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Katta

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I am the wife of a vietnam Vet. We've been married for 37 yrs. My husband was in vietnam in 1968 and 1969. He was wounded and spent a year in the hospital. We met in 1973.

The Problem started when he retired from the military 30 yrs ago. The first day of retirement he put on his fatigues in the morning and opend the first bottle of beer stood in the kitchen and just starred into now where. That went on for the whole day. Every little thing made him blow up ( children 2 and 6 at the time ).
I was working trying to run family life.

This went on for 2 yrs. He was looking for work and was turned down and because of that stooped looking.

Family life was hell. Our son had problems at school and if I asked for help from my husband his solution was to scream at the child which made things worse.
I don`t want to go on in more detail.

After 2 yrs of this I was exausted and told him he needed to find work to support the family. I was also at the verge of leaving because a could't take the emotional abuse of him towards me and the children any longer. He had beat our sun for something minor to the point where he had bruises on his bottom. I told my husband that is childabuse and if he does that one more time I am reporting that to authorities.

He found work and things got somewhat calmer. But he never was the person I met in 1973. He had changed.
The last 30 years the children and I "worked" around him. In the beginning I was upset when he did not go with us to school functions or on a day out with me and the children. After a while I accepted the fact, asked if he wanted to come along and if he didn't it was OK. I learned how to do everything myself. But I have to this day a hard time with the rage, the withdrawal ( speaking maybe 10 words a week).I feel emotionally alone.

In the past few years I had to take care of my aging and sick parents ( father passed in 2004 and my mother in 2010) I worked part time (nurse) and started my own business. After my father passed in 2004 I felt very excausted and then was diagnosed with hepatits. I underwent Therapy ( which is tough) took care of my mom, my family ( children had moved at the time) and still had both jobs and no physical or emotional support from my husband. On the contrary.. one little thing go wrong and he would blow up.

Our daughter moved back home ( she has flat on our property). I had started to renovate our house. My husband had cluttered basement, garage and attic in the past 10 yrs and I I told him a year before that we had to declutter and let go of things. The renovation was major. Well knowing what I know now this was all to much stress and a minor thing made him grab our daughter by the kneck and he hit her on her shoulder. We went to see our family doctor and I had a talk with my husband that that was not acceptabel behavior. He justified that "the child" was talking back at him ( she is 32 yrs)

He told a fellow vet about him hitting his daughter. The friend has been diagnosed with PTSD in the 1992 ( which neither of us knew) and he told my husband to go seek treatment. My husband has not talked to me about this at all.

To make things worse he was diagnosed with cancer the beginning of this year ( shortly after the above mentioned incident) and went into total withdrawl.

I have been reading everything I could on the Internet abaout PTSD and on this Forum. I printed some things for my husband ( does not use the computer at all) and want ot have a talk with him about the issue and getting treatment. We live our daily lives mostly not talking. That to me is the major problem...not beeing able to have a conversation about anything.
 
Hello Katta - welcome to the Forum. Wow - you have lived with a lot, and for a long time. There is one lady on here that I can think of that is married to a Vietnam Veteran, the rest of us tend to be more Gulf War and beyond. But the symptoms and the pain are same despite which battles they fought.

I hope that knowing others are walking the same path can bring you some comfort and that you can find the support that you need here x
 
Hello Katta, and welcome to the forum:). I am glad you've found us. I am sorry you have walked such a terribly difficult path for so long. I'm glad to see you in the supporter's section, lots of good info and support there.

30 years ago there wasn't any good info or treatment for PTSD. Effective treatments are recent innovations. So if he thinks there is no hope, he was right then, and he's wrong now.

I don't know any way to make someone talk , or get help if they don't want to. And it is hard to get someone to try who may not believe it is possible. Can you get another guy or two from that era who have gotten their PTSD treated to talk to him? Someone he knows would be best - from his unit if possible is optimal - but anyone would likely help.

You need to take care of you, first thing - lead by example and all that - which it sounds like you've been doing for a good long time. I don't have any words of wisdom except that there is so much good information and a wealth of experience here, that I hope it helps you. Read everything.

Sending peace and healing.
 
Thank you Toria and Eleanor for your reply. I am glad I found this site and others to get information and learn to understand PTSD.

Yes it does help to see I am not alone and many others are suffering/struggeling with this problem.

My first priority is to help myself at the moment since I am pretty bruned out. But finding out what our problem all these years have been and what I am dealing with has been helpfull allready.

I will start therapy in August myself to keep myself balanced and I had a very good talk with my husband today. The best conversation in years.
 
Hey Katta, I am glad you will be in therapy for yourself. It has been a godsend to me. It takes so much to try to "adapt" and live with PTSD. And not all of it is healthy for us. I would imagine you are VERY burned out - it is bad enough dealing with this horrible disease knowing what I am up against - we figured it out pretty quick (my H and I were both married before - we got married in our 40's) and it has been bad... three and a half years or so. I cannot imagine doing it 'blind" for decades.:sick: You must be one tough cookie.

I am glad you guys had a good talk - I'll keep my fingers crossed for many more in the future!
 
This past week has been a good one. My husband I I had a talk where I told him that I was reading a lot of information about PTSD and that I believe that he suffers from it. I told him I would print out information for him ( he does not touch the computer) if he would like me to.

I also set some boundries and told him I will stop a conversation when he starts yelling and pick it back up when he has settled down. I also let him know that I will go to therapy and hope he will do the same.

He went to our family doc today and called VA. It will be difficult to find a therapie for him since we live in Germany and can not use VA for treatment.

I feel a lot calmer now. I am trying hard to stop walking on eggshells.
 
Hi Katta, I am married to a man who has ptsd and I have it. His was untreated. We went through years of emotional, psycological, verbal abuse. He also became a alcoholic until I left him for 3 months and he checked himself into a program and started to go to AA.

We did marriage counseling and counseling for substance abuse. Things have been alot better since then.

So I understand about the effects on the children. I hope for you and yours to come to healing for all you have suffered and endured.

My husband is now very sick . He has parkinsons and lewy body dementia. He has become very sweet. I have all of the responsibilities now. It has been a growing time for me.

Anyways, my heart goes out to you, and I am glad you are here now. You are not alone.
 
(((Katta)))
It's hard to stop walking on those eggshells.

My husband and I have recently been talking less and less. I feel as if anything I bring up will incite anger from him. Either I'm being too emotional or I'm being insensitive to him. There seems to be no topic safe for conversation anymore.

The loneliness that comes along with living with someone that has combat ptsd is overwhelming at times. Yeah, we are the rock. We are the ones that are understanding and sympathetic. Who does that for us?

Everyone who truly knows my husband says I MUST love him because I"m still with him. I commend you for over 30 years of marriage. I don't have any idea how you have done it but I admire that kind of determination.

I don't have any solutions or fixes. I just wanted to let you know I admire and respect you for what you are , a loving wife who has gone through hell to try and bring her husband back.
 
Since I found this forum a lot of positive things have happend. Since August I go to psychologycal therapy which has been a lot of releave for me. I am no longer walking on eggshells.

My husband had his checkup with a VA psychologuist and has been diagnosed with PTSD as we expected. He is talking to a friend which is a vietnam vet on a regular basis and we have are working on our relationsship. We are now waiting for VA to send him to therapy. I now have hope that the future will be better then the past. We had a great four week vacation in September which both of us enjoyed.
 
Yes I know amethist but since we both know that the PTSd is the source of the problem I do not take the anger of my husband personal anymore. We both agreed that I can just walk out of the room when he goes into a rage and that helps him to calm back down. So far that works very well.
 
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