@Katherine more than anything, we've been together 14 years and this really isn't him.
I have PPD and it honestly sounds like heās suffering pretty bad I always make excuses which Iām trying to do anything else but interact with baby on my bad days I know itās not fair on my partner but itās a illness Iāve been suffering for years and I do understand where heās coming from with the medication point of view but itās trial and error try and level and speak with him in a calm manor and make sure you let him know that your here for him and you are trying to understand Iāve finally found a medication after years and Iām having more good days than bad but sometimes itās impossible on the bad days heās using going out as a coping mechanism to try and cope with how he feels. It also sounds like he has post partum rage which I thought only women experience but apparently itās not the case I feel so much anger sometimes and say some things I regret and honestly think his outbursts at toddler could be like that l. Like I say I donāt honestly know this for sure just going off
My own experience sending you so much love because I know it must be so hard for you x
@Abbey thank you so much x
My husband is struggling with PPD and this sounds so familiar. He didnāt want to talk to anyone about it as he was worried no one would take him seriously but I managed to persuade him to at least try. Iād had such terrible PPD after my first that Iād spotted the signs in him after our second was born. He got started on medication and absolutely hated the side affects. It took another 2 or 3 goes to find one that works for him. Weāre getting additional support from health visiting and heās having some counselling sessions on the NHS to help. It such hard work seeing them go through it and shouldering all the work with the kids to. Make sure you are taking care of yourself too, and hope he can maybe seek help soon š©·.
Does anyone know if this is something that can get better on it's own over time or do I need to push him to get help? š©
You need to push him to get help, his behaviour toward your two year old is not acceptable at all and when your mental health starts impacting the wellbeing of a child or anyone around you frankly you need to bite the bullet and do something about it I hope you can work through this, this bubbling frustration and suffering heās feeling that is now only showing as āshoutingā and calling a literal two year old āstupidā could get worse if he doesnāt seek help and nip it in the bud now Iām sorry youāre going through this and Iām really sorry heās hurting but this isnāt okay for any of you to be suffering with- and if he isnāt going to help either baby then he at least needs to get help to make sure he can adequately look after himself and your toddler without becoming a hugely negative aspect of your family life I wish you the best of luck, thereās often community support groups for dads available that suit men a bit more as itās more of a lads environment so that could help?
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Do you love your husband and want to stay together? x