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When does the reaction end?

Paintcrisis's picture

Today I filled a bucket in the sink and walked away for a minute. When I remembered it was running, I rushed back in a panic. It overflowed harmlessly into the sink. In our old house, I flooded the kitchen twice last year doing something similar. I was so freaked out, I had a panick attack trying to clean it up before ExH came home and would scream at me.

He did notice the damp spots so I lied to him and said I spilled a bucket so I wouldn’t hear his abuse.

The other day, I went into the bathroom and saw the toilet roll was empty. I got scared for a minute, hoping Ex hadn’t seen it and would spew obscenities to us all.

I wonder if I need to see the crisis counselor again. I’ve been away from him for over 6 months and have the divorce papers and new name and everything. But every once in a while, I panic over stuff like this.

Comments

blayze's picture

Much love as you recover from that jerk. It must be really jarring to have those moments. You’re going to keep getting better. Just be easy with yourself and celebrate the small victories. 

Sweet T's picture

Girlfriend. I promise it gets better. I still worry about pissing the loon off but it I am 4 years out and worry less and less.

WalkOnBy's picture

you are traumatized, paint.  Totally normal after what you've been through.  A visit with the crisis counselor sounds like a good idea.

Reach out if you need me, you know where to find me xoxoxoxo

marblefawn's picture

At least read about PTSD -- that might be enough for you to realize your reaction is normal after years of that abuse. It might help calm you and help you talk yourself down to accepting your new reality: there's no one to harm you.

I experienced PTSD after three burglaries, and also after seeing my dog mauled to death by a pit bull some years ago. Moving to a boring suburb where nothing happens helped after those burglaries. But almost 10 years later, when I take my new dog to a dog park and hear dogs fighting, I still freak out and get teary. But knowing what's going on in my head and why it's happening helps me take down the panic very quickly.

You are bigger than this. You've come this far and made it out alive. Now you're recovering. It takes time, but it does get better. And you are a stronger person for what you've been through -- remember that. Sending you good thoughts!

lieutenant_dad's picture

Definitely reach back out to the counselor!

It took 3 years post-divorce for me to not cry or freak out when I would or DH would do certain things. I broke down crying in the kitchen once because DH turned and had a knife pointing at me while putting away dishes (he was turning to put the knife away in the direction I was standing; he wasn't purposefully pointing it AT me). XH used to antagonize me with knives, pointing them at me, pretending he was going to stab me, until I would curl up into a ball crying on the floor, at which point he would laugh. DH felt awful, but he truly didn't do anything wrong. Just a flashback.

I cried during sex multiple times, or would say horrible things about my body that would bring DH almost to tears (or rage at XH). I can't describe just how self-conscious XH made me feel, and that has carried over for a long time. Food has been an especially powerful self-conscious trigger, and there were times when I wouldn't eat in front of others because I was afraid they woukd ridicule me for what and the amount I ate. I have never heard a word from anyone (except the occasional friend who says "finally, someone who will eat as much sushi as I will"), but I still get VERY nervous eating around new people.

Seriously, talk to the counselor. No one could convince me what I went through was abuse, so I never went. I always thought it was just a bad marriage and everyone experienced my feelings. That's not true. No one should be afraid of spilling water, or eating an extra slice of pizza. It has taken me a few years to not let it eat me alive; don't let the same thing happen to you.

*hugs* You will make it through this stronger than before.

beebeel's picture

It was about two years after I left my abusive ex that I stopped flinching at everything and the nightmares finally quit.

lieutenant_dad's picture

I forgot about the nightmares.

I used to have them where XH would randomly appear with a posse of people, and the posse would spew vitriol at me as I begged and pleaded XH for forgiveness. In the dreams, he would be so cold and ignore me as I screamed to be heard and recognized while trying to drown out the people around me who were saying awful things.

Yep. All because he never raised a hand didn't mean he wasn't a twisted duck.

beebeel's picture

I had a recurring nightmare in which I'm vacuuming my old bedroom. My ex comes in the room and trips over the cord, so he rips it out of the wall socket and whips me with the plug end. I had that nightmare every week for two years.

AJanie's picture

I relate to this so much.  I am still on guard way more often than not. I actually have flashbacks of things my ex used to say to me. I have days where my self esteem is in the gutter, just because I remember something from 5 years ago.  It takes time, therapy, and trying your damn hardest to replace fear and negativtiy with bravery and positivity.