@xraydave - just a few things, to clarify some things about the way this forum works:
i just dont like people triggering me, maybe dont reply to my posts next time?
What you'll actually want to do is put any member whose posts you don't wish to see on 'ignore'. You can click on their avatar or username to get their profile pop-up, and you'll see the 'ignore' option there.
It's up to you to manage your own triggers; others can post as they like. Since we all have triggers and they are all different, it's much more effective for individual members to take individual responsibility.
I just dont see why it is so difficult to see a post, and think 'hmm that looks a bit wrong, but he's obviously hypervigilant and has ptsd, and can have emotional and cognitive processing difficulties so maybe i will look over it without questioning him like he is some dictator or authority over the issue'
Relating to the above: since we all can have blind spots, were we to overlook all of each others' symptoms all of the time, we'd all be missing out on opportunities to have our own distortions pointed out to us. This is a support forum, but one that encourages active response, not mind-reading.
I'm not sure how anyone could have gotten hyper vigilance from your posts, without leaping to assumptions about you, something else we try and avoid. Not everyone here has the same symptom set.
I'm not offering any of this as a provocation - merely a desire to clarify the dynamic here on the forum. I'm the admin, that's my job. Since you are relatively new - you were here for awhile, briefly, gone and now back - I'd encourage you to keep an open mind and learn the dynamic of this particular community, rather than starting from an idea about how you'd expect a PTSD forum to work.
One of the reasons I am struggling to get help is, I believe, because this was a gay relationship. I feel because it was two males, that it hasn't been taken as seriously as if it were a heterosexual relationship or if I was a woman.
This doesn't surprise me at all. Even if you're dealing with someone who isn't homophobic per se, I think there is a general misunderstanding about gay male relationships - that they exist on one of two emotional extremes; either they are hyper-feminized, or they are hyper-masculine and therefore, violent by choice. And, since you're a man, you're already at a disadvantage to be understood as the abused partner in a relationship, because statistically, more women are domestically abused.
I do want to challenge the notion that you wouldn't be able to handle seeing a male practitioner, though. I'm not saying it's not true, but have you tried?
I appreciate everyone's POV and am sorry that it has caused such a heated debate.
Nothing to apologize for. And welcome - glad you're here.