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Relationship Waiting

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Nicolette, great ideas, but some cases are different and have different realities...read my thread... My Wife Has PTSD And.....
Drago I was generalising and am well aware there are different realities..... unfortunately with PTSD they can become the same sometimes.

My point was
If someone does not want to be with you, says so, does not contact you and you see them with a status of single it's not always PTSD and them having PTSD does not mean there is a really good chance they will change their minds.

I have spent the last month out of work, working with lawyers in two states, and hoping that she will get some memories of what it was to work on it, and praying so that my son is ok. I haven't seen him in more than a month. I have read a lot about the subject, and someone in that state can become careless with the child, no matter how much she loves him. That is scary.
In my opinion waiting for someone and ensuring your child is in a safe environment are two separate matters and I have faced that situation myself so have some understanding including across states.
 
Newcomer may I suggest you start your own thread if you want to continue going into detail as the thread is getting a little off track on waiting and becoming focused on your situation. We are happy to support you and share our thoughts with you but this thread is not the best place. Thank you
 
Newcomer, I think you brought up a really valid point, that boundaries have to be set, and in order to sustain a relationship you have to have some kind of checking in during the dissociative times. I'm going through this right now with my sufferer.
 
Waiting is hard... Should I stay or should I go? I feel as though I've been shut out, but I worry that he will never get help if I don't break through to him:(
 
Hi Hopefloats, yes waiting is hard. If you are being forced to 'wait', my advice is to try your best to date someone else in the meantime...especially if you are not getting what you need out of the relationship...ptsd or not. If it's meant to be then it will be, but waiting around could be maddening and this is your life, so I say LIVE it, don't wait for it. :D
 
I didn't know ANYTHING about PTSD other than it was real and happened to people who experienced something awful when I met my ex. We met online and he was upfront before we even met in person that he had some issues that he felt was TBI from explosives in service. And, he for sure had issues, but not scary ones. Trouble sleeping, eating, being in social situations, etc. When he told me about his experiences I began to suspect PTSD, again, not knowledgeable but what happened made it kind of a no brainer. he did NOT think he had PTSD. But I started researching both TBI & PTSD and honestly, his issues were pretty text book for both. It took time and patience for him to even look at the info, but eventually he got there.

We were together for almost a year, lived together for most of it. I got him into treatment though he refused in patient and they did not find TBI but absolutely PTSD right away. I WISH I had found these forums sooner. He didn't even pretend to try in therapy, it seemed to me the therapist was only kind of going through the motions and my being ignorant, I tiptoed around him and excused every bad (not violent) behavior thinking until we get some progress with therapy I don't want to make it worse. I had asked his therapist for home direction, and even though he told her she could tell me anything, she basically told me to look it up.

Short story long, it all ended badly, out of ignorance I handled him too permissively and by the time it was all said and done, he really drug me though hell and sucked me dry for anything he could get out of me. I think he was affected by what happened, but he had many of the "bad behaviors" looooong before the military and I just never found out until much later.

I wish I had known more, handled it differently. I could have saved myself an absurd amount of time and hurt. But without knowing, how could I have thrown out this "poor affected man who had been injured serving his country" and who played the role (as I taught him how from the research I suppose) so well.
 
I have only just come across this thread and realise there is much here that relates to me and my relationship with my sufferer. He does not say he doesn't want me in his life, he doesn't say he does either. He just doesn't speak to me at all. I have come to realise that I love the man he was, there are so many things I don't like about the man he is now.

For a long time now I have questioned what is PTSD symptoms and what is just plain selfish and hurtful behaviour. I struggle with the fact he will not communicate me and after 28 years of marriage I believe I deserve much better than this. I get it is hard for him, I have tried for the past 7 years to get help for him and to try to get him to want to help. I have failed. His silence speaks more to me than if he said the words. I am not worth it anymore. I never imagined my marriage ending this way and I am struggling big time adjusting to my newly separated status and being a single mum. I hate being alone, but in all honesty I was anyway before I left.
 
I've been aware of my husband's PTS symptoms, or combat stress, or whatever we want to call it, for the past two years. We've been together almost 6 years and will celebrate our 4th anniversary on July 4th. I knew he was a hothead and had trust and attachment issues before we got married, but for the first 3 years together, he was an amazing partner - fun, outgoing, flirty, sexy, romantic. Then he deployed and a few months after he returned, I discovered his online/offline chronic infidelity. He promised to stop, we saw a chaplain and attended a Marine Corps marriage retreat, he apologized and I gave him a pass with the stipulation that if it happened again, the consequences would be serious. He refused to see a marriage counselor with me, so I started to see one on my own.

She opened my eyes and within a month of his next deployment, less than a year after his last one, I discovered more chronic infidelity. Now we started to discuss sex addiction and PTS because he said he tried to stop but couldn't (he has an online ritual aspect that goes to offline sex). He refused to believe he could have PTS even though he's an infantry combat veteran. During his deployment, he would vacillate between shutting down and saying he'd do whatever it takes to make our marriage work and that failure was not an option. But when he returned from deployment, everything was great for one week - as soon as his family left, so did he. He packed up and moved out.

He's been living in a apartment 45 miles away for the past 8 months - the same duration as the deployment and the Marine Corps limit on how long you can expect Marines to need space as part of their "reintegration" process. Nice. I did convince him to finally see a therapist for himself and he confirmed he "scored a 10" on the PTS diagnosis test and has a "behavior problem" with infidelity but it's not an addiction because it's not listed as such in the psychiatric directory of diagnoses (yet, but it will likely be added to the next edition according to my therapist). He was my fun-loving husband for one weekend after his one and only counseling session. Then he refused to go to any more sessions (he had committed to 12) and said he is not taking the counselor's advice but won't tell me what that is. He is often angry, rude, screaming "I hate you," "I don't want to be married to you" and "Leave me alone!" on the rare occasions we talk by phone.

He's mad that I turned to his immediate family and mine when I discovered his infidelity a second time and started to learn about PTS and sex addiction because I felt he needed someone other than me to tell him to get some help. He isolates and lives on his computer, living in a fantasy world with dozens of women that he has emotional online/offline love affairs with. He told me the sex is meaningless but now he says divorcing me is "the right thing to do" and he can never make me happy because he can't be faithful to me. I'm in the same camp as a few others here - learning as best I can to detach with love, encourage him to continue to seek counseling, letting him know I love him but giving him the space he needs.

He denies he has any issues and says "I'm just not the marrying type" yet he married me and I know he loves me but can't be in a traditional relationship and the expectations that come with that. I believe he's afraid to try because he doesn't want to fail again. Ego. Pride. Such a shame. I am working on taking care of myself - yoga, running, a new job, my family. I also joined a group therapy for betrayed spouses. Sponsored by the Marine Corps. Interesting because the other 3 women have civilian husbands who put themselves in therapy and they want to stay married. Mine doesn't. So, I guess I have to heed the advice above and tell myself it may or may NOT be due to his PTS. He may just not want to be married to me. Time to move on but love him and pray for him always.
 
Holy cow. I'm reading my life in your stories. It brings relief.

I too struggle with letting go. More importantly I have struggled mostly with not listening to what my sufferer has been saying. I have been so focused on showing him there is help in a desperate attempt to make it better I have ignored his pleas for me to stop. What did that do? Sent him running for the door of course!

We have a 6 month old baby and I am praying that if I let him go he will come home to us but I realize there is nothing I can do.

Reading your stories gives me hope that it is possible. I don't believe I'm naive or in denial. I have to have hope for my little girl.
 
I too am having a hard time with the reality that my marriage may be over due to my husband's PTSD. I have tried understanding, empathy, anger, compassion, and now the situation is such that I have no control. He is in treatment. I don't know what will happen when he returns. He was told prior to going that the only way for reconciliation was through treatment. He often has said that I am the one who hurts him the most. He is so angry because now his employer is involved. I wish I knew what was going to happen but there are no easy answers. I was forced to make a decision. I chose to reveal his PTSD although I knew it could mean the end for us. 18 years of sacrifice is a long time. I am dealing with my own co-dependent issues, attending treatment but it has been a roller coaster ride.
 
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