I like to strap my guy in a chair and put a ball gag in his mouth so he has to listen to all I have to say.
Haha...yeah, won't lie. I've had that same thought. That gag ball...stuff of my daydreams.
We're going to talk about this or I'm gonna...
Yes, I keep arriving at that conclusion too. Boundary. It's a tricky one to enforce, because he continues to reassure me that we're going to talk about this. Really, when do you decide it's not going to happen and pull that boundary? There's a saying around my parts: "Hope is always the last to die." Well it hasn't died yet :(
When we have an argument and it overflows his
stress cup it NEVER gets resolved at the time. I usually have to use my "flight" response. When we've both calmed down (this is where J is awesome) he will ask me if I'm ok.That's my cue to express what I need to. He knows he reacts pretty intensely. And he knows (after the fact) that he was in PTSD mode.
That sounds pretty similar to our dynamic as well. Only that in this situation, I can't reasonably answer his question "are you ok?" with anything but a "yeah, but I need this discussed," because of course I'm not okay and I'm not going to drop this one. I'm pretty good at remaining calm and reasonable and non-confrontational, but it's taking superhuman strength and patience to cater to his needs when I'm here having to question the foundation of our relationship. So...it's been difficult.
You actually DO have the power to punish and judge. Mothers aren't the only people who can do that.
I disagree with that somewhat. I have the power and right to make my own choices based on the information I'm receiving (be that staying or leaving.) That's me taking care of me and my boundaries and needs. A mother has the prerogative to lecture, judge, and punish in order to mold her child into a person that aligns with her values and beliefs. I don't have that ability or right as a partner. All I can do is take a look at what I'm dealing with (which is what I'm asking of him!) and make my own choice about leaving or staying. If he is keeping stuff hidden to prevent me from leaving, then he's overstepping his bounds and manipulating me by withholding information.
If the person accepts it without judgement and doesn't come up with some way (either passive-aggressive or down right aggressive) to make me pay for it, I'll be more likely to risk more truth telling down the road.
I totally agree with you. It's incredibly important to listen without judgement and not turn any flavor of aggressive (though there's a case to be made for the right to express anger, in a constructive way, of course.) But I'll have to ask: how does one hold you accountable for your mistakes (if the truth is some mistake, not something unrelated) if one isn't allowed to express one's dismay or disagreement because that would mean you clam up and not tell the truth the next time around?
I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around this because what the above entails would basically mean him making a mistake, me listening in a loving, caring manner, while keeping any and all personal emotional response under wraps. That sounds more like a therapist's job to me than a partner on equal footing. Just so you don't get me wrong, I'm more than willing to cater to his limitations b/c of his PTSD, so I'm not saying it's not also on me to make sure those conversations go smoothly. But I think it's a little much to ask to not hold someone accountable.
In the case you're talking about, for reasons of your own, you have strong feelings about him getting messages from other women. He knows that, right? How could he not?
Just to clarify again. I don't have strong feelings about him getting messages from other women. I'm not jealous or controlling. I do have strong feelings about secrecy, lying, and hiding. If there are reasons he wanted to keep that conversation private, that's fine. But it's secretive to not even be able to discuss that if it were the case.
Someday down the road, when he's got all of his own issues under better control, maybe he'll be able to handle this kind of disagreement.
Yes, that's what it's starting to look like. I think it all boils down to his triggers and difficulty working through them. This is a make or break point of whether his trigger management allows him to be fit and ready to be in a relationship. Or not.
ut, at the moment, I honestly don't think there's any way to just fix this.
I agree based on all of the above. I was just wondering if there are some communication tools, as well as boundary enforcement strategies, I could use to do my part in fixing this.