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Let’s Talk About the Elephant in the Room: PTS

Kaila Fain by Kaila Fain
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Nobody likes talking about it.

We’ll slap inspirational quotes on social media. We’ll post reunion videos at airports. We’ll thank veterans for their service while quietly avoiding the realities that service can leave behind. We’ve gotten good at celebrating survival while staying uncomfortable with the aftermath.

So let’s talk about the elephant in the room.

PTS.

Not just PTSD. Not just diagnoses and acronyms and clinical definitions. I mean the actual human experience behind it. The version that walks into your kitchen at 2 a.m. checking locks. The version that sits in silence at family functions. The version that gets angry too fast, shuts down too hard, or struggles to feel safe even in a room full of people who love them.

And let’s talk about the spouses too.

Because military spouses go to war in their own way. Maybe not overseas. Maybe not carrying rifles. But we carry the weight. We hold the line at home. We learn how to read the room in seconds. We learn what footsteps mean. We learn when to push and when to back off. We learn how to survive emotional landmines we never saw coming.

That does not make us victims. It makes us adaptive.

But somewhere along the line, many of us started treating PTS like a character flaw instead of an injury.

That has to stop.

Hypervigilance is not weakness. Emotional detachment is not always lack of love. Irritability is not always hatred. Sometimes the nervous system has been running at war speed for so long that the body no longer remembers peace. Sometimes the person in front of you is fighting battles you cannot see while desperately trying not to become consumed by them.

And before anyone gets defensive, let me be clear.

PTS is not an excuse to abuse people.

But understanding the root of something matters if you actually want healing instead of just punishment and resentment.

Spouses, this part is important.

Everything is not about you.

I know that sentence stings. Good. Sometimes growth does.

Your veteran’s withdrawal is not always rejection. Their silence is not always manipulation. Their struggle to regulate emotions is often rooted in survival conditioning that kept them alive at one point in their life. The military trains people to react fast, suppress emotion, compartmentalize pain, and stay mission focused. Then one day society expects them to flip a switch and become emotionally available overnight.

That is not how the nervous system works.

Healing requires self awareness from everyone involved.

Veterans have to take accountability for their healing. Spouses have to stop personalizing every emotional response. Both people have to communicate honestly. Both people have to learn regulation. Both people have to decide if they are building a relationship or keeping score.

That is the real work.

Not performative support online.
Not hashtags.
Not empty awareness campaigns once a year.

Real work looks like uncomfortable conversations. It looks like therapy. It looks like patience. It looks like learning triggers instead of weaponizing them. It looks like saying, “I know you’re struggling, but we still need accountability in this house.”

Two things can exist at once.

Someone can be deeply wounded and still deeply responsible for their actions.

And spouses, let’s talk about us for a second.

You cannot save someone by setting yourself on fire.

You are allowed to have boundaries.
You are allowed to be exhausted.
You are allowed to say, “I love you, but we need help.”

Strength is not silence. Strength is honesty.

The military community has spent too long pretending resilience means never falling apart. That is nonsense. Real resilience is rebuilding after you do. It is having the courage to look at the ugliest parts of yourself and still choosing growth anyway.

I have watched veterans survive explosions, combat, loss, addiction, isolation, guilt, and the crushing weight of feeling misunderstood in their own homes. I have also watched spouses hold families together with trembling hands while nobody checked on them.

Both deserve compassion.

Both deserve support.

And both deserve the truth.

PTS does not make someone broken.
It makes them human.

The goal is not to “go back” to who you were before trauma.
The goal is to become someone stronger, wiser, softer where it matters, and disciplined enough to not let pain drive the vehicle anymore.

That is the conversation we should have been having all along.

Tags: PTSptsd
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