User Panel
I was in a bad marriage for 30 years and suffered decades of abuse. On top of that my teenaged son killed himself.
15 years after his death and five years after the divorce I was still screwed up badly. PTSD + a side order of Bipolar 2 = a sad life. In 2010 i finally found a doctor who was able to get me into a manageable place. About a year later I met Mrs Rabinowitz and we decided to get serious. One of the first people she met was my psychiatrist. I gave them permission to discuss me behind closed doors. Mrs Rabinowitz is an RN. He gave her the unvarnished truth about me. Afterwards I sat her down for a talk. My question was simple. Do we go foward with this thing of ours. Obviously she said yes. When I asked her why, she said that weighing the good and the bad, I was a good choice. If someone has a problem they need to take responsibility for it. If they won't then walk away. Mrs Rabinowitz says I am a great husband but I have to monitor myself and take my meds. Don't hook up with sick people who won't take care of their emotional shit. |
|
Quoted:
There's no fucking way a baby will fix someone like that. If anything, the responsibility will drive them even further around the bend. (I think) View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
There's no fucking way a baby will fix someone like that. If anything, the responsibility will drive them even further around the bend. (I think) Then when you show the lightest amount of anger at your kids getting molested the judge will take away %100 of your parental rights and you'll not see your kids till they turn 18 and are asking for bail money because of their own meth problems. Quoted:
Quoted:
So I've been dating this girl who was married for 10 years to an abusive husband. She has PTSD and any conversation you have with her about it she flies off the handle and starts bawling and it ends up being a huge fight. She just wants to sit in her home, drink, and live in the past crying about what happened to her. I've told her I'm not like that and I'd like to begin a relationship with her and for her to move forward...but she just can't get past what happened to her. I guess it's time to move on. You just can't fix broken people. People with personality disorders tend to become angry and defensive, and gaslight (shift blame, change subject, rewrite history) when they dont want to talk about something they feel bad about. People with personality disorders tend to have black and white thinking, once someone no longer fills their narcissistic needs, that person becomes the worst person they can describe, like an abusive ex. People with personality disorders tend to drink and resist change. You cant fix broken people is right If some woman gives you the "I was molested, my husband abused me, etc" story, RUN LIKE HELL. And damn sure don't marry them and have kids. |
|
Quoted:
So I've been dating this girl who was married for 10 years to an abusive husband. She has PTSD and any conversation you have with her about it she flies off the handle and starts bawling and it ends up being a huge fight. She just wants to sit in her home, drink, and live in the past crying about what happened to her. I've told her I'm not like that and I'd like to begin a relationship with her and for her to move forward...but she just can't get past what happened to her. I guess it's time to move on. You just can't fix broken people. View Quote At least with sex abuse survivors there is kinky sex. |
|
Quoted:
I dated girl I met through a friend, really quiet and shy. We hit it off. A couple of dates went well, we liked each other. We didn't do anything more than kiss. We had a dinner date that ended at her place to watch a movie. When we got in the door she went from being quiet and shy to a sex monster. Like a light switch went off. Wow. We had a couple more dates that ended like that. One night she invited me over. I thought "more of the same". When I got there she was crying. Uh-oh. I asked her what was wrong and she started going off on men in general. Confused. I tried to talk to her, but she got more agitated. It got too weird for me, so I got up to leave. She attacked me! She was only 5'5" and weighed in at a buck-o-five, but she was swinging at me like a prize fighter. She got a few good hits in before I was able to get out. The next day my friend called me - he already knew what had happened. He told me that she had been married and that her husband used to hit her, like beat on her. She took it for two years before she she bailed and divorced him. That was 3 years before I met her. He told me that sometimes she had "issues". I told him fuck no, I don't want anything to do with her. That was over 30 years ago - she still asks my friend about me. View Quote |
|
Pushing yourself onto her when she’s not ready makes you another abusive person in her life. Leave her alone.
|
|
Quoted:
Pushing yourself onto her when she’s not ready makes you another abusive person in her life. Leave her alone. View Quote We are all broken. Life isn't a celebration or a parade. It's a predicament. |
|
Before this turns into a woman bashing thread, there are men AND women who suffer the same fate. There are horribly manipulative and abusive men out there too, looking for women to victimize and abuse. Frankly I figure it's about equal.
Ask your self this question. If a romantic interest abuses you. Would you stay with them? If someone is telling you some sob story about how they were abuse, why did they stay with that person so long ? (without kids) Either they are lying and they are the abuser, Or they were both abusive to each other, AND on some level they think it's ok. And if they think it's ok, what are they going to do to your kids, or let someone do to your kids when the almost inevitable divorce happens and they get custody... Women especially are enabled in this behavior because society treats a woman different than a man. People fall all over themselves on TV shows when some pretty woman says she was abused, and they seem to go deaf when she talks about her own abusive behaviors, including physical. I've seen it. Many times. If she is hot she can basically get away with murder. Or molesting young boys/girls "Not Guilty!!!" If she is fat and ugly and tells a good sob story, same thing. The OTHER HALF Remember, this applies to Men and Women. Family. If they tell you all their family and friends are trash... Or if you can find that out by other means... background checks are cheap. Court records are online. They probably aren't the only good apple in their family of miscreants. If half their cousins have records for meth and shit, or their first two spouses are meth trash, Or they talk about their meth trash ex's who abused them...what makes you think they are any different? IF they've been arrested twice for domestic abuse... This shit writes itself. If they have a good family, the odds of them being a bad apple are lower. Much lower. Frankly at this point, seeing what I've seen over the years, one would be crazy to not data mine someone if you are thinking about marrying them and having kids. Are they fiances crap, but they are young and healthy and have a job? Have they been evicted from every place they've ever lived? Keep in mind people will hid this stuff from you until they think they "have" you. Did they fuck you on the first date? Generally a bad sign, although there are obviously exceptions. Most likely (90%) they fuck everybody on the first date. You weren't the most incredible person they ever met. Just one more sucker in a long line. And if YOU fucked THEM on the first date. For shame. FOR SHAME |
|
I have a hard line in the sand... No mental illness. The ex was a disaster and it took me 8.5 years to shake my savior complex and get out of that shit.
After him, I refused to date anyone with mental illness or family members with it. It's not personal. Of course mental illness doesn't make someone 'bad'. It's just not something I want to deal with or babysit. Also on my no fly list: people who can't stop being victims. Ok, little Timmy pushed you into lockers when you were a kid. It sucked. Move on. |
|
Quoted:
LOFL. If she wasn't ready she wouldn't be throwing that pussy like it had a best by date. We are all broken. Life isn't a celebration or a parade. It's a predicament. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Pushing yourself onto her when she’s not ready makes you another abusive person in her life. Leave her alone. We are all broken. Life isn't a celebration or a parade. It's a predicament. |
|
Next...
Pre existing children. OR adoptions. OR both. Do they have a kids whos other parent is trash? Who they tell you (or you find out) have been molested or exposed to porn at a young age? You are about to maybe have babies with this person. What makes you think your own kids will be safe from theirs? If one of the kid's parents "killed" themselves after they got their 28th arrest (21 of which were for meth), and the child has been exposed to porn and/or molested by one of their friends/family,etc , why would you bring this broken child into your house to destroy your own future children? Once a kid is ~6 years old they are who they will always be. Grade school teachers can tell which kids will be in jail later in life. They have lists in the office. If you are about to adopt a kid, and/or bring their child into your house, and you expect to have children with this person... You see where this is going, right? Actions have consequences, sometimes YEARS down the road. |
|
Quoted:
some fucking friend you have. He didn't warn you about her in advance? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
I dated girl I met through a friend, really quiet and shy. We hit it off. A couple of dates went well, we liked each other. We didn't do anything more than kiss. We had a dinner date that ended at her place to watch a movie. When we got in the door she went from being quiet and shy to a sex monster. Like a light switch went off. Wow. We had a couple more dates that ended like that. One night she invited me over. I thought "more of the same". When I got there she was crying. Uh-oh. I asked her what was wrong and she started going off on men in general. Confused. I tried to talk to her, but she got more agitated. It got too weird for me, so I got up to leave. She attacked me! She was only 5'5" and weighed in at a buck-o-five, but she was swinging at me like a prize fighter. She got a few good hits in before I was able to get out. The next day my friend called me - he already knew what had happened. He told me that she had been married and that her husband used to hit her, like beat on her. She took it for two years before she she bailed and divorced him. That was 3 years before I met her. He told me that sometimes she had "issues". I told him fuck no, I don't want anything to do with her. That was over 30 years ago - she still asks my friend about me. |
|
The best thing you can do for her if you love her is tell her she needs the help of a competent therapist.
Then just stand back and give some space. The problem will follow her around until she has someone to assist her with working through it. The PTSD will likely never entirely go away, but it’s manageable if she has the tools. Therapy may take years (I did 3). As for the poster who wondered why someone abused in this fashion would return, that sounds to me like codependency. Sometimes people stay with emotionally or physically abusive people out of some sense of trying to live up to their vows. I did, because it seemed humiliating to me to leave a man I vowed to love. If you think religion or spirituality has nothing to do with it, just look at Shane. People hate to admit failure under these circumstances. These days my PTSD only kicks up when I see someone else who shows the outward signs I had. Several years ago I saw a woman at the Wanamacher show OK. She had handprint bruises on her arms and I had to go sit down to get myself together. |
|
Quoted:
I have a hard line in the sand... No mental illness. The ex was a disaster and it took me 8.5 years to shake my savior complex and get out of that shit. After him, I refused to date anyone with mental illness or family members with it. It's not personal. Of course mental illness doesn't make someone 'bad'. It's just not something I want to deal with or babysit. Also on my no fly list: people who can't stop being victims. Ok, little Timmy pushed you into lockers when you were a kid. It sucked. Move on. View Quote If you've overcome the odds, then I'm happy for you. But it isn't the norm. Not by a long shot. |
|
Quoted: I submit that we all have some form of mental illness. Nobody I've met has had a Beaver Cleaver upbringing. We all have demons, and we are all trying to figure our way in this world. Looking for perfect is an exercise in futility. If you've overcome the odds, then I'm happy for you. But it isn't the norm. Not by a long shot. View Quote I did find perfect. Everyone's perfect is subjective. For me, I found someone with a healthy family and the ability to rationalize through things instead of focusing on them nonstop. People who stay victims get trapped in their pasts and can't move forward. Of course we all have demons. We either succumb to them or recover from them. Don't take my post to mean harsher things than it does. |
|
Quoted:
I dated girl I met through a friend, really quiet and shy. We hit it off. A couple of dates went well, we liked each other. We didn't do anything more than kiss. We had a dinner date that ended at her place to watch a movie. When we got in the door she went from being quiet and shy to a sex monster. Like a light switch went off. Wow. We had a couple more dates that ended like that. One night she invited me over. I thought "more of the same". When I got there she was crying. Uh-oh. I asked her what was wrong and she started going off on men in general. Confused. I tried to talk to her, but she got more agitated. It got too weird for me, so I got up to leave. She attacked me! She was only 5'5" and weighed in at a buck-o-five, but she was swinging at me like a prize fighter. She got a few good hits in before I was able to get out. The next day my friend called me - he already knew what had happened. He told me that she had been married and that her husband used to hit her, like beat on her. She took it for two years before she she bailed and divorced him. That was 3 years before I met her. He told me that sometimes she had "issues". I told him fuck no, I don't want anything to do with her. That was over 30 years ago - she still asks my friend about me. View Quote As far as I know my wifes first husband did not abuse her, till the end when he was running around on her, she has a lot of family baggage though. A couple weeks after we got together I came over and found her sitting in a bedroom floor going through cds and crying. I thought ok, she has been through some stuff (very very little I knew about at the time) and figured we all have baggage we can work through things. If I only knew, we would not have been together long enough for me to have found her like that. |
|
Sometimes it’s best to move on, doesn’t sound like she has quite gotten over her past. Until she does, you will be on a downward spiral relationship that will not end well.
|
|
Quoted:
My ex came from severe abuse and was bipolar. I did find perfect. Everyone's perfect is subjective. For me, I found someone with a healthy family and the ability to rationalize through things instead of focusing on them nonstop. People who stay victims get trapped in their pasts and can't move forward. Of course we all have demons. We either succumb to them or recover from them. Don't take my post to mean harsher things than it does. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted: I submit that we all have some form of mental illness. Nobody I've met has had a Beaver Cleaver upbringing. We all have demons, and we are all trying to figure our way in this world. Looking for perfect is an exercise in futility. If you've overcome the odds, then I'm happy for you. But it isn't the norm. Not by a long shot. I did find perfect. Everyone's perfect is subjective. For me, I found someone with a healthy family and the ability to rationalize through things instead of focusing on them nonstop. People who stay victims get trapped in their pasts and can't move forward. Of course we all have demons. We either succumb to them or recover from them. Don't take my post to mean harsher things than it does. |
|
|
|
|
|
Quoted:
The best thing you can do for her if you love her is tell her she needs the help of a competent therapist. Then just stand back and give some space. The problem will follow her around until she has someone to assist her with working through it. The PTSD will likely never entirely go away, but it’s manageable if she has the tools. Therapy may take years (I did 3). As for the poster who wondered why someone abused in this fashion would return, that sounds to me like codependency. Sometimes people stay with emotionally or physically abusive people out of some sense of trying to live up to their vows. I did, because it seemed humiliating to me to leave a man I vowed to love. If you think religion or spirituality has nothing to do with it, just look at Shane. People hate to admit failure under these circumstances. These days my PTSD only kicks up when I see someone else who shows the outward signs I had. Several years ago I saw a woman at the Wanamacher show OK. She had handprint bruises on her arms and I had to go sit down to get myself together. View Quote Because you aren't broken. |
|
If she doesn't want to be fixed, she can't be fixed. I ask her if she wants to try and fix things first, and if she doesn't, then I would bail, and let her know why.
|
|
Quoted:
You didn't put up with that shit, did you? Because you aren't broken. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
The best thing you can do for her if you love her is tell her she needs the help of a competent therapist. Then just stand back and give some space. The problem will follow her around until she has someone to assist her with working through it. The PTSD will likely never entirely go away, but it’s manageable if she has the tools. Therapy may take years (I did 3). As for the poster who wondered why someone abused in this fashion would return, that sounds to me like codependency. Sometimes people stay with emotionally or physically abusive people out of some sense of trying to live up to their vows. I did, because it seemed humiliating to me to leave a man I vowed to love. If you think religion or spirituality has nothing to do with it, just look at Shane. People hate to admit failure under these circumstances. These days my PTSD only kicks up when I see someone else who shows the outward signs I had. Several years ago I saw a woman at the Wanamacher show OK. She had handprint bruises on her arms and I had to go sit down to get myself together. Because you aren't broken. I had an exceptional therapist. I spent three years in therapy, and left right toward the end of my time in therapy. |
|
Quoted:
I dealt with many of those types in my previous occupation. They actually want abusers for relationships in most cases. If you are kind and decent to them they usually will come to disrespect or dislike you and will treat you like shit. It is better to just ghost them and be done with it. Very likely she will not even care or contact you which says it all. View Quote If she grew up in an abusive home, she will subconsciously seek out a mate with the same characteristics. |
|
It's an oldie. The first time I heard it, it was a dick that shot $100 bills.
|
|
Quoted:
My mother had that happen to her. Ex was some black op in Army during Vietnam. The guy was sent to kill one person and get out alive to repeat it later. He can track anyone anywhere and show up anywhere and disappear just as fast. He used her as a beating post, he has problems. She let it go and married 2 guys who are opposite of what he was. But if the female wants to live like that its time to move on you cant fix someone who isnt willing to move forward. They like drama, ive seen my share of drama from females. I just cant believe that they feed off it like a baby does sucking on a tit. View Quote |
|
Quoted:
Can't find the video, he does a better job explaining it there, but here is a quote that sums it up: Women say they have sexual thoughts too. They have no idea. It's the difference between shooting a bullet and throwing it. If they knew what we were really thinking, they'd never stop slapping us. Larry Miller View Quote And let’s not forget they’re sex drive increases in their 30’s and they become a bit more like horny teenage boys... |
|
If you went to the store to buy a jar of pickles, would you buy the jar that was dropped on the floor and is broken? No - no you wouldn't. The same concept applies to finding a significant other. You didn't break it, don't buy it.
A healthy relationship is when two happy people unite. It's impossible to make someone else happy in the long run. Trust me, I just spent the last four years of a nine year marriage trying to make someone happy who was determined to be miserable. |
|
Did not read 5 pages. Been there done that . You are not Captain saves a ho. Just saying.
|
|
|
Quoted:
So I've been dating this girl who was married for 10 years to an abusive husband. She has PTSD and any conversation you have with her about it she flies off the handle and starts bawling and it ends up being a huge fight. She just wants to sit in her home, drink, and live in the past crying about what happened to her. I've told her I'm not like that and I'd like to begin a relationship with her and for her to move forward...but she just can't get past what happened to her. I guess it's time to move on. You just can't fix broken people. View Quote I know people who came from homes where everyone was an abusive psychopath and they just got out as fast as they could and pretty much had a "bad shit happens" attitude. As a consequence, normal life became exceptionally easy for them and they don't even notice the shit that can sidetrack most of us. It seems to be a matter of seeing yourself as a survivor or a victim. Some people do that with greater capability than others. |
|
Don't be the test case.
Get on your mount sir white knight and ride away. |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.