I don't think it's his denial about PTSD that is the main issue - but your denial about your own trauma that concerns me the most.
I was lying in bed last night, thinking exactly that.
@toomuchlovetoletgo , from what you have written, I think you have come to the right place by coming here. Welcome.
If the guys haven't already convinced you of your need to leave, you need to understand what you are dealing with, with your psychopath -
-without him being able to find out that you have looked and what you know.
(go to the file menu on your browser and open a "private window" and use it. That way it won't store any record of where you've been or what you've done in that window)
check out the "Hare Psychopathy Checklist"
It's a checklist of 20 characteristics / traits, you score it zero if the characteristic isn't present, one if it is slightly present, and two if strongly present.
To be diagnosed, your psychopath must have scored a total of at least 30:
there are therefore
at the most only five traits on that list of 20 that he doesn't show, there are probably less than five, as he probably scored some ones.
as a simple exercise, see if you can work out the five. If you get more than five that you think he doesn't have - then either you or the psychiatrist who diagnosed him, have got something wrong - and the worrying thing is that it's likely to be you that is unaware of him having that trait.
The general concensus ammong psychiatrists is that psychopaths cannot be changed, you, alone, certainly cannot change him.
In terms of your feelings of attachment to him, this from al-anon might help you. what it describes is universal, it's not just about alcaholics. In your case though, your psychopath will never heal,
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