greeneyes24 said:
He has tried to take his life. He is supposed to be on meds, and he will take it for a while the right way (I have to administer it, he would not do it himself) and then he decides he hates to be on medication and wishes he didn't have to take it so he stops and I am so tired of fighting with him to take his medication...this time he hasn't taken it since the 17th of this month, but it may have been longer because there have been times when he would pretend to take it and then spit it out,...he has now gone on a downward spiral, is not working, totally irrational...he will be okay for a minute and go off the next...the medication had helped stabilize this, his mood swings were still there but not as bad.
Hi Amberly, welcome to the forum.
Firstly... something you need to get him to understand is this. If he doesn't want to help himself, then nobody else can do this for him.
Second... by stuffing about with his meds so much, it is likely this that is causing a lot of irrational issues, more so than he would, because the meds are no doubt an SSRI, which are designed to change his chemical composition within his body to equalize it, for a basic understanding. PTSD changes the brains chemical balance for ease, and an SSRI attempts to supply, restore and rebalance these chemicals so his brain can function a little better, thus his moods, etc are all affected.
When you take meds, withdraw, etc... he is f*cking with the composition constantly, thus his moods will be all over the place, more so than normal with PTSD.
Now... if he doesn't get it, if he doesn't want to accept this, then you need to simply step back and stop trying to help him... don't do things for him like help with meds and so forth, then hopefully he will actually get on with doing it himself. Basically, DO NOT enable his behaviour, otherwise he will do it because he can.
Veterans get frustrated mainly, because they are trained to have such high self esteem, they can do just about anything, to suddenly their brain develops PTSD and they feel much more useless and confused.
He must choose to help himself though, he really must, because nothing you do or say will fix him... only he can fix himself. He must want help to be helped.