Home   News   Forums   Log in    Get personal advice    My area     Help    
|
Go to:
All forums
  Ask the Expert Areas
  No psychological free advice is available in English (for more info click "info")
  Is my husband suffering from paranoia?
  Re: Is my husband suffering from paranoia?
MORE INFO

CATEGORIES

KOM2002 (plain)  Is my husband suffering from paranoia?

Thread Messages in thread:

reply Re: Is my husband suffering from paranoia? , Gunborg Palme - Leg psykolog - Leg psykoterapeut - Telefon 08-664 60 92 , 09 Feb 2005 09:29
plain Is my husband suffering from paranoia? , ****** , 08 Feb 2005 22:30
 40800. To top of pageTop   Next message down
Is my husband suffering from paranoia?
From: ******
Date: Tue, 8 Feb 2005 22:30:08 +0100
Language: English

 


Reply to this message

Reply to all  

plain
My husband has been acting very strange lately. He feels that everyone including his family and friends are against him, or out to get him. He feels that everyone picks on him and that no matter what he says or does he's always in the wrong. We try everything to keep his spirits up but nothing seems to help. he even thinks our kids are turning on him (even our 5 year old). He has been spending more and more time off by himself watching tv in his bedroom or in the living room. If we try to interact with him we're "picking" on him but if we leave him be we're ignoring him. i'm at a loss and our marriage is suffering terribly because of it. I don't know how to approach him about it, i'm afraid he'll think i'm "picking" on him again if i try to bring it up. Is there any advice you can give me and maybe a psycosis i could offer up to our dr. if needed?
Any advice would be helpful, thank you

Confused Wife
 40820. To top of pageTop Previous message Previous message  
Re: Is my husband suffering from paranoia? (Reply to: 40800 from ****** )
From: Gunborg Palme - Leg psykolog - Leg psykoterapeut - Telefon 08-664 60 92
Date: Wed, 9 Feb 2005 09:29:17 +0100
Language: English

 


Reply to this message

Reply to all  

reply

You can bring things up without making him feel that you are picking on him. Accept him the way he is. Give him a lot of appreciation every time he does something good. Tell him that you love him and admire him.

Try to find things to like about him and ask your children to show their father that they love and trust him, if possible. Don't ever accuse him, but ask him in a nice way what you need from him.

If none of this helps, he may have to see a psychiatrist. If your husband refuses, you can go to a psychiatrist yourself to start discussing your husband's problems.




You are not logged in
Today's date: Fri, 29 Mar 2024 08:46:26 +0100
KOM 2002