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  #1  
Old 05-04-2008, 04:44 AM
scaredwife scaredwife is offline Gender Female
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Default Wife to a Soldier With PTSD - Scared & Confused

I don't know what to do...6 mths since he has been home and things don't seem to be getting better. We were best friends when he left, and while he was gone. We lost a good friend while he was there! I know that was hard, I was the first person the wife called when she found out..I was at her house within 3 minutes barefoot and all.

Well anyways...my name is Carmen
my husband has the classic symptoms of PTSD but I am not quite sure if their has been a diagnosis yet...he is just now getting treatment and will be ETSing soon (getting out)..I am scared for him and SAd for him. He doesn't seem to enjoy life anymore. Not even our three beautiful children. We will be moving back home and I am scared it will only worsen when we get their. With the lack of support of people that know what he is going through. What scared me the most is that he doesn't hardly talk to me, he just tells me he is numb, no feelings. What can I do??????? I have to admit my patience are thin, I feel resent and anger because I did it all for 12 months by myself three kids a dog, a house, and all, when he came he just doesnt seem to want to get off bed or away from the TV. Please somebody are their any spouses out their of war veterans with PTSD????
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Old 05-04-2008, 04:05 PM
motorjack motorjack is offline Gender Male
 
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Location: canada
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hello carmen and welcome

I was once like your husband and only wanted to lay in bed and hide from the world. It took me 9 months to get back to some sort of normal life(if you can call it normal) It took me alot of shrink time and love from my wife to get threw. There are no answers i can give you or quick fixes, it will take time....hope this helps a bit

mj
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  #3  
Old 08-04-2008, 06:30 AM
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WarHippy1% WarHippy1% is offline Gender Male
 
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Hi Carmen, Welcome. I can almost tell where the distance came from in your relationship. We inherently feel like evil, no-good people because of our symptoms. When you compare how positively you've managed to hold the spirit alive in his absence, you de-value any pride he might have managed to hold onto of a "job well done"

Here is a good way to describe HIS year. Imagine you are a member of a street gang, and you've angered the rival gang to the extent that they've sworn deadly vengeance on every member of the gang you belong to. Now, imagine that every minute of that year, the next strange noise that you heard could be an armed home invasion where death would be the outcome, or a drive-by using automatic weapons, or a rival gang member sneaking across the street and lobbing a grenade in through your front door. That's been his year if he was in the rear, away from the fighting. If he was part of a reactionary force, imagine when something like I described happened, that he had to get into his car and go pay the rival gang back, or even worse, walk down the street signaling his intent for the rival gang to see coming.

First of all, spouses shouldn't compare years. You held the family together, that's very important. He fought for your safety to walk down the street without the fear of someone popping up out of the bushes and taking you out, because you accidentally got in the middle of a fire fight. Do you think that is as important as keeping the family together? I do. Don't compare apples and oranges, you both should be closer because of your individual accomplishments. Together, you were successful at keeping the family together and safer. Please don't discount his contribution to the family, it'll alienate him to you and the family. I'm sure you're not looking for that.

I hope this has helped you to understand him, and your relationship to each other. Best Wishes.

Last edited by anthony; 08-04-2008 at 08:09 AM.
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