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Relationship My Husband Has Ptsd And Is Verbally Abusive. I Feel So Alone.

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My blunt assertion is that abuse is never acceptable. There is no excuse for it, despite mountains of explanations(excuses?). If someone has dropped going to counseling, refusing to take meds, etc. and is being abusive, my not so humble idea is to vote with one's feet as well as the legal system. There is no excuse for abuse.
 
I hope this catches some of you in time - I found a SOLUTION to this (skip to the end if you dont wanna hear my story).

My husband developed PTSD at 37 years old after we lost our baby at 13 weeks gestational age. I didnt understand what was happening at first. It took me about 3 years to really figure it all out. Ive been with him for over 16 years. He has always been a calm rational person, so when we started fighting all the time, and the arguments got crazy, I thought I must be part of it. It takes 2 right?

I looked for all sorts of ways that *I* could manage it, suggested we go to marriage counselling (he refused), wondered if *I* should go by myself (that didnt seem like it would be effective).

The emotional abuse (rage attacks, I called them for a long time) just got worse. He would have "episodes," and sometimes I could see them coming, but couldnt stop them, no matter how carefully I tread. Most times I was completely blindsided by them. He would get it in his head that I said something, even when I literally said the opposite, and I could not convince him I said anything different. He would just get madder and madder at me. He would verbally attack me. One time I triggered one because I came around the doorway "wrong," when I was looking for him in the kitchen. Taking full "responsibility" for whatever he imagined I did didnt even help, he would just "loop" no matter what I said and continue attacking me all over again, though I had just apologized profusely for it a minute ago, and 3 minutes before that, and before that, etc.

Ironically, one fight, he started telling me that I "never apologized for anything" and that was the problem (du jour). There were times I had to pack up the kids and literally leave the house because I couldnt get him to stop verbally/emotionally attacking me. Luckily I had a friend whose door was always open to me. Spent the night there once, on the floor with our baby. I thought maybe it would get better after the kids (we had 2 by then) were older and there was less stress in the family. But I reached my tipping point eventually and realized that I just couldnt do this any longer.

Luckily my friend was going through something similar with her fire-fighter husband. She had done some research and explained to me that PTSD can be sort of cumulative, and it doesnt always have to be one major event, it can be a build up of many traumas. My husband had a crappy childhood, then our miscarriage, then our 2nd child was born 2 months premature... and all the while his PTSD/rage was just getting worse. I was worried that I might have to call the police and have him 51/50'ed at some point in time.

Anyways, she told me about a new therapy called EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing), which literally re-programs the brain using some neurological tricks. It's MUCH faster than traditional therapy often taking only 8-10 weekly sessions. Turns out another friend of mine had already done this therapy with her husband who was a vet and also had a crappy childhood and had great and fast results.

We've completed the 8-10 weeks now. He is, I would say, 90% better. If we are not careful to monitor his stress and give him his "hour a day" (he needs this self time to destress daily after work), and other stressful things happen (like my parents visiting, after he's been trying to put the kids' play structure together all week unsuccessfully, he will have an episode again - just as bad as ever.

In hindsight, that one was completely predictable and avoidable, and we've done much better at watching out for clusters of stressful events since then. And we just make sure he get's his daily hour. Now and again he may have smaller episodes, but I have been able to make him go to his "man-cave" until he can calm down (making him leave or leave me alone simply didnt work at all before- he was way too out of control).

I wont lie, I had hoped this would 100% "fix" him back to the way he used to be, but this is totally manageable and doable as it is. In other words, rather than the DAILY walk-on-eggshells routine, with weekly or every other day horrible blow ups/abuse incidents, I get to live a totally normal, just like it used to be, life but with occasional bad days. And I hold out hope that he will continue to get better at using the techniques he learned in EMDR therapy, and that things will get better as our lives get a little less stressful.

(note, I originally had links to the scientific study abstracts, and websites for the things I am about to say, so you can check my sources, but it wouldnt let me post with links. If a moderator will let me, I would love to post sources for each item below, or you can do your own research.)

EMDR Therapy has proven to be more successful at treating PTSD than drugs by the way.

And more successful as well as faster than other kinds of "regular" therapy:

EMDR Therapy has been assigned to Category A as "strongly recommended" for the treatment of trauma by the Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense (2004, 2010)

You can google EMDR and view any number of FAQ pages about how it works, what a session looks like, etc:

Lastly - I have no connections at all to EMDR other than that my marriage was saved by it. I dont have any websites, nor am I a therapist (Im a high school biology teacher). Also, if the cost is prohibitive for you, in our area at least, there are EMDR trained therapists who work on a sliding scale.

I wish I had known about this 3 years and so much pain ago, but hopefully this info can reach some of you sooner than it reached me!
 
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If there was CBT done it was a part of the therapy. The first 2 of his 10 sessions were introduction, get to know you, explore your issues, as I understand it.
 
If there was CBT done it was a part of the therapy. The first 2 of his 10 sessions were introduction, get to know yo...
That is brilliant I hope things keep getting better for you . I am stuck completely because my husband won't go for any kind of help so I really don't know what to do I've tried so many times. But there's no way he ll go because he says there's nothing wrong with him !! I m at the end of my tether I need help but can't go and get any !
 
I hope this catches some of you in time - I found a SOLUTION to this (skip to the end if you dont wanna hear my story...

Thank you so much for the post and the info. about EMDR. It helps to know I'm not the only one going through something similar. I'm a partner of someone with PTSD and Bipolar II. He grew up in a very violent area where he was subjected to violence within the community, and it has resulted in such extreme hyper vigilance. It negatively impacts our relationship when he often blames me, in ways that seem irrational to me. The "walking into the kitchen wrong" thing sounded so familiar. There was a time that he asked me a question while he was in the middle of something else, and then when I answered his question, he blew up at me for "distracting" him by talking and breaking his concentration.

It's so hard to deal with such a "no-win" situation because of course, if I hadn't answered, that would've been rude, and how would I know that answering would break his concentration? Exchanges like these would send me into a spiral of feeling upset, resentful, and like there was nothing I could do that was right or that would stop these kind of interactions, no matter how much I tried to improve communication. Even if I walked on eggshells all the time, I could not possibly predict what would trigger him or set him off, as much as I tried to be sensitive to his triggers to the best of my understanding.

I know for many people, hearing about interactions like that, they would wonder -- why put up with it? Why not end the relationship? And, I've certainly circled around that myself. However, when he's not feeling triggered and not in that highly-agitated state, he's able to talk through things and admit that he acted irrationally. And, in so many other regards, he's a wonderful partner. Also, when he finally began undergoing therapy (which he just started recently, roughly a month and a half ago), he did show some slow but steady improvement -- no dramatic overnight changes or quick fixes, but when I would inadvertently say something upsetting to him without realizing, he could step back and say "I'm feeling triggered," and stay in the feeling and talk about it rather than shutting down or lashing out.

Things have been very difficult recently, and it doesn't help that, given my own family history, being blamed "unfairly" is something that is especially hurtful to me and I really have to struggle not to take personally. However, the gains made by therapy -- and the fact that he was willing to undergo it after resisting for awhile and sharing with me his fears about entering therapy -- give me hope. I am also hopeful that EMDR might be helpful, too, given the situation you described with your partner. Thank you so much for sharing this info.
Also, thank you to everyone who's posted. This has been a huge relief for me to read other people's stories and know that I'm not alone out there in feeling what I'm feeling and thinking. It's hard to explain to others, even well-meaning family and friends, who may not have dealt with something similar.
 
Be a little wary of EMDR. Done appropriately I think it can be very helpful but for someone with multiple traumas or in the hands of an inexperienced therapist I think it can do more harm than good. Just my two cents.
 
I wholeheartedly agree that PTSD is NOT a free pass to be an abuser. Period.

No matter my difficulties, I am stil 100% responsible for ALL of my behaviors.

My heart sinks when I read so many stories of dedicated and loving, kind-hearted supporters who are suffering in trying to help someone with PTSD who apparently doesn't give a darn about taking advantage of the goodwill of their SO. Such a person with PTSD, IMHO, doesn't deserve the loved one who is suffering and miserable from trying to love and support the supposed "sufferer" of PTSD.

There is no excuse for abuse and that is not debatable.

Lord knows I've got my problems, but I will literally be damned before I would do to another what was done unto me.

Supporters, if you are being abused at all, put yourselves and any children FIRST.
 
Update - so while the EMDR therapy helped, it turns out that for us (him) alcohol was really the culprit. I didnt realize it was alcoholism because he drank in secret and I have some weird quirk where I am really unable to smell alcohol. Anyways, he is now sober (because I was in a position to be able to say he had to get help or else I was leaving and taking the kids), and no longer is abusive at all. It's been over a year, with a few off-the wagon episodes, but we are doing very well now, relationshipwise.

His drinking started because of childhood trauma that was brought back up when we miscarried and had our own babies to take care of. But it wasnt the trauma that was our problem - it was all about the alcohol he was abusing to numb his emotions. The reason he got better SO FAST with the therapy is because he decided to stop drinking (for a brief time) while he was doing it. Just wanted to let folks know what happened and what I'd learned, in case anyone else realizes they might be in the same boat. <3
 
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