BloomInWinter
VIP Member
It's wonderful that you care for and about her so much.
She has a right to choose to live in her own suffering, but you are not obligated to share her suffering any more than you have to. It is perfectly ok to find what you are willing to live with and let her know what that boundary is. If you're willing to be woken up and live with it, that's a valid choice to make.
But if you're not, you have other possible choices. You can let her know you need your sleep too and choose to sleep elsewhere unless she goes to therapy to deal with the cause of her nightmares. Or, you can choose to walk away. Or schedule different sleeping times.
As a sufferer, my loved ones thought they were helping me by twisting their lives into a pretzel to accommodate my symptoms. That allowed me to sink really low before I sought help. That was unfair of me to allow it though I didn't know it at the time. Once I knew how much I was taking away from their lives, I decided to face whatever was necessary to minimize the negative effects on my hubby and kids.
I don't have to like it when my husband chooses to do things he wants to do when I'm isolating, but it is utterly necessary for his health. He can't give me support if he is tired, lonely, depressed, and isolated.
My hubby entered therapy too in order to help him deal with my symptoms. His willingness to do that and continue has helped our household tremendously. He still enables me when I'm feeling really low, but I'm doing all my therapy to decrease that until hopefully we're on more even ground.
But his committment to me makes me feel determined to go back to EMDR every week to heal what is possible, grieve for what was lost, and learn how to set healthier goals.
My best suggestion to any supporter is put your health and safety first. Keep doing the things you do which energize you. Communicate how her symptoms affect you. Don't bother "letting it go" until you have faced it, addressed it in therapy, and taken the wisdom you can out of the situation first.
Nightmares are our brain's attempt at trying to process our traumas. But nightmares aren't enough, and no person can be our cure. Indeed, no person should expect another human being to be their only resource. It shouldn't take two people to live one life.
I rarely wake up screaming anymore. I also haven't punched my hubby in my sleep in a few years now. Therapy isn't just a means of getting better. It's a gift I choose to give myself and my loved ones out of respect for their autonomy and right to a good life.
She has a right to choose to live in her own suffering, but you are not obligated to share her suffering any more than you have to. It is perfectly ok to find what you are willing to live with and let her know what that boundary is. If you're willing to be woken up and live with it, that's a valid choice to make.
But if you're not, you have other possible choices. You can let her know you need your sleep too and choose to sleep elsewhere unless she goes to therapy to deal with the cause of her nightmares. Or, you can choose to walk away. Or schedule different sleeping times.
As a sufferer, my loved ones thought they were helping me by twisting their lives into a pretzel to accommodate my symptoms. That allowed me to sink really low before I sought help. That was unfair of me to allow it though I didn't know it at the time. Once I knew how much I was taking away from their lives, I decided to face whatever was necessary to minimize the negative effects on my hubby and kids.
I don't have to like it when my husband chooses to do things he wants to do when I'm isolating, but it is utterly necessary for his health. He can't give me support if he is tired, lonely, depressed, and isolated.
My hubby entered therapy too in order to help him deal with my symptoms. His willingness to do that and continue has helped our household tremendously. He still enables me when I'm feeling really low, but I'm doing all my therapy to decrease that until hopefully we're on more even ground.
But his committment to me makes me feel determined to go back to EMDR every week to heal what is possible, grieve for what was lost, and learn how to set healthier goals.
My best suggestion to any supporter is put your health and safety first. Keep doing the things you do which energize you. Communicate how her symptoms affect you. Don't bother "letting it go" until you have faced it, addressed it in therapy, and taken the wisdom you can out of the situation first.
Nightmares are our brain's attempt at trying to process our traumas. But nightmares aren't enough, and no person can be our cure. Indeed, no person should expect another human being to be their only resource. It shouldn't take two people to live one life.
I rarely wake up screaming anymore. I also haven't punched my hubby in my sleep in a few years now. Therapy isn't just a means of getting better. It's a gift I choose to give myself and my loved ones out of respect for their autonomy and right to a good life.