Hi all,
it is my first post here, it took some time, but finally I took the courage to share with you my experience.
My wife Julia has ptsd due to an assassination intent attack from her mother when she was 11. We are together now for 23 years (she was my high-school sweetheart), and married for almost 17 years.
Her symptoms got worse with the time, and to make things worse, her health is also delicate due to a auto-immune disease (lupus) and agorafobia (fear to be alone outside her home).
This led to a situation where she does not work, we cannot have children (because of lupus), for me besides the children grief (from which I am better now), what it is more challenging is to see her suffer, she is doing therapy but therapy does not does miracles and the ptsd is there.
Almost everyday when I arrive from work, she is in her bedroom playing videogames or in the living room looking youtube videos, frustrated because she "did not do anything worthy all day", she wants to paint, to sew, to read books, but she cannot do it, or if she starts, she can only do for one day.
We have the house full of "things" that she intend to use (musical instruments, painting material, sew machines and material) that at the end of the day, I finishing using (I am currently learning to playing a guitar that she bought and only used for one day).
Anything that creates a difficulty, generates stress for her, which of course, she "avoids", avoidance is a big ptsd issue and with my wife is no different, she avoids everything that makes her feels stress, and to see everyday she spending all her day in facebook/youtube/videogames is very sad.
I have a therapist of my own to cope with all this and with my co-dependency, I am learning still how to not "buy" her problems and let her cope the best she can, but it is very hard.
Right now, she is trying to do some painting course, but, although she went to the school (with her therapist) to ask for information, she is totally paralysed with the stress and suffering a lot, and I fell helpless, as any husband, we would like to "fix" everything and help our wives in her problems, but there is not so much I can do, only to give moral support and "be there" for her, but still, it is very hard for me to see this "never-ending" nightmare.
I am reading a lot of books on these issues (ptsd,codependency,grief), and they help, and with all the love I have for her, I go on, but still it is a hard path...
thank you all,
best,
Carl
it is my first post here, it took some time, but finally I took the courage to share with you my experience.
My wife Julia has ptsd due to an assassination intent attack from her mother when she was 11. We are together now for 23 years (she was my high-school sweetheart), and married for almost 17 years.
Her symptoms got worse with the time, and to make things worse, her health is also delicate due to a auto-immune disease (lupus) and agorafobia (fear to be alone outside her home).
This led to a situation where she does not work, we cannot have children (because of lupus), for me besides the children grief (from which I am better now), what it is more challenging is to see her suffer, she is doing therapy but therapy does not does miracles and the ptsd is there.
Almost everyday when I arrive from work, she is in her bedroom playing videogames or in the living room looking youtube videos, frustrated because she "did not do anything worthy all day", she wants to paint, to sew, to read books, but she cannot do it, or if she starts, she can only do for one day.
We have the house full of "things" that she intend to use (musical instruments, painting material, sew machines and material) that at the end of the day, I finishing using (I am currently learning to playing a guitar that she bought and only used for one day).
Anything that creates a difficulty, generates stress for her, which of course, she "avoids", avoidance is a big ptsd issue and with my wife is no different, she avoids everything that makes her feels stress, and to see everyday she spending all her day in facebook/youtube/videogames is very sad.
I have a therapist of my own to cope with all this and with my co-dependency, I am learning still how to not "buy" her problems and let her cope the best she can, but it is very hard.
Right now, she is trying to do some painting course, but, although she went to the school (with her therapist) to ask for information, she is totally paralysed with the stress and suffering a lot, and I fell helpless, as any husband, we would like to "fix" everything and help our wives in her problems, but there is not so much I can do, only to give moral support and "be there" for her, but still, it is very hard for me to see this "never-ending" nightmare.
I am reading a lot of books on these issues (ptsd,codependency,grief), and they help, and with all the love I have for her, I go on, but still it is a hard path...
thank you all,
best,
Carl