and I will be receiving divorce papers soon. I have no idea what to do now! He has changed the locks at our home so I can no longer get in, and even if I could I wouldn't feel safe with how angry he has been getting. Any ideas on what I can do? I still don't want a divorce but I don't know how I can stop it.
 
In need,
Very brave of you to bring this all up with him and bring it to a head. And you "behaved" yourself too:)

My take is that he has gone through this pattern before and this is how he runs his life. He might actually feel more comfortable if you did get truly confrontational and he had a "real" reason to blame it all on you.

Follow your instincts and stay far away from his anger. He obviously doesn't care enough to take his meds/go to counseling to keep it under control or deal with it. Stay far away from this part of his pattern, sounds to me like the divorce is inevitable (he's already threatened it once) unless he has a radical (self-induced) change of heart about the way he manages his relationships. He seems to have more than a passing acquaintance with the courts and divorce lawyers.

A broken heart you can mend at a safe distance, other things don't heal so well.

My thoughts are with you, this must be very difficult. No one gets married to someone they love with the idea it could end this way. Do you have someone good to talk to?
 
I really feel for you. You are in a difficult situation. All the advice above is good. What should you do? Only you can make the decision.

I'm pretty sure that most members here will tell you that PTSD is not a reason for bad behaviour, for violence (verbal or physical), for cheating on you, etc. He may be using his PTSD as an excuse, but his behaviour is inexcusible.

If you want my opinion, this is no longer about him, but about you. About what you are prepared to accept, what you are prepared to put up with, and what you are prepared to forgive him for. How badly will he have to treat you before you walk away? Where will you draw the line? ...... When he cheats again? When he gets physically violent? When the dog bites you? When he gets you sent to prison?

Of course it's easy for me to tell you to leave him. Just from what you've written, I think you are worth 10 of him. I think you deserve way better. I think you should cut all ties with him and move on with your life. Easy for me to say, but I have no emotional involvement. The reality is, that I can't tell you what to do, I can only give you my opinion, based on what you have written. I hope I have given you some things to think about and consider. The only thing I will ask is that whatever you decide, please try to keep yourself safe at all times.

All the best,
cherryblossom
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$980.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  54.4%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom