• 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.

My husband died today

Status
Not open for further replies.
What a unique experience you had. I believe that the souls of people can hang around and try to comfort the ones left behind. So I beieve you. It was him. He was trying to tell you something to help you. Look how your subconscious dreamed that dream of him comforting you. Eventually he will leave you but I would strain my ears to hear a message from him if you are able.:hug:
 
:hug:
I fully agree with gizmo! I don't believe that the soul dies, nor does love! You were comforted by the presence of Tin, and I think you should hold onto the feeling that he was there, in some way, to comfort you. I read about hypnogogia, and it describes the feeling of terror and fear along with the feeling of paralysis, as you describe your previous experiences.

I believe with everything I feel and know, that he LOVED you, and that he did NOT leave you as the person he truly was. EVERY loving, and fun experience that you have described sharing, was the REAL and TRUE man that he was. Your marriage had it's up and downs. Your "ups" are beautiful to read about. Slipping and sliding in the snow, hiking in the snow filled "wilderness", the picnics, going to restaurants, the Scottish celebration that you attended together every year....I think you said it was every year. The two of you had your own little world, that the world of being EMT's crashed in on, and ate away at both of your cores.

He had become someone that he didn't recognize, and was afraid that his "true self" was gone forever. He lost himself, in every way, and he was horribly afraid to tell anyone, even you. He just couldn't find a way to tell you he was in a mental and emotional panic, and in anguish that was robbing him of who he was. He didn't recognize himself. Where was the medic who was looked up to, the husband that he was, and you needed him to be? He didn't know anymore.

Please hang on to EVERY bit of comfort that you get from "him"....the love you both had for each other still exists in YOU! If you were blocked off from that kind of experience, you would not have felt the beauty and comfort of his presence. Your love for him opened up the doors of your subconscious mind, and soul to experience his spirit. (This is my humble opinion) I pray that you will continue to feel his love in a very profound way. :hug: Medic :hug:
 
Last edited:
Thank you everyone for your kind words.

But for every up there is a crash. I'm upset and I don't know now whether or not to be angry with him. In all honesty, I feel like a fool.

I've been missing him so much. And like I'm told his brother said at the funeral, "I'm a person of science..." but I still have no answer for what I heard in my room yesterday morning. The house makes no sounds similar to what I heard. The dog hasn't made any vocalizations that are remotely similar or as clearly vocal as that. I heard it as clear as if there were someone standing in the corner of my room not wanting to be detected, "Shh. Sit. Stay." The dog was reacting to something, just like he'd been reacting to something all day that prior day. There were several times he was lying on the floor when he alerted and looked toward the stairwell or the front door. At one point he even got up and walked toward the front hall, curious with his ears back and then he looked back at me unsure and started wagging his tail. When we were in the basement because I wanted to "be" down there "with" my husband (his stuff), the dog was sniffing around and then suddenly turned and looked toward the stairs. He then went to the bottom of the stairs and sat there looking up at something. His ears kept raising up like he was listening to something.

Maybe I was just wanting to have "an encounter" with my hubby and my mind produced what I wanted. Maybe when we die, we just move on with no memory of what we've left behind. Maybe he's actually gone and he'll never look back toward me. My therapist told me that she got goosebumps when his brother said in his eulogy that he was a man of science and does not believe in the metaphysical but the night before the funeral his brother came to him. She said it sounded very confusing but she thinks he truly believed that my husband visited him in a way he could not fathom using earthly rules. Is it possible?

It was very cold yesterday and I decided to rot in front of the TV watching Netflix. I put on a program called The OA which I was warned that I was not to watch because the opening sequence involves a suicide attempt (nothing severely dramatic or emotional). So i begin watching this show (and binge watch the entire first season!) only to find it is about the afterlife and a possible explanation for what happens. I sit there going over and over what I experienced and start trying to explain it in terms of this tv show I'm watching! it actually made sense to me in a way then - alternate realities that our consciousness just transfers to after life in one reality ends in some way. Some consciousnesses can figure out ways to "Jump" back or visit. Hubby was a very intelligent being, if not a little handicapped by his possible dyslexia issues, he had an amazing mind. If there was anyone who could figure out how to "jump back" to this place, it would be him.

It's all very illogical and fantastical but somehow it soothes the soul in it's need for answers.

Of course, then came the crash. I decided to write to him last night again about his visit. I re-read the entries since his death, almost every single one screams, "I miss you, please come back to me, please, please, please, I need you, I love you, I'm sorry," etc. etc. I'm essentially crying over and over repeatedly through the pages of this journal. I'm begging him over and over not to leave me the way he did. I'm devastated and shocked and afraid and alone for the first time in a very long time. I'm terrified of facing this life alone. I scream repeatedly how much I loved him and how could he give up what we had. I go on repeatedly about our love, our perfect life together and how we were just made for one another. And then I skimmed through years worth of entries before that.

Every single one was an expression of how disappointed I was with him. It seemed I only wrote when I was angry with him. There are no good memories contained in those pages. I read it and I see a past filled with anger, disappointment, swallowing my pride and carrying on "accepting" the life I've chosen with him. In several entries I'm rationalizing suicide because I cannot see a way out of the decision I made to be with him....but I keep coming back to the decision that I'd invested too much of me in that relationship to just walk away from it and give up.

He did. And that answered a question for me - how could he just walk away from what we had? He was never nearly as invested in it as I was. I was the one who was carrying that relationship. keeping it moving forward and making a majority of the effort to make things work. Why was I so exhausted and fatigued and susceptible to PTSD? Because I was swallowing back trauma at work and swallowing some pretty unfair treatment at home. I was being willfully blind to the reality of our relationship together. I was his caregiver over the course of our entire relationship according to these entries and I was his emotional dumping ground, just taking and taking and forgiving and forgiving and not wanting to rock the boat. In the pages I see my perceptions of things that were happening and just how much I was not communicating to him for fear of losing him.

I was always afraid to lose him. He was part of my illusion of "success" in life. And yet, in the same breath, I was wanting to walk away from him and just leave it all behind for death. I was convincing myself that he would be okay without me. I was rationalizing and finding ways for him to be okay after I was gone - selling my vehicle, not having to feed or clothe me anymore and most importantly, he could spend all of his time on his games without having to interrupt his "life" by entertaining me.

That was a recurrent theme throughout the years - even BEFORE I developed PTSD. His stupid video games. In one entry I go over how he had to move his nintendo machine off the couch the first time I went to his apartment just so I could sit down. In many others, I describe how lonely I am because he is spending 12 - 18 hours or more on his video games, often not coming to bed and only stopping to eat and catch a few hours of sleep. This wasn't just a post-PTSD or recent years issue, this was something that was so a part of our life that I'd completely white-washed.

Yes, we had adventures together. Yes, we traveled places and had vacations. Yes, we shared an interest in movies and tv. Yes, we snuggled and hugged and said I love you every day. Yes, we loved one another, but if I deluded myself into thinking his video game issue was just something recent, I was wrong. He had this period where he gave up on the marathon sessions because I expressed how upset it made me. We went out hiking, we started working out together, we took up jogging, we started spending hours at the mall but in between, his "reward" for doing the things I wanted to do was to spend a few hours on his games. I "allowed" that....like a mother raising a child.

I complain that he stopped trying to make an effort in our relationship in recent years but if I'm to believe everything I'd written down over the years, it was me making all the effort. All vacations and outings were planned by me. All birthday celebrations, holiday meals, anniversary trips, our wedding - it was all me. It's not that I didn't want him to do any of that, I would have loved him to help me to do something in our relationship but I always got, "Whatever you want." I even had to choose my own birthday, anniversary and Christmas gifts. He invested very little in me other than companionship. We lived beside one another. I was always lonely. I wonder if that's why this being without him isn't actually such a huge adjustment and why I keep waiting for him to just show up at some point - he was usually missing from the room anyway.

Our anniversary was fine if we were working. He went out of his way to be moody on a lot of our anniversaries. Our fifth, I didn't actually remember but I read about his frustration with me for not asking the waitress for the bill and how he let that stew and became angry and sullen and quiet. Passive aggressive. I wrote about how I spent that anniversary crying silently on another bed at the hotel we were staying at. Alone.

I glossed over all of those bad times because I didn't want to be "that wife" who nags her husband over every little thing, who bugs him to just adore and pay attention to her. I wanted him to be free to be him but being him did not include or make room for me. Being him gave no thought to my needs. He didn't really know me enough to plan a date or buy a gift because he had no clue what I liked - he never payed attention.

Like I said, there were good times but it seems I've either magnified the bad times or I've magnified the good times. I'm not really sure anymore.

I wrote about my therapist suggesting I take time off of work to deal with the PTSD because it was strongly suggested to her by her supervising psychologist after going over my file. I wrote about how I wanted to discuss this with him and we'd make the decision together but he refused to talk about it, he acted angry, snapped at me for little things and then when I tried to rationalize it, he said, "Well, I guess that's your job then." in a voice that sounded highly disappointed in me. THAT'S why I put myself through hell trying to hold onto that job!! I didn't want HIM to be disappointed in me. I didn't want to be his DISAPPOINTMENT of a wife. THAT'S why I wanted to die so badly. I was alone in facing the PTSD too. He didn't want a dependent. He didn't want me to be defective. He wanted to hold onto that illusion of the "power couple" at work that everyone else wanted to be.

I can say that it was tough on both of us at the beginning because I was elevated all the time. I wanted to die all the time. I was upset and triggering and running to him for safety and comfort. If you read those entries, you see just how many times after PTSD that I wanted to just die and throw it all away because I was an annoyance to him with my symptoms. I tried to shield him as best I could. I started to swallow a lot down again, hide it from him to try to protect him and make him believe life was still okay. Little things made me want to die. He got frustrated with me - I want to die. He had a bad day at work and projected his anger onto me - I wanted to die. I couldn't sleep and he gets upset - I wanted to die. I have a nightmare and he has to work in the morning, so he just rolls over - I wanted to die.

I never gave up.

I never gave up and let go because I knew he needed me - to cook, to clean, to look after him and his needs. He rarely made the effort to meet my needs but I just accepted that this is what I could live with anyway. All I needed was to know he loved me and accepted me.

It kind of makes me feel a fool for having just spent a year whining and crying over him when I spent a good majority of the past 20 years essentially alone anyway. I was addicted to him. That is why it is so hard to let go. I got used to him being here, treating me a certain way, loving me just enough to keep me here looking after him. That's why I felt my life had no meaning without him here.

I loved him. I gave him all of my love, all of my devotion, all of me. He gave me a sense of safety, stability and loved me for what I did for him. After PTSD I could no longer do those things. It took 8 years for him to implode when the roles were reversed and he had to try to look after me. He was essentially my dependent for 12 years and we were financial equals then the tables turned and I became his dependent - eventually financially as well. I can imagine how hard that was for him.

I stopped making an effort. I stopped giving up my days planning FOR him and started trying to look after me. We ate out a lot and put on weight. I felt like an idiot having to resort to lists to remember things like "Do Yoga" and "Go quiet". He'd come home sometimes and I'd have nothing to share with him about my day because I'd done absolutely nothing but make myself meals and maybe get some laundry done before dropping to the couch exhausted. I stopped planning trips and vacations. I stopped making reservations for our anniversary dinners, my birthday etc. I stopped being able to do the things we used to do like mall walking or hiking. I wanted him to make the effort, to notice that we used to do things. He never noticed he just allowed everything to slide by the wayside. Our entire life went to the wayside. We spent hours beside each other, him absorbed in his computer, me staring at the tv - not talking about anything or being able to relate to one another at all.

We stopped being together because I stopped making the effort to carry us anymore. If a young me had just stopped being so full of energy and stopped pulling this relationship along, I wonder if we would have broken up long ago.

He didn't know how to safely say he was upset with the way things were going. He didn't know how to handle my possibly being disappointed in him for a potential future loss of his job. He didn't know how to be anything but a paramedic. He didn't know how to be him anymore. He walked away. He just let go and walked away.

He made the same conclusions I did. "If I die, he will be fine. The house will get paid off with the insurance, he can sell my car or the house and he will have money to live on. He will find a way to live without me, he's essentially lived without me all this time anyway." We lived alongside one another.

Is that why he was coming back to me? To ask why I was so upset and lonely when I'd practically been upset and lonely for 20 years anyway? Did he come to remind me that he's always just lived silently beside me and his death makes no difference, he's still there watching me, silently following along?

I don't know what to feel today. I posted on fb about the "visit" and hearing his voice. I get people saying things like, "True love goes beyond death." and now I'm wondering, did I just imagine what I wanted to hear? Was he ever as truly attached to me as I was to him? He walked away, that has to say something about how he felt about the value of our relationship.

I loved him.
 
So now I've spent the entire day wondering about all of those days I spent writing about how "badly" he treated me all those years. I wrote them down, I wrote down how horrible I felt, the anger I had stored up inside of me, the disappointment with how our relationship wasn't perfect and he wasn't perfect and today I took the dog for a long drive (which made him sick) and came to the conclusion that the issue with him was me. I had the issue. He was happily clueless about how his callousness affected me. In his eyes I was madly in love with him and he was the luckiest guy alive.

He had a depression much the same as mine, I suppose. I've never been fully satisfied with anything in my life - until he came along and then I felt I had something to cherish. Someone actually liked me and tolerated me and accepted me despite my heritage. I guess I didn't want to ruin that by being a bitch about every little issue that bothered me about him. I didn't want to be a nag. I didn't want to argue over "stupid" things. I forgot that a healthy relationship allows for some of those issues to be aired and put away. I never did that because I knew he would not react well to them. It would have just ended up with him accusing me of things and me accusing him of things and both of us being angry with one another and growing to resent one another. I loved him, so i kept my mouth shut because I didn't want to hurt him in any way.

He did the same thing back.

We didn't live an illusion, we lived as accommodatingly as we could with one another. My presence stressed him, he wasn't used to sharing his space. If you believe what he said on our 9th wedding anniversary, he "didn't love me from the start", he "came to love me over time." That admission sort of broke my heart, I think our wedding champagne acted as the truth serum there but it puts all of that earlier treatment into perspective. He came from a past relationship where he was tossed shortly after getting engaged - he still didn't trust me fully. He didn't handle change or stress very well.

I know he had a breakdown after that relationship went sour. (Or was it before? I'm not sure). I wish I could speak to his family about it but they are probably too "stiff upper lip" to talk about it. From what I remember, he may have been diagnosed with depression. He was away from work for a few months. He was on meds. He was getting counselling. He took up a hobby. He eventually went back to work. He dated a few women from a dating service and said he'd given up because they were not matched at all to him. He hated being referred to as "nice" because one of the women he dated in that interim told him he was "too nice a guy for her to date". That really hurt him.

I liked that he was "nice". He was considerate to me. He opened doors, he pulled chairs, he offered his coat - he was a perfect gentleman who, when we were dating made me feel special. I always had to remind myself that the honeymoon ends. He settled into his routine, his ways and I had to get used to him and his ways; it's part of being in a relationship. There were those things that annoyed me but everyone in any relationship male or female, has things about their significant other that actually annoy them and they don't like. People aren't perfect. He wasn't perfect. I was never perfect.

We made it work for 20 years. That has to say something about our "tie" to one another and our dedication to one another and our love for each other, right?

He drove away from the house to take his life. He spared me from having to witness his death. That's martyr material in my eyes. He thought of me. He considered me and my potential emotional future. I don't think he understood how complicated post suicide grieving is. I don't think he realized I may spend the rest of my life mourning him. I don't think he understood how this would deepen my own depression.

I feel blank most days. I can't imagine a future. I don't see anything ahead of me. I try but I quickly pooh-pooh everything as "impossible". I'm depressed. I miss having him to bounce things off of. I miss having him here to be my sounding board. I miss having him here, whether I hated him at points or not, I loved him through all of that.

I was the "best thing that ever happened to him." I was the thing that made his life worth living and when things got potentially tougher than the two of us could possibly face, he decided his life was no longer worth living. He checked out.

You know what's really weird? Once when we were in Mexico on vacation I fell off of a kayak in deep water. I couldn't get back on. He came back to try to help me but he wasn't a strong swimmer and he could not risk himself falling in too, so he just paddled away from me with a pathetic "sorry". I watched him paddle away from me and I felt that one day he was going to abandon me in some way. It was almost a premonition in the way I felt it.

I was eventually rescued by a stranger and I paddled back to shore livid with him for just abandoning me out there in possibly shark infested waters. I thought, "He saved himself first." And I knew that this is what he would always do in our relationship, he would "save himself first" and "cut out" when the going got tough.

He cut out when the going looked like it was going to get tough. We didn't know for sure if things were going to get tough. We didn't know anything yet that night but he was sure in his own mind. He was upset. He wasn't thinking properly. He was "very sad".

I couldn't save him from that. I couldn't save him from himself. I don't know if anyone could have. There were no signs. There were no plans. There were no previous attempts. There was just access to lethal means. We should never have had access to lethal means in our house, especially in the state I was in most days.

I can't change what happened. I can only change how I move forward. I have to keep moving. I fought too hard to stop now. He knew that about me. He knew I'd be okay. He knew I'd find a way. He told me once he felt I was stronger than him. I just had no choice. I had to be.

I miss him. I wouldn't have seriously wished death on him ever. I loved him too much.
 
:hug:(((Medic)))
Wow! You are amazing! Every single thing you said makes COMPLETE sense.

The way you describe your relationship, is quite like a lot of marriages, unfortunately. One partner does most of the work. But, you were committed, and that's what made it work.

He loved you as much as he knew how. He WAS the luckiest man alive!

You ARE an incredibly strong person! You have the ability to write about your feelings in a way that is so clear, and SO in depth, yet not elaborate or hard to read.

i just want to say that I admire you greatly! You are a work in progress, because you don't allow yourself to be "stuck", even though you are depressed and grieving. If I could be like you, if only for a while, it would make a HUGE difference in my life!

Here's a :hug: for you. You have done a tremendous amount of inner emotional work!
I hope you can get some good rest...you deserve it.:hug:
 
Can't sleep.

A paramedic died today, I don't know how. Social media is bad for this kind of thing. I'm hoping it's not a suicide.

I went to check news feeds to see if there was an accident. I searched paramedic dead and an article popped up from last month with my husband's photo on it. I was in shock.

One of our coworkers was dx with PTSD and apparently her "admission" on social media went viral. Of course things only really go viral if you make it possible, i.e. It had to be a public posting somehow and not a limited audience (friends/coworkers) post.

Well they worked for the same service, so of course they splash his picture all over it. They also conveniently mention her new fb page about fitness and mental health - yep, because I'd be promoting my business page if I were in the early stages of a PTSD struggle...

But I digress.

I saw his face there and quotes from my brother but they're very careful to avoid labeling him as PTSD but the association with the article is enough to mislead, isn't it? Crafty media bastards.

I was shocked seeing his face. I was instantly heartbroken and angry and feeling like they were using him. I felt violated. He hated having his picture taken. He never wanted celebrity and I'm pretty damn sure he'd never want to be constantly remembered as the guy who killed himself because of that job!

Then I was angry that she was essentially riding his coattails trying to increase her celebrity. How do you garner media attention in your struggle with PTSD? You have to go looking for it. I'm sorry, but I spent the first 3 years struggling to survive and recover me - I was too busy and too distraught to be seeking media coverage of my struggle. It would have just complicated matters for me.

But I've stewed and screamed and cried and now remember that there are degrees to this injury and some of us are not as badly wounded. Those less wounded ones are usually the stars and later plastered all over successes.

It was hard to see his face in the media again. It's almost been a year. Today is 342 days since he decided to shoot himself.

He wasn't diagnosed with PTSD! But he's still a convenient and sensational assumption. Meanwhile, I worked for that same service too but no one cared at the time and no one seemed to care that I had PTSD. Nope, they wanted to take a grieving wife and try to trap her into saying certain things and lead their audiences to a certain conclusion. My PTSD, my background as a paramedic wasn't front page material but a suicide!? Oooooh-weeee, now that's a BIG story.

I got ignored, the same as I'd been ignored for the past 8 years. Screaming in a vacuum.

When I could think again, I wrote my story for the media but two whole weeks had passed since the funeral. I was not sensational. I got, "thanks, I'll pass this on to a colleague who might be doing a story on PTSD. Sorry for your loss." There was no follow up. I wasn't worth it. I had nothing to sell. I didn't kill myself.

I'm stuck between wanting to scream at them to stop using his image and not wanting to hurt the coverage of the field and how we struggle.

I wrote a line in a blog post tonight but erased it. I wrote, "he was a good person. He deserved to be alive. I should be dead."

I thought about it after I wrote it and considering the number of times I've waded into hell, I should be dead. How am I still here and he's gone!?

My story will never make headlines. If I ever get the book written, it will never make any bestsellers lists. I don't really care. I honestly don't know if I could endure a spotlight on me. I'd be too afraid I'd breakdown again.

I just need to keep breathing and allowing time to take me where ever it is I'm going - in peace.

I need to hold him tonight. I need to talk to him. I need his comfort. I need to feel his love.

I don't want to think of him or be constantly reminded of him as only dead. :(
 
Wow, I got about 4 hours of sleep. If he came to me in my sleep, I don't remember.

After getting up to let the dog out and feed him his morning meal, I laid in bed with Netflix for another three hours. I finally decided after the alarm on my husband's watch went off that I needed to shower and start the day. My messenger alerted me to a message while I was getting dressed - people reacting to the sad blog post I had written the night before.

It was a former coworker of my husband's, "The F Lady". She was so known because every other word out of her mouth was the F word regardless of what she was talking about. She was very "butch" and just a very crass woman. Anyway, there were two messages, one was a poem about "I'm watching you from heaven" and the other her message which said something like, "For some reason while reading this quote I had to send it to you. I figure Martin made me." The poem made me feel horribly sad but I was kind of upset because she believes he would go to her....

She came up to me on the day of the funeral and sat with me really quickly. She moves fast. She talks fast. She crushed down beside me, grabbed my arm and whispered in my ear a story about my husband. She said he was a good guy and they were always joking around when he was on the tactical team with her, "one day at the beginning of shift, I put a drawing of a dick on his back and he didn't know. He walked around like that all day and finally found it near the end of shift!" She thought this was hilarious. "He was a good sport about it. We all had a good laugh. He was a special guy, okay?" and whoosh she blew away.

I sat there dumbfounded that this is the story she chose to share with me as I sat preparing for a final goodbye to my loving husband, whose body sat mere inches from us in his casket. I was sort of in shock again. I remember that day. I remember the damage control I had to do with him. The sheer amount of de-escalation it took to calm him down in his anger and his hurt. I remember him on the verge of tears asking me why people didn't like him, he was a good guy, he never seemed to catch a break, people were always a*holes to him. He began to hate that team then. That team. Being on that team meant so much to him, it was his Mt. Everest. It was the closest thing he could ever get to his lifelong dream of being a police officer. It meant SO MUCH for him to be a part of THAT team and they did everything they could to make sure he felt like an outsider. The funny thing is, they were the inaugural group and they started to eat one another in less than a heartbeat - they were not a TEAM.

It was bullying. There is no if, and, or but, about it. It was outright bullying. A cruel joke designed to break someone who the rest of the "team" felt didn't belong. He was smarter than them all. He was more than familiar with tactical procedures, he'd been studying them for years at that point. That was HIS DREAM! And it turned out to be his nightmare because he was working with a bunch of a*holes.

But there she was laughing about it and hoping it was a story that would cheer me up at his funeral. I wanted to kill her. I wanted to run after her and strangle her. I wanted to kick them all out, tell every last two-faced paramedic who talked about him behind his back, mistreated him, made fun of him to his face - I wanted all of them to get out and get away from him once and for all. I wanted to protect him one last time...but I couldn't. I couldn't lose it in front of a crowd of hundreds. I held that story inside of me and I let it fester until finally after six months my sister and I were talking and I let it come out in huge gasping sobs.

My poor boy was always picked on in some way in that job but he felt it worse on that tactical team but he tried to push through it with his head high, his pride carrying him and his knowledge to Justify him.

I think that is when he really sunk into a sort of depression. He broke his hand at work while on that tactical team. He was placed on light duty but was allowed to wear his "duty uniform" - his regular duty uniform was a tactical subdued uniform. He was never given instruction to not wear it, nor was it written anywhere in our policies that he was not allowed to wear his special teams duty uniform. He'd been on light duty for more than two weeks when he and fellow team member (also in tactical duty uniform) were allowed to go watch a team practice at the airport. On scene there was a stand-by active duty regular ambulance crew, one member of which was our second in command's wife who made snarky comment about these two being in tactical uniform while on light duty. He had some verbal exchange with her.

The very next shift, my husband came in and was ordered to remove his tactical uniform. He only had spare tactical uniform in his locker because he was a team member and had no use for his old uniform at work. When he informed them of this he was then ordered to go home and change into his old regular duty uniform. When he asked why, he was given the run around. He knew why, it didn't take a genius to figure out that someone had gone home and complained to their husband because she felt it was wrong and she was upset with the verbal exchange they'd had. When he was ordered again, he asked to see the policy requiring him to comply. Again, the run around. There was no policy. My husband called a union rep. The union rep suggested he comply. So he came home and then booked sick once he got here he was so angry at how unfair this treatment was. He found out the next day that his fellow team member was not approached and requested to change into regular duty uniform the night prior. He called his union rep again. He felt attacked and singled out because of an exchange he'd had with a coworker who just happened to be the Deputy Chief's wife.

It all culminated in an HR investigation, a long drawn out process where my husband backed them into a corner and then suddenly, back dated policies started appearing, emails with wording changed and dates changed were produced as managements defense and the HR department defended management. They didn't know this man, they didn't know who they'd chosen to mess with - he printed out every email and filed them as they were received (piles had to be shredded after his death). He had the originals. He caught the attempts at evidence tampering. If he'd ever gotten on a police force he would have made detective easily and he would have been excellent at it. In the end, my husband got his "apology" for his mistreatment but he didn't consider it a victory because the "apology" letter read that management was sorry that he misunderstood what was being instructed of him. It was not an apology but HR accepted it.

My husband was LIVID. He went back to the team after his hand "healed" (he cut his cast off 2 weeks early so he could get away from light duty and management). After that he tried to do his job but felt he was being targeted. His paperwork came in for question repeatedly, not for patient care issues but for transcription issues, inability to read his handwriting, tiny little nit-picky things. He was constantly being shifted "for operational reasons" to a regular duty vehicle, so he was now required to keep a regular duty uniform, with spare and a spare tactical uniform all in his locker. When they randomly decided to downstaff his tactical vehicle and shift ONLY him to a regular duty truck for the day, despite his seniority over his partner, he'd had enough. He wrote up his letter of resignation from that team. He had to give up on the one thing he'd wished for his entire career because he was being administratively bullied now.

Can anyone guess how much and how deeply that hurt him? He was devastated but while it was happening to him he was under so much stress. If it wasn't bad enough that he had to deal with his fellow team members being a*holes to him, he had to deal with an unfair management system that was now targeting him. (Same management system that targeted and "killed" me).

THAT was the turning point for him. Even though word of what he did rippled through the service like a wave, with shock and rumors and some people judging him and others praising him for his bravery, he still held his head up and stood by the principles he was trying to hold onto. He was an honorable paramedic and would not stand for mistreatment. Three of his colleagues on that team followed suit shortly after that. He stood up for what he believed in. He was a brave man. And he was destroyed inside because of what they did to him.

During that investigation, our life was at near capacity for stress. I was still on the road then, this was prior to PTSD for me. I wonder now, just how much of that trickle down stress affected me. I could see how much it was affecting him. At that point, I was afraid for him. He was crying every night. He was under so much stress every day. it was all I could do to settle him each day. He'd wake in the middle of the night and go play his games. He'd sit up in bed unable to sleep. He'd cry in the middle of the night and I'd reach out to comfort him. I wanted to take his pain away. I wanted him to hold on and keep fighting for what was right. I reassured him he was doing what he needed to do. Leaving that team was the hardest decision he'd ever made in his entire career.

Leaving that team took a chunk out of him. Yep, that's when he really started to change. Cynical. Angry. Withdrawing. I can't remember how long ago it was, definitely before 2008 and after 2004. It may have actually been in 2007. I shredded all of his paperwork on it. He kept it all in a fireproof lock box because he wanted to never forget what happened to him and how they essentially got away with bullying him and "ruining his life".

Yep. If I were to seriously look back and evaluate what started him on this path toward a shotgun, that was it. Nothing that happened after that was easy for him, my PTSD, his increased paranoia dealing with managers, his mistrust of people he worked with. It all just compounded over the years. it ate away at him and it eventually killed him. He was going to lose everything. He was fighting an imaginary battle in his own head and no one could see it.

Enlarged heart. That was the last straw. THAT is what would place him in another battle with our management like the one I was currently embroiled in, like the one he'd already been in. He wouldn't survive another unfair battle. (I'm barely surviving this one I'm still in with them). They play dirty. Nothing is below them. Cheat. Lie. Falsely accuse. Turn tables. They're good at it.

We had enough stress in our lives. He didn't want any more stress in our life. He just wanted things to get better for him but ever since that episode with the tactical team, his life just seemed to get worse and worse and I know he felt like a failure, like a quitter for walking off that team and I know that hurt his pride and his very soul. No one knew how much that hurt him.

He just wanted things to get better for us. He just wanted to be okay. He just wanted to get away from all of the pain he was carrying and enduring. He took the only route he could see at the time. He decided to die.

And after that story spilled out of me I ask, why does this woman continue to "mourn" him? Does she really miss him or is it just guilt over knowing she somehow contributed to his eventual death? Who tells that kind of story to someone's wife at their funeral? Was it all just guilt?

I hope so. I hope they're all wracked with guilt and I hope one of them eventually breaks and takes a shotgun and places it against their body and pulls the trigger. They deserve no less a fate than he did. I want all managers who were associated with that crooked investigation to die a horrible, horrible death, slow and choking.

I want them all dead for what he had to endure. I want them to know what they did to him and how they killed him and know that despite what they did to him, he held his head high for as long as he possibly could.

He was my husband. I loved him and I will defend him to the ends of every universe. I miss him so much.
 
I am so sorry that she told you that story and I so understand your anger towards her. I hope that you never have to see her ever again. You have a right to be upset over this. What an asshole.
 
It was a quiet day today. The dog and I napped until just after noon because it's frigid outside. In the afternoon I went looking for a charging cord in my husband's computer room, I came across a hard drive that I hadn't checked. I found our wedding video footage on it.

His voice.

You can barely hear him because my brother is standing away from the speakers and hubby is talking quite low into the microphone but I can hear him. I remember looking in his eyes as he said his vows. I remember him saying if it wasn't for looking in my eyes he would have fainted being in front of that crowd of people. He was never good in crowds. He hated making presentations and when he was offered a spot teaching at a local college he had to say no because, despite our trying to prepare him, he still broke out in a sweat and began to shake just thinking of standing in front of a class.

And yet, he would stand in front of a gathered crowd at work, in the garage or at the hospital and "teach". You stick him in front of a formal crowd and he'd get pale and sweaty. I remember once doing a school presentation with him and he let me do most of the talking because he was too nervous - and they were just elementary school kids!

There were other scenes in the unedited footage where you can hear his voice, you can't exactly make out what he's saying but I can hear the sound of his voice, unfortunately it's also dark because it was later at the reception which was outside in a tent and was poorly lit so you can't see him, just his silhouette. I looked at the video and I wondered why I couldn't feel myself there. It is so foreign to see this stuff so long after the fact and frankly, I'm not sure I ever saw the unedited footage. It's strange to see things from someone else's eyes. I don't remember cutting the cake. I remember I had his jacket on, that I remember and I remember later, wearing our baseball caps that said "Bride" and "Groom" on them as we danced but other things from that night I have no recall of - our first dance! I don't remember dancing with him. I know we did, but there's a blank in my head. Strange.

I know in a lot of our pictures the sun was behind the house we were getting married at, so almost everyone's pictures ended up with sunspots in them but I know a lot of people had said, due to the number and location of the spots, that they were "orbs" and my parents were there. In one picture in particular, I have three above my head and he had two above his. I know it's angles and things but everyone who saw the photo said the three on my side were my parents and brother (all deceased by the time I married) and he said the ones on his side were his Gramma and Grampa. Hey, it worked out for the number of spots in the one picture.

Many people also remember our wedding (wow, I almost typed funeral) because when my brother performing the ceremony asked who was to give me away, and my oldest brother stepped forward, the door to the house I grew up in also blew open behind him. Everyone said that my parents had been there too to give me away, they had "opened the door." In reality, it was a pretty windy day that day and it's a little obvious that we neglected to close the door properly - old house, door sticks - so it just coincidentally blew open when my minister brother asked who was there to give me away. Regardless, many people had goosebumps when it happened.

There was something about finding that video that was so comforting today.

I also found a lot of photos my husband had taken over the years, a lot of me, candid shots where I didn't even know he was taking my picture and a lot of just random shots of scenery and things - no selfies. He hated having his picture taken - as evidenced by the many pictures I have of him with his face half covered. He hated his smile. He was embarrassed of his smile because he said when he was growing up kids called him "gums" because he had small teeth. He didn't have small teeth, but there was something about his smile that I just couldn't put my finger on when I first met him. It actually took me a few months after dating him to figure it out, his upper lip pulled up high when he smiled and his gums showed - that and he had a slight space between his front teeth. I remember my sister once, trying to discourage me from him, had said he had "horse teeth". I just ignored her because in the early days she seemed a little jealous that I had a boyfriend and she was always negative about him.

When we were dating he used to take his hand and put it in front of his mouth when he'd smile or laugh. I used to reach up and pull his hand away and he'd get really embarrassed. I loved him smiling. It was a huge smile. I think by our second year together, I broke him of that habit of covering his smile and if anyone said anything negative about his smile around me, they felt my wrath.

I remember we were sitting once and he had called me beautiful and I had said something like, "That's okay, I know I'm not. There are a zillion other women in the world prettier than me..." and he'd said that, it didn't matter what they looked like, he loved me and I was beautiful to him. So some time later when I'd commented about how handsome I thought he was, he said, "I know you settled, you could've landed a more handsome guy than me." I used the same line on him that he'd used on me. I didn't see any other men, they were background noise. I only ever saw him. I only ever loved him in that special way.

That's why it kills me so much that he's gone, especially the way he decided to leave this world, the violence toward himself - he was so loved by me. If you look at the sheer amount of people at his funeral and the numbers who said they would have loved to have attended, he was respected by so many.

I was chatting with my cousin last night who lost her son to suicide a couple of weeks ago. She's not doing well. She asked when you stop crying - everyone asks when you stop crying and in all honesty? I haven't finished crying yet and I'm coming up on a year. It's long. It's painful. At points you feel like you're going to die. She said the spouse is feeling worse. They were broken up because he'd recently beaten her up and was being charged. She was the last one to speak to him, she called him a coward when he threatened suicide just hours before he died. I can't imagine that. I can't imagine the guilt she must be feeling. I wish I was there to talk to them. I told her they need professional help because this is something that won't just go away on it's own.

I was angry with hubby but mostly it was frustration and I was afraid which triggered me. I was afraid for him, he was my rock and he was hurting and I couldn't reach his sense of logic. He kept saying he was going to die and him dying was always my worst nightmare. And then my nightmare came true. I wasn't "angry with him", I wasn't mad at him, we hadn't fought, we hadn't argued, we were just caught each in a state of emotional reasoning. I couldn't try to think up possible solutions to his issue until I could calm down - I calmed down at some point after he'd already left our room that morning. I started looking for solutions for his pain, solutions for his possible heart issue. I got up armed with ideas, optimistic and eager to share my ideas with him.

He was already dead.

I miss him. 343 days today.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom