My husband was just recently diagnosed
with PTSD. He has been suffering with
this for over 2 years and just recently
was diagnosed. However, he is in the
military and the doctor suggested that
since we move so soon that he wait to seek
medical treatment after we arrive at our
next duty station. This upset me horribly
because I don't know if we have longer to
wait for treatment before the situation
bursts wide open.
After he returned from Iraq he shutdown
emotionally. I know this is a common
symptom on PTSD. He was sent on his
second tour of duty when things reached
their worst. Once he returned he started
acting differently towards me. He acts
like he doesn't even know who I am. We
are having problems being intimate because
we both start shutting down emotionally
towards one another. He acts as if I am a
stranger to him.
My concern presently is that he just told
me he wants a divorce because he doesn't
feel any love for me anymore. He said
that he thinks that he has "supressed" his
PTSD and is controlling it without the
help of any therapist or medical
treatment. He doesn't want to pursue
treatment because of fear of ruining his
career. I asked if he thinks that what he
is saying is related to the PTSD and he
said no. However, I don't believe this is
true. I KNOW he has not supressed any PTSD
on his own it has just gotten worse. I
don't even believe he knows what he is
saying. Is this possible?
Can someone please tell me if this is
common among individuals diagnosed with
PTSD?
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slb08
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 12 Jul 2008 Posts: 1
ptsd Posted: 07-12-08 22:50pm
My husband has been dealing with ptsd for
2 yrs also not much therapy, alot of meds,
unable to hold a job, drinking alot more,
on july 1 08 he told me he didnt love me
and the children any more and wanted a
divorce sense then has moved everything
out. acts like i dont exsist. all this
started when the military put him on
medical hold, hes unable to go with his
unit to iraq. he has a va disibility
rating of 50%, I'm just lost what to do,
hes acting unlike him self, I to wonder if
the ptsd and lack of therapy is to blame?
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pinky3
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 19 Aug 2008 Posts: 17
PTSD Posted: 08-19-08 17:33pm
My mom was in a very bad car accident
about 5 years ago. She was also hit by a
car when she was 12 years old. She has no
memory of being hit by a car because she
was in a coma. When the car accident
happend the car ended upside down and she
had to get herself from the car before the
paramedics got there. She didn't break any
bones just scrapes and glass stuck in her
eyes and skin. When the paramedics did
arrive they put her in the ambulance and
told her "you are lucky, you should not
have lived through that". The doctors
question if hearing that played a part in
the PTSD. They also wonder if being hit by
a car at 12 also played a part in it. She
ended up losing her job over it. She saw 2
different doctors for a short period of
time and then decided she would have to
work through it on her own. She didnt take
anymore meds and started the battle on her
own. I couldn't understand the things she
felt I could only listen to what she had
to say. I could see loud noise set it off.
I could see her body shake. I could see
her body shut down. I could see the tears
and the hurt, but still couldnt understand
it. Of course I felt the pain of seeing my
mom hurt. Its been awhile now and she is
doing a lot better but I still see loud
noises on the tv she has to walk away. I
dont have much advice just be there and
listen to what he has to say. Maybe go to
a doctors appt with him and see if you can
get a better understanding for what he's
feeling.
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GeeGee2
Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 17 Aug 2008 Posts: 64
Thanks: 1
Thanked:3
Posted: 08-24-08 13:08pm
Pinky3,
I too had a major car accident about 10
years ago. I now realize what I went
through was ptsd, due to the accident. At
the time of going through it, I didnt know
what was wrong with me. I startled easily,
overreacted, paranoid to drive or ride in
a car. At times I was even afraid to go
outside of my home. It was terrible. I did
not seek medical help. In some ways I
didnt want people to think I was
crazy-plus I didnt know it was prob ptsd.
I am better now, and I attribute this to
time passing. I still have some of the
symptoms from that crash. I get very upset
if I pass a car wreck for instance. Most
of the other symptoms have subsided. Best
of luck to your mom.
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tuinazhongyi
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Aug 2008 Posts: 3 Location: San Francisco
The way I try to understand PTSD Posted: 08-26-08 12:46pm
I think of PTSD as survival mode gone
awry. It causes the sympathetic nervous
system to be in constant alert, which is
the body's stress mechanism. For survival,
like before we had our modern
infrastructures, the sympathetic nervous
system would allow for the individual to
react without having to think about what
he/she had to do in order to survive a
crisis, like a bear, hunting or fighting.
When those situations were over, the
parasympathetic system would come back
into play, bring the blood and energy out
of the extremities and back into the
organs responsible for digestion,
filtration, in general all the things our
body just does to keep us working at
optimum level.
Ironically with the height of our modern
era, stresses are now more prevalent than
ever. We are all suffering from
sympathetic take over and the
parasympathetic nervous system rarely gets
to kick the stress of daily life in order
to accomplish all it wants and needs to
accomplish in our bodies. This is where
and when flight or fight mechanisms begin
to govern our responses to daily stress.
We find ourselves on constant alert.
With that said, those of us who
experienced and witnessed things that were
of particular horrific awe, like those
having to serve in Iraq, a car crash,
9/11, childhood molestation or a rape
victim, the body's response to those
events actually allowed it to rewrite how
it chooses to deal with similar situations
or other stress in the future. Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder, I think is a
funny description because it actually
affects the future of the individual's
responses to stress and trauma.
Each organ in our bodies governs a
particular emotion. Like fear is housed in
the kidneys, as is our will and strength
to live and pass along our inherited will
from our parents to our children. The body
is so adept at protecting itself either
from emotional trauma or physical trauma,
that what happens post-trauma is nothing
short of miraculous. The body responds by
shutting down or placing a pause on the
functionality of the area most affected,
either emotionally or physically. With
PTSD there is already an underlying
traumatic rewrite, which the body
remembers and employs when something
happens again. It is the primary goal of
the body to avoid pain at all costs. Like
in Pinky3's post about her mother, how
loud noises set it off, where she
physically shuts down, or removes herself
from the room, that is exactly what the
body is doing on an organ level.
The other thing that I have experienced
personally from PTSD is an underlying
attempt to remove myself from anything,
anyone that I'm not sure I can trust. That
means for my relationships, I will shut
down when I feel like I'm not being heard,
or beliefs compromised. Furthermore, I
always have one foot out of the door
because I feel that I can fend for myself
much better than anyone else could.
Relationships get sticky with PTSD because
the individual suffering will
subconsciously take inventory of
everything that isn't right, everything
that would destabilize and victimize the
individual. Keeping those things at arm's
distance is a protection mechanism. I have
found great and longstanding relief from
these feelings, flight or fight mechanisms
by going to an acupuncturist regularly.
Southerngirl200, I empathize with your
situation. It is the PTSD talking, but
unconsciously. What he's perhaps saying to
you, is 'I'm not sure how this
relationship will affect my ability to
protect myself from future trauma, and I'm
distraught at how to proceed in order to
avoid trauma again in the future.' A
marriage is a partnership where both
protect and fend for the other. If he's
dealing with PTSD at this level, he is
having serious concerns about how to
protect not just himself, but you as well.
Subconsciously, he is trying to remove
himself from any situation that could be
traumatic, either to you or to himself.
One more thought, due to the importance of
his career, perhaps he's afraid that his
military endeavors will cause eventual
trauma for you.
Best to you all.
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pinky3
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 19 Aug 2008 Posts: 17
Posted: 09-05-08 09:21am
GeeGee2-
Thanks for telling me that. Its like the
almost exactly how my mom was. She still
has it, its just gotten much better. She
didn't seek medical help for long because
all they wanted to do was put her on meds
and she didn't want to do that. She did
see a doc for a little while because her
work made her. She had a hard time driving
but had to do it. She would get nervous if
there was things on both sides of her
(example: driving in between 2 cars) She
didn't like to be in the car when other
people were driving. She still can't sit
in the back seat because she can't see
where she's going. She also didn't talk
about it much for fear that people would
think she was crazy...