Evio….I have C-PTSD from childhood trauma. (Homelessness, drug addiction, abusive, etc). When they say it takes 2-5 years to heal, I can say it was closer to 5 for me.
EMDR was a godsend for me. Went in for A trauma, walked out having dealt with childhood trauma. I also had very insomnia, very disturbing dreams, I struggle/struggled with eating (I completely lose any appetite), I was in the throes of menopause during DDay. Feel free to PM me.
When we were pre-A, after my upbringing, FWH had been my only safe place. I bought the fairytale. I placed all my safety in one basket. It was an illusion I don’t think people who’ve never experienced severe childhood trauma can relate to as easily. Affairs are devastating for anyone betrayed….but the when that illusion of 100% safety provided by my H came down, I had to learn that I have the ability to keep myself safe.
I will say that for me I’m not 100% safe within my body anywhere. I do believe that it is a day to day thing for me. For me, I now have tools to deal with that flight or fight. Somatic exercises help. Reminding myself that while the feeling is distressing, this is my body and brain doing what they were made to do, ie keep me safe.
I do feel safe within my marriage, but not the blind trust I once had. There was a Gottman exercise in one of their books about listing out the ways you can trust your FWS post DDay. While I couldn’t trust him 100%, I could trust him 60%….early on post DDay. That was mostly because of what he was doing. I couldn’t trust him 100%, but I could trust him to do the dishes, to do his best to be a good dad, to step in to help when I was having a bad day, etc. We built on all those little things. Those little things also helped me to recognize how very superficial the A actually was. FWH never did stuff like that for the AP.
Of course this is difficult, this is your primary adult relationship. Affair betrayal is traumatic. Trauma sticks to trauma in your brain.
This month is the 7th anniversary of DDay for me. I’m not perpetually in flight or fight, but this month it is much more activated than usual….and running into the AP a few days ago is challenging on an extreme level.
In some ways, having C-PTSD had me more co-dependent on H pre-DDay. In many ways, I’ve prioritized myself since DDay, out of necessity. I have an amazing friend group. Amazing counselor. We had an expert MC.
If you’re both willing to work together, you’re definitely a candidate for recovery. But, I do think it has taken me longer than someone without C-PTSD.