Justmehere
Sponsor
My therapist and I talked about some friends I know through a faith community that are asking me for advice on how on they can support other people with PTSD.
I'm struggling because when I told two people in this circle of friends about my own diagnosis a few years ago it did not go well. Now I don't tell any of them at the faith community about any of it. I don't talk about it. It's off limits. (Please don't tell me how terrible faith communities can be, or that I should leave mine. I know they screw up at times/way too much and the reasons I stay are complex.)
I have developed (apparently) a reputation for being a safe person who knows how be friends with others who are struggling with "big" things and they say I seem to know a lot about trauma and how to help people who have been traumatized... so they are asking me.
I told her I was angry these friends want to be there for someone else, but there was no one there for me.
She told me that people can't just approach a group of friends and ask for help like another person is doing within this faith community. It has to happen naturally. I asked what she meant but she didn't really explain it in a way I understood.
I told her that at some point I want to address that this group wasn't there for me in a safe and healthy way, and those problems still exist and need to be addressed.
She kept telling me they won't be there for you. Someone will be someday but it's not them. I mean yeah... but they are asking me how they can be there for people...
And then the session was over.
Any thoughts about what she might talking about?
I'm struggling because when I told two people in this circle of friends about my own diagnosis a few years ago it did not go well. Now I don't tell any of them at the faith community about any of it. I don't talk about it. It's off limits. (Please don't tell me how terrible faith communities can be, or that I should leave mine. I know they screw up at times/way too much and the reasons I stay are complex.)
I have developed (apparently) a reputation for being a safe person who knows how be friends with others who are struggling with "big" things and they say I seem to know a lot about trauma and how to help people who have been traumatized... so they are asking me.
I told her I was angry these friends want to be there for someone else, but there was no one there for me.
She told me that people can't just approach a group of friends and ask for help like another person is doing within this faith community. It has to happen naturally. I asked what she meant but she didn't really explain it in a way I understood.
I told her that at some point I want to address that this group wasn't there for me in a safe and healthy way, and those problems still exist and need to be addressed.
She kept telling me they won't be there for you. Someone will be someday but it's not them. I mean yeah... but they are asking me how they can be there for people...
And then the session was over.
Any thoughts about what she might talking about?