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Legendary Wise Elder
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#41
Of course he has weird thinking. Prolonged continuous drug abuse effects brain functions. It’s inevitable that his thinking is and will continue to be weird
I see you are denying that abuse of marijuana is one of the causes of his bad behaviors. You might need to read about it or talk to addictions counselors. It’s absolutely one of the causes of his behaviors, if not the main cause Most people need to hit the rock bottom before they decide to seek help. As long as you provide him with home, food, bills paid and money to buy drugs he’ll have to incentive to seek help with his addiction. You make it comfortable for him to continue abusing drugs. Then you think he’d just randomly quit. He won’t |
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Starlingflock
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#42
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I made some changes around here so my daughter is much more comfortable for the time being. She is smiling much more and focusing on defining herself. If Id kicked him out immediately it’d be because she said that’s what she wanted and needed. That’s not how it works, so I’m digging deep, trying to see. I’m trying to see the big picture. It’s easy to know I deserve a peaceful relationship, easy to know this isn’t working and I don’t approve, and easy to know no kid wants to live in weirdness when they can live in security and fun. |
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Rose76
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#43
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Open Eyes
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#44
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I know it can contribute which is why I’ve been pressing him to curb the use, so his baseline can be determined, so he’ll be on track. |
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Open Eyes
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#45
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He’s always made more money than me until the last couple years, so he always felt entitled to what he wants to buy because he worked hard. He says now he won’t buy it, but that seems impossible. I’ve tried separating the finances, but didn’t get all the changes in place. He’s given up his card a number of times which seems to be most effective while it lasts. It’s ridiculous. Last edited by Starlingflock; May 14, 2022 at 12:12 AM.. |
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#46
So he goes to work drugged up, acts out and then gets fired. You are still saying drug abuse is not a problem on the job. It’s old wife’s take that pot only mellows people down. It causes psychosis. If someone says they went to work drunk and caused problems and got fired, would you still argue that alcohol isn’t a problem and that’s not why they misbehave on the job and then get fired?.
I understand you don’t want to leave and I get it you want to understand why he does this or that and often times it’s important to know all this. But no amount of rationalizing and finding excuses for him will change the reality of what’s happening Separating finances is not hard. Just create a bank account deposit work pay check there and only cover urgent bills like buying food and paying things for the house. If he doesn’t work, isn’t stay at home parent and is not on disability if he chooses to act out at work, he shouldn’t have to be able to buy drugs. |
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#47
You mentioned you have fear of leaving him because he has triggers. Are you afraid of him and is the true reason is not leaving is fear of him and not other things? Many stay out of fear. It is sadly understandable
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#48
Did your husband use marijuana before his break down?
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#49
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I go back and forth between wanting him to go and hoping things will improve. I just keep bringing it up to him again and again (that I can’t allow poor parenting, addiction, neglect). Each time feeling more real. Each time worrying less about how he receives the message, and believing more in my message. I’m sure he thinks his last pay check earns him some weed. I told him I don’t want him buying weed now. If he makes any money I’m sure he’ll buy weed. He’ll always find a way to get weed. He’ll trade things for it. Invite a smoker over. I guess to separate finances I would get him off my bank account and have him pay me for expenses. |
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Open Eyes
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#50
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#51
I’ve been worrying he’ll hurt himself, but I guess it’s occurred to me that what if he hurts me. Ive been afraid of him in the past, yeah.
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Open Eyes
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#52
What caused this break down he experienced?
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#53
Before diagnosis/breakdown, he’d had a number of ptsd episodes triggered by religion/religious people, male authorities at work who yelled at him/invaded his personal space, threatened him, poked him in the chest (major trigger), child abuse memories that made him shake uncontrollably, constant intrusive thoughts of abuse he went through, being told by his mom that he should forgive his dad when it’s the last thing he needed to be guilted about or directed to do (that happened like a week before breakdown) and then talking to his dad showing forgiveness which he quickly regretted, too much stress and responsibility at work with multimillion dollar project with deadlines and way too much overtime, current child abuse occurring in our family, some newly recalled abuse he had buried deep and became self harming about, some failed ventures, I could go on. He spent the summer isolating in the back yard drawing pictures of ugly men, wicked eyes, not saying much, I think he kept calling out of work, using vacation time? His face changed at this time, his eyes very wide, looking like recalling things and reliving. He couldn’t talk about it, just kept drawing so many pictures. He finally told me he has been finding himself on the verge of trigger warning and would “come to” about to do the act. It was like involuntary, taking over him. Took him to e.r. He went inpatient, it was the constant memories of all types of abuse by a few people. So much anger and depression. He was different after that-stopped socializing, seemed “gone”, etc.
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Open Eyes
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#54
I am sorry, from what you share it sounds like his ptsd can get down right crippling for him. Unfortunately, the average person can be very dismissive and can invalidate what is a genuinely horrible and confusing mental health challenge.
It’s bad enough that someone was badly traumatized in their past, but if ptsd is triggered to surface, it’s actually traumatic and confusing to the person suffering. No one chooses to suffer with this form of mental illness. And one person can have it worse than others who develop it. And it’s not just bad memories, instead the entire body carries this challenge throughout the nervous system. A trigger can cause a person to go into hyper vigilance and produce too much cortisol where the person can experience a lot of muscle tension and pain. Some individuals become addicts as a way to escape symptoms they do not know is trauma related. There are individuals that get sober only to now have to learn that they are struggling with ptsd. This adds more challenge to learning how to live their lives sober. Yes! Canibus is often used to help with the crippling ptsd symptoms. However, this is something that should be overseen by a professional. The level of THC is controlled and reduced. Buying street marijuana is bad because the weed being sold now can have very high levels of THC and that can end up damaging the brain and contribute to a person experiencing acute psychosis. I think it’s important the rest of the family gets counseling, it is not easy to live with and it’s important to understand that it’s not the sufferers fault. The fact that your daughter has come to you with concerns means she should be seeing someone to help her understand what she is witnessing and advise her on how to best protect herself from being traumatized by what she is witnessing and can not control. It’s only been two years since his break down. And to make matters worse we have all been expected to deal with a pandemic that has significantly changed how we live and interact. Also, depression can be brutal with acute ptsd as it’s mostly coming from real exhaustion. When it comes to working, it’s important to find work that is not stress producing. Your husbands therapy should be helping him identify key types of triggers so he can learn to avoid these situations moving forward and regaining a sense of being able to be productive. My guess is that your husband probably doesn’t even know all his triggers. Yes, he may need to go slowly while exploring that in therapy. I think you are sensitive and caring and you don’t want to add hurt to your husband. However, you do need to learn how to protect your own mental health. It may be helpful if both you and your daughter see a therapist together. Your daughter needs counseling, her approaching you with concerns means she is being affected and is very concerned for you. Teenagers do not have enough life skills to navigate this kind of challenge. Your daughter Is most likely afraid and confused and deserves to have understanding and help so she doesn’t end up traumatized. Last edited by Open Eyes; May 14, 2022 at 10:51 AM.. |
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Starlingflock
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#55
A therapy that may help your husband is called DBT. This can help him slowly identify the emotions that flood him that contribute to him becoming overwhelmed. His being able to slowly identify emotions and verbalizing them can help him articulate his injuries not only to a therapist but to himself. This will help him gain a much needed sense of empowerment.
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Starlingflock
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#56
Yeah PTSD isn’t a joke. My husband has been diagnosed with PTSD as well. He has it under control but it’s not something that would just go away. The thing is that substance abuse makes it worse, not better. Your husband needs to seek proper help. Not drugging.
I’d say if it’s severe enough he might need to go on disability. If he wants to stay employed though, he needs to figure out ways to behave on the job. Reality is that you can’t make him do any of it. He has to want to make changes. It can’t come from you And let’s face it as important as he is for you, and as much as you want to help him, emotional and physical health and safety of your minor children should be a priority. What happens now effects them forever. We are responsible for life we create for our children |
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Starlingflock
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#57
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My daughter is already traumatized, that was unavoidable from the breakdown, the inpatients, his talk of self harm. And as I found out recently from her, a lot of things he would say and do around her that I had no awareness of because I was at work. Since she tells me those things now, I addressed them with her (plus her counselor helps her although daughter is absolutely sick of talking about him there because it’s another place her life is taken over by him), and I’ve addressed things with him (separately of course) to the degree I can. My daughter is not concerned for me I don’t think. She just wants to be apart from the behavior and was trying to appeal to me via talk of divorce and healthy relationships. She was/is mad at me (frustrated) for being in an unhealthy relationship. She thinks his illness is no excuse, and she thinks he could improve things but that he stubbornly won’t. I was diagnosed with ptsd as well and I’ve had a lot of complications from it but I mostly manage it by way of wanting to be “good,” especially a good mother. My husbands values are focused on nonconformity, passion, creativity, monogamy. |
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Open Eyes
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#58
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Open Eyes
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#59
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I can’t help him, I know it. I want the best life for my kids! It’s just dawned on me…I think a couple few years ago my husband must have been telling our son that I want to separate because suddenly my son was saying “mom you have to love us how we are. We are a family we have to stay together.” My husband was standing there. It was very weird and tense and I steered things another way. My kids confronted me around the same time (without him there) with long faces, asking me if I was getting a divorce. I asked them why they were asking me that, and they said they had seen something on the computer. I had been looking it up for my job, and explained that to them. They were relieved and crying. So from this, I had put out of my head to leave him when I had been privately considering it before. That’s why I was caught off guard when my daughter brought her suggestion for divorce to me. My son currently asks how I can stand to be with him and he limits contact with him as much as possible. I want what’s best and it’s a confusing tangled mess in my head and heart which is why I’m coming here. Thank you everyone for taking your time for me. |
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Open Eyes
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Legendary Wise Elder
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#60
((((Starlingflock)))),
You did a good job explaining things. I think you needed to get that all out too. It’s understandable that you don’t know what course to take. I am sorry that your own personal history has been that of living your life around addiction issues and a parent that also had mental health issues. It’s what you know, what’s familiar to you and why you also have ptsd symptoms yourself. It sounds like your husband has more than ptsd, some kind of other disorder along with how he developed an addiction problem too. How old are your children? Last edited by Open Eyes; May 14, 2022 at 06:11 PM.. |
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