@SamRuck, I’m posting this as a member, not a moderator. This is not a critique, but an observation: you sound tired, exhausted, guarded, almost on edge, and you are taking on so much, more than even trained professionals can take on.
You say the support you have is enough, but yet describe very understandably fighting back tears when describing some of the painful realities of this task. Even when writing about your wife’s healing, you write about all you have done and nothing about anything she’s done. You’ve taken on a Herculean task doing all the healing work in this relationship, I’m concerned for you for your sake. Secondary trauma and burn out is a real risk supporters face - and that’s not because they are doing things right or wrong, but the simple reality of walking with a sufferer.
You matter. Your wellbeing matters. You are so focused on her and her healing, everyone else’s healing, you leave out any place for you and your needs.
In fact, when a person is drowning, that is NOT the time to teach 'empowerment'.
This is my perspective as a sufferer, using the drowning example:
I used to be a lifeguard. One of the things they teach in lifeguard training is that if we jump into the water with someone who is drowning, without support of our own, there is a good chance we will start drowning as well, and then there will be two victims of drowning, not just one. People who are drowning are in fight or flight mode, and they tend to drown lifeguards that jump in with the drowning person without any help to stay afloat. It’s not done maliciously, but out of sheer desperation to stay alive.
To rescue a drowning person, lifeguards are taught to have a support with us to stay afloat, like a rescue tube (a long float) that we throw to the drowning person. Then they can grab onto it while we pull them in, and/or use it to hang on to and stay afloat ourselves.
Same applies for being a supporter of someone with a mental illness.
Ever flown on an airplane? The safety drills on airplanes emphasize the importance of putting on your own oxygen mask before doing so for someone else. Why? Because if someone first puts it on someone else, there’s a good chance they’ll pass out before they do it for the other person, and then there will be two victims. Not just one.
Instead, if someone puts on their own oxygen mask, they are likely to be able to breathe enough to save the other person as well.
The tools I was given as a PTSD sufferer when I have been drowning have been incredibly valuable and life saving. Even more so, the support my own therapist and supporters have for themselves, has been really important for them to stay afloat.
Even traumatized kids need some empowerment and don’t heal unless they do part of the work.
You are clear you have your path to “get her healed” and won’t be deterring from it. So be it. That’s up for you and your wife to decide.
You are also clear that you are looking for support for you, and that’s good.... yet at the same time, when you are asked what that support looks like, that support seems to be you giving advice to others on how they can do it your unique way.
It’s back to you giving support one way, not getting it from others.
So here’s a question to consider: when and where do your needs and understandable heartache and struggle get to show up?
I keep hoping to find a group where I'm allowed to be who I am and contribute what we've learned but also find support for the stress that trauma issues bring to a marriage.
I want to gently challenge you to consider describing more about the issues that you don’t have all figured out, or what your needs are that are going unmet, and perhaps describing more about the heartache you are experiencing.
That might help folks to better be able to support you, and for you to be less isolated in this journey.
It’s been one way with your wife. You are giving, giving, giving. Peer support, which is what this site is about, works best (in my unofficial opinion) when it’s not always one way, but two ways. Where sometimes folks support you, not just you giving advice to them.
It’s something I hope you consider. Of course, if it’s not helpful to you, like others mentioned, take what’s helpful and disregard the rest.