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A reminder, for sufferers posting in the Supporter forum.
A reminder, for sufferers posting in the Supporter forum.
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Can a person with PTSD break up with someone without the other saying "it's just the PTSD! He'll come around!" No! He has said it in so many ways. Lying or not doesn't even matter anymore as he has booted you out of his life.
Are you a sufferer? Because this sounds like maybe you are projecting, like you have had people in your life who have not respected your wishes or boundaries and kept pushing and pushing, all the while writing your actions off as a symptom of an illness.
Thank you so much @Willowtree . It helps so much to know that others have experienced the same thing. I was truly in awe of what happened and hearing other peoples experiences has helped greatly. Thank you for your kind words.
I used to get my feelings hurt at some of the replies I would get when I first started coming here and posting. What I quickly learned was, this is not the place to be if all you want is encouraging smiles, pats on the back, and "he'll come around!"s. This is where you come for real people, real life advice from individuals who are living it. No -- a lot of the times you won't like the feedback you get. Yes -- sometimes members have their own shit going on and may not give the best or most tactful advice. Is it coming from a bad place? Most of the time, no! I think it's important (in all aspects of life) to be open to other points of view, especially if it's something you're new to (like PTSD). I don't see a lack of empathy here. Nor, do I see akicking them while they're down scenario. I see a wide array of advice and feedback that the OP can either choose to ignore or not.The persistent lack of empathy towards people who are genuinely hurting on here continues to blow my mind.
My issue is this is becoming about his PTSD when all that happened is a break up. He, for whatever reason, does not want to be in the relationship and this poster keeps pushing herself into his life when he has made it clear as can be that he just wants her to leave him alone. PTSD is not to blame.
Willow, I relate to every single word you have written here. This pain is so unlike anything anybo...
@lostforgottensoul has PTSD, yes. So do I, another person you took to be pretty cold blooded earlier.Are you a sufferer?
I've never experienced this as something that shows up "at a moments notice". I've experienced it as something that grows over a period of time, where I attempt to communicate and my attempts don't go anywhere. As time goes on (and I guess it could be hours or days, but, for me, it's usually longer than that) and the person I'm dealing with continues to miss what I'm trying to communicate, and my own desperation to communicate grows. By the time I get to where I'm communicating in ways that are nearly impossible to miss (Get out of my life! NOW!) I can see where, to the person who didn't get what I was trying to say earlier might be surprised and think it came out of nowhere, but it actually didn't. I suppose this is some kind of communication problem and maybe it even happens with "normal" people. But, maybe not.the need to create distance (long or short term) at a moment's notice