My marriage of 15 years is one in which my wife has only in the last
five years realized that this "might be PMS," and only discovered the
identity of PMDD in the last two years. In hindsight, I can see elements
of PMS or PMDD even in our dating relationship but over the years we both attributed those elements to something more akin to an assertive personality.
After the birth of our last child, a time that coincided with some family financial distress, she began losing her ability to hold on to reality. Whatever the first cause, I am losing my ability to hang on too.
Her statements speak of great, deep darkness. She can see no hope. She speaks of a switch that goes off and on but she is often unable to identify that it is on PMDD for several days. By then much damage has been done.
As honestly as I can assess the situation, I am not an "unsupportive" husband. I have learned, however, that support is not usually offering solutions. She mostly needs someone to listen and be present with her. Being present, though, means reminding her by my mere presence of the multiplicity of faults and results in my being berated and hearing about how I have made everything hopeless.
I try to serve but in these times everything is wrong including what I might choose to do to help. I have gotten to the point where my mind is swimming and I cannot focus on anything much at all in or out of PMDD time. She has a switch, I do not. She goes back to normal and wonders why I am so moody. In her better times, she is sympathetic and apologetic.
We are both working on it. She is trying to find solutions; I am trying to stay close as long as possible and take as many blows as I can without crumbling. We are both bearing our crosses.
After the birth of our last child, a time that coincided with some family financial distress, she began losing her ability to hold on to reality. Whatever the first cause, I am losing my ability to hang on too.
Her statements speak of great, deep darkness. She can see no hope. She speaks of a switch that goes off and on but she is often unable to identify that it is on PMDD for several days. By then much damage has been done.
As honestly as I can assess the situation, I am not an "unsupportive" husband. I have learned, however, that support is not usually offering solutions. She mostly needs someone to listen and be present with her. Being present, though, means reminding her by my mere presence of the multiplicity of faults and results in my being berated and hearing about how I have made everything hopeless.
I try to serve but in these times everything is wrong including what I might choose to do to help. I have gotten to the point where my mind is swimming and I cannot focus on anything much at all in or out of PMDD time. She has a switch, I do not. She goes back to normal and wonders why I am so moody. In her better times, she is sympathetic and apologetic.
We are both working on it. She is trying to find solutions; I am trying to stay close as long as possible and take as many blows as I can without crumbling. We are both bearing our crosses.