I think it is worth entertaining the option that you guys do not have what it takes to be in a
PTSD relationship together.
Yup. That may be the hardest part, right there. Which is why I'm letting him go. The things I post here, are things I can't tell him, or say to him, because it won't help him. As soon as I realized what we were dealing with, and how PTSD is different (and complex PTSD even more so) from any other mental illness, and did my research, I stopped. I gave him his space. It was a complete shift of gears from what we had before, where he *wanted* us to be able to talk about our problems. I knew he had "issues," and I tried to let him take the lead on what he could do and handle. So I believed him not only when he said he has problems (though never called it anything other than a "bad childhood"), but I ALSO believed him when he said HE could deal with it.
That's why it's so hard, and jarring, to go from "We got this and if we don't, we'll do what it takes to figure it out" (from him) to "Nope. I'm done. I don't WANT to deal with this anymore, I never have wanted to deal with this, I stopped myself from running SO MANY TIMES already and I don't want to fight it anymore. And no, I don't want to get help, either." All in the span of three weeks, after a stress bucket dumped itself into an already drowned stress cup. So to me, and our marriage counselor (who kind of specializes in relationships and people with trauma), and my therapist, and the family that he still talks to, it's so much a result of PTSD.
It's jarring to go from being told he's already MADE the decision to do what it takes to heal, to hearing "Nope. Not going to, don't want to. I just want you to go away." And that's the problem. He's an adult, and ultimately, he has to own up to it, too. I thought he already had. But some "normal" rules of relationships still have to apply. Lying is still lying, even if it's to yourself, too.
Both people have to have what it takes, you're definitely right
@tiredtexan