@glass half full - I think you raise a point that is something important for sufferers to keep in mind - the importance of supporters to appreciate supporters and vice versa. Not because supporters are so horrible to be around we should thank our supporters for enduring great pain by being around us, but because even in PTSD affected relationship, showing appreciation and understanding for the other person is an important relationship skill. I think you also are feeling of the place of deep and real pain of being shut out by someone you care deeply about, who can't/isn't/or won't communicate or show the real care someone should have for you in a relationship with them. That's real and valid heartache.
However, I think you are taking things too far when you imply the majority of sufferers have an "oh well" attitude about the impact of their PTSD symptoms on supporters. Frankly, many sufferers are guilt ridden about this and carry shame and self hate over it that is quite profound.
the toll it takes on us is largely unacknowledged and unappreciated by our sufferers.
I have not actually seen a sufferer respond to the well communicated pain of supporter with a true "oh well." I have seen many end the relationship because they knew they couldn't be what the supporter needed. I have sat with a sufferer crying for hours and almost sucidial over the deep pain they couldn't be there for the supporter like they wanted to be able to be for them.
You are basically implying sufferers have no empathy and feelings for the other person in the relationship, and that's not PTSD. That's sociopathy. That does hurt and is awful!
Most sufferers struggle to even accept that someone would want to be in any kind of relationship with them at all.
As a sufferer, I expect my supporters to leave at any second and I try to show the appreciation I have for them and the person I support does the same. Myself and others fail often, but that's common even in non-PTSD relationships.
It's also a little to far to act like the supporter is always in pain and there to just endure. Sometimes that does happen and it's not healthy. I
The fact is, a supporter is in the relationship because they get something positive from being in relationship with the person. If they don't then it's not a fair relationship to the sufferer or the supporter. Especially not the supporter. I personally don't want supporters who just silently endure the pain of being in a relationship with me with an "oh well" attitude about the toll of symptoms on them. I want supporters who enjoy and love being with me, and can understand my symptoms are not there because of a lack of concern for the supporter.
When my relationship with the person I support gets to the point that it's not a two way relationship, and it's all about them their pain and I am not even in the relationship - even when I'm there - I let them know I want to stay, and it needs to change in order for me to stay, and if things don't change, I have to move on and carry on life without them. Painfully. It's simply about what I can and can not do. I also work hard to accept the person as they are, and accept what they can and can not do, and try to figure out if that's something I can be with them in and still find it a good relationship for me -- because it's not fair to them or me for me to stay in it just enduring pain and expecting it to change and resting them when it doesn't.
PTSD hurts on both sides of the supporter/sufferer side. It's rarely about the supporter or sufferer wanting to reapond to the pain of the other person with an "oh well" approach. Usually there is deep care and concern on both sides, but sometimes there is not the ability to be what the other person needs them to be no matter how much they care and hurt over the other person's very real pain.