Eleanor
Diamond Member
Can barely bring myself to post. Horribly written. Maybe incoherent. Not my usual problems. Interesting....Here goes
I hope I don't offend any supporters here. I guess I am sort of implying that we need help too - and not just with the coping stuff. I could be wrong about all of this. Ok I'll stop apologizing before the fact and just shut up.:speechless:}
Update on me and mine to preface the question: Husband is doing EMDR (decided to go with the therapist who husband connected to immediately) 5 year old is in therapy. I just started with same therapist as husband. Husband doing very well. 5 year old is quite happy with her doc. Waiting on second session for T with me.
My question grows out of the theory that a person falls in love with another person who has (in the negative) congruent neuroses.
Here is where my question comes from: The T says "let me reframe that in a more positive way: we fall in love with people who offer us opportunities for healing." Right. Hopefully everybody knows what I mean. So I am talking to T about my first husband (basically a slightly worse version of my dad who is so mildly Asperger's-y that you have to know him really really well to even suspect) and mentioned that I decided on divorce (after 10 or so years) because I couldn't "fix" him, and couldn't live with him as was. I said it spooked me because I had worked really hard to give up my "rescuer" habit with respect to people - and went looking for someone who Did Not Need Rescuing - and found... my husband, who has PTSD and needs rescuing - oops NOT - he has to rescue himself. T looks pleased, says something about thereputic something or other.
In the interests of saving myself a lot of chasing ideas down blind alleys and doing a lot more fruitless searches here (;) ) Is there a "profile" of supporters? We know something about the dynamics and patterns of sufferers - but what of the people who choose them? Again in the negative (though not judgmentally, just more descriptive in my mind) if we start with the assumption that we always pick/fall in love with people equally "screwed up" as ourselves THAT means I must have something that parallels PTSD (in a yin yang kind of way - sorry don't seem to have the right language here) that needs working on in tandem.
Admittedly I am not too keen on the idea that I might have some "anti-PTSD" thing - I'd just as soon NOT. But if the theory is right we BOTH need to get better to have the marriage we want - and to get the things healed. The problem for me is that whatever is wrong with me **I Can't See It**. I have (diagnosed at 35! AH, many things make sense) ADD which comes with being a bad observer of oneself apparently. My folks are lovely pleasant people who have raised denial to an art form and avoid conflict so thoroughly as to make it appear effortless (only took me most of my adult life to figure that one out.) They are an inch deep and a mile wide. Haven't told them about husband's PTSD because, well, what would be the point? But here is the thing - I can't think of ANYTHING in my past that is more than necessarily human trauma (pets dying, that sort of thing.) There are several "oddities" that vex me in my own behavior - my inability to engage in pretend play with my daughter - I just seem to "sheer off" and need to do something else when I try. I have a devil of a time getting anything professional written (a problem because I am an academic and it is part of my job.) again, I start and just...suddenly am doing something else. Clearly I can write at length here :eek:. I have, in the past, been an expert at stuffing anger and hurt (worked on that after the first marriage, have gotten much better.) I can read micro-expressions, and have done since at least Jr. high. I am always "Fine." My husband says I have no "tells" as to when I am totally exhausted. I am just throwing stuff out here to see if there are any commonalities that we might uncover (or to elicit the "What you need to read is ...." response!:geek:)
What do you guys think?
I hope I don't offend any supporters here. I guess I am sort of implying that we need help too - and not just with the coping stuff. I could be wrong about all of this. Ok I'll stop apologizing before the fact and just shut up.:speechless:}
Update on me and mine to preface the question: Husband is doing EMDR (decided to go with the therapist who husband connected to immediately) 5 year old is in therapy. I just started with same therapist as husband. Husband doing very well. 5 year old is quite happy with her doc. Waiting on second session for T with me.
My question grows out of the theory that a person falls in love with another person who has (in the negative) congruent neuroses.
Here is where my question comes from: The T says "let me reframe that in a more positive way: we fall in love with people who offer us opportunities for healing." Right. Hopefully everybody knows what I mean. So I am talking to T about my first husband (basically a slightly worse version of my dad who is so mildly Asperger's-y that you have to know him really really well to even suspect) and mentioned that I decided on divorce (after 10 or so years) because I couldn't "fix" him, and couldn't live with him as was. I said it spooked me because I had worked really hard to give up my "rescuer" habit with respect to people - and went looking for someone who Did Not Need Rescuing - and found... my husband, who has PTSD and needs rescuing - oops NOT - he has to rescue himself. T looks pleased, says something about thereputic something or other.
In the interests of saving myself a lot of chasing ideas down blind alleys and doing a lot more fruitless searches here (;) ) Is there a "profile" of supporters? We know something about the dynamics and patterns of sufferers - but what of the people who choose them? Again in the negative (though not judgmentally, just more descriptive in my mind) if we start with the assumption that we always pick/fall in love with people equally "screwed up" as ourselves THAT means I must have something that parallels PTSD (in a yin yang kind of way - sorry don't seem to have the right language here) that needs working on in tandem.
Admittedly I am not too keen on the idea that I might have some "anti-PTSD" thing - I'd just as soon NOT. But if the theory is right we BOTH need to get better to have the marriage we want - and to get the things healed. The problem for me is that whatever is wrong with me **I Can't See It**. I have (diagnosed at 35! AH, many things make sense) ADD which comes with being a bad observer of oneself apparently. My folks are lovely pleasant people who have raised denial to an art form and avoid conflict so thoroughly as to make it appear effortless (only took me most of my adult life to figure that one out.) They are an inch deep and a mile wide. Haven't told them about husband's PTSD because, well, what would be the point? But here is the thing - I can't think of ANYTHING in my past that is more than necessarily human trauma (pets dying, that sort of thing.) There are several "oddities" that vex me in my own behavior - my inability to engage in pretend play with my daughter - I just seem to "sheer off" and need to do something else when I try. I have a devil of a time getting anything professional written (a problem because I am an academic and it is part of my job.) again, I start and just...suddenly am doing something else. Clearly I can write at length here :eek:. I have, in the past, been an expert at stuffing anger and hurt (worked on that after the first marriage, have gotten much better.) I can read micro-expressions, and have done since at least Jr. high. I am always "Fine." My husband says I have no "tells" as to when I am totally exhausted. I am just throwing stuff out here to see if there are any commonalities that we might uncover (or to elicit the "What you need to read is ...." response!:geek:)
What do you guys think?