do most people go through a denial phase when starting therapy?
I did. It took me a year, going every week for a year, to tell my therapist why I was really there but "I didn't need therapy" and "was only there because I was forced to be". I've called my therapist every single nasty thing one can say to another (thank god he is an amazing therapist and knows how to not just take that but take that and gently turn it to being something healing).
I accepted the BPD diagnosis as it was suspected by me years before, but the PTSD diagnosis was reject by me for many months, as was other things he said I had or exibited, such as Stolkholm (at the time).
So yeah, i was in denial and rejected therapy for a long, LONG, time.
Is it possible he will never have a break through and always blame me for everything?
I mean, I guess. Anything is possible really. But I think you are looking too hard at this. He has symptoms. Those symptoms get worse with therapy in the beginning and possibly for a while. That't how I see that.
How do I get him to feel differently?
You can't get anyone to feel anything. We control our own feelings. But, to be honest, if I found out a supporter told mutual friends (or anyone I know in real life) that I have PTSD or trauma or anything, that's done for me. I'm gone. That is mine to tell, not theirs. So, in my opinion, don't seek support from mutual friends or even people you both know. Seek it here anonymously or with people he knows know and are ok with them knowing or with people he doesn't know.
I realize I am just getting in the way of his recovery and not giving him TRUE space to get through what he needs to get through. I keep seeing signs from the universe of "hope" and I know deep down we are meant to be together, I just have to let it go and let things happen the way they are supposed to.
This confuses me. So is he just isolated from you or is he fully seperated from you?
I appologize if I didn't read it correctly or if already advised as I didn't read any replies.