I was actually reading through some of the posts in the supporters section of the other forum and I came across a post where there was a 25 year veteran who had retired. He had locked his uniforms away, taken his dog tags off, and let his hair grow.
Two years later, he started wearing is dog tags again, dragged his uniforms out and got a high and tight haircut again.
[When I first discharged, I locked my uniforms away, took my dogtags off and let my beard and hair grow too. It was hard too after 20 years of it. But I went back to a neat haircut and shave when I want to] Maybe nothing was wrong. He had PTSD apparently from Spec Ops Duties, and the VA would not give him the help he needed because there was no proof.
The poor woman had no idea what was going on.... She thought something dramatic was happening.
So, what had he actually told his wife during his service??
Now, down under I know a lot of guys who don't tell their partner anything about what they do for a career in the military, let alone what experiences they have had whilst serving overseas, so how can they expect their 'Life' partner to understand when they all of a sudden exhibit symptoms of PTSD.
Now on the other side of the coin, I know of some partners that could not give a shit what their other half does or how they are feeling, as long as there is money in the bank.
Where do you fit in.
Me first. Well, I was not diagnosed correctly in the first place and by the time I had been diagnosed, after my second deployment, the damage had already been done and my wife left me. I don't resent her, how could I, putting up with all the anger and verbal abuse. And it wasn't fair on the kids either and I am still undoing those issues.
Now with my new (Wife in two weeks), well I am lucky to find a woman who not only cares, but actually tried to understand about PTSD. She understands when I am up at 3 am in my cave becasue I could not sleep. She understands that when I am having a bad day I want to isolate. And at the same time, she won't let me use it as an excuse either (not that I would). But it does not make it any easier on her when I go off on a rant for no apparent reason.
So........................................................
I am lucky to find the right person and to all you single veterans, you have the ability to find the right person for your life, if you want.
And to all the Nam Veterans, I don't know how you survived and how your partners that stayed on handled it, not knowing what the beast actually was. You guys had no options, we do.
Two years later, he started wearing is dog tags again, dragged his uniforms out and got a high and tight haircut again.
[When I first discharged, I locked my uniforms away, took my dogtags off and let my beard and hair grow too. It was hard too after 20 years of it. But I went back to a neat haircut and shave when I want to] Maybe nothing was wrong. He had PTSD apparently from Spec Ops Duties, and the VA would not give him the help he needed because there was no proof.
The poor woman had no idea what was going on.... She thought something dramatic was happening.
So, what had he actually told his wife during his service??
Now, down under I know a lot of guys who don't tell their partner anything about what they do for a career in the military, let alone what experiences they have had whilst serving overseas, so how can they expect their 'Life' partner to understand when they all of a sudden exhibit symptoms of PTSD.
Now on the other side of the coin, I know of some partners that could not give a shit what their other half does or how they are feeling, as long as there is money in the bank.
Where do you fit in.
Me first. Well, I was not diagnosed correctly in the first place and by the time I had been diagnosed, after my second deployment, the damage had already been done and my wife left me. I don't resent her, how could I, putting up with all the anger and verbal abuse. And it wasn't fair on the kids either and I am still undoing those issues.
Now with my new (Wife in two weeks), well I am lucky to find a woman who not only cares, but actually tried to understand about PTSD. She understands when I am up at 3 am in my cave becasue I could not sleep. She understands that when I am having a bad day I want to isolate. And at the same time, she won't let me use it as an excuse either (not that I would). But it does not make it any easier on her when I go off on a rant for no apparent reason.
So........................................................
I am lucky to find the right person and to all you single veterans, you have the ability to find the right person for your life, if you want.
And to all the Nam Veterans, I don't know how you survived and how your partners that stayed on handled it, not knowing what the beast actually was. You guys had no options, we do.