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Relationship Any luck/tips getting your issues resolved with your so?

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This may be sh*tty advice, but honestly the consistent thing that allowed him to open up and for us to discuss heavy or sensitive topics? Alcohol. We'd go out for dinner and drinks and after a few, he'd be much more willing to talk it out. Not like I was drugging him with alcohol to get him to talk (*rolls eyes*), but we did drink often.

My sufferer turned to alcohol to cope with her C-PTSD. And, you’re absolutely correct @dulcia , during “most” of those times, she could open up and share her heart. Alcohol is a funny gatekeeper though, sometimes it would also let the demons out. Towards the end, she drank alone to stew in her own thoughts.

It was when she had to stop drinking or die due to physical issues that the PTSD came with a vengeance. In retrospect, the PTSD was always there, the drug of choice worked most of the time in the beginning but quit working eventually.

You didn’t give sh*tty advice, sometimes I think, in our case also, I’d rather have the alcohol than the PTSD. Eventually, however, that comes with its own issues including death.
 
that allowed him to open up and for us to discuss heavy or sensitive topics? Alcohol.
Ha, yeah, I'm not gonna lie. He's a regular little chatter box when he's tipsy. Too bad he's started taking really good care of himself and is practically not drinking anymore (jk, it's great, he feels a lot better without it.) Drinking sure did help in the past :)

I don't think you're going to be able to find any sort of balance if y'all aren't able to openly talk about this other woman (or more so, the hiding of her texts)
Yes, agree 100%. I don't think I will get far talking with him about this other woman, though. I've asked all the questions about her and he's answered them. I don't have any evidence to think he's not being truthful. I'm not gonna lie, it does irk me and I still have questions, but what am I gonna do about that?

Here's an interesting little dynamic in that regard: he's triggered by someone not "believing what he says" (childhood trauma about being called a "liar" about CSA.) He'll go into full on panic if I press on an issue I think he is maybe not being honest about. That's a weird one...because essentially that means I have to take what he says and never question a word of it or the conversation will end badly. Doesn't feel all that safe for me, to be honest. Then again, PTSD works in mysterious ways. Then again, could be a super convenient excuse to lie with full liberty. Then again, I have no evidence to support he's lying...this is exhausting.

The most important convo is about him hiding the text, why he thought that necessary, how he views transparency, etc. Still working on it. Slow af progress.
 
Hmm...to get super specific, @scout86, I think it would help me if we could sit down and talk about this/her for as long as I need to without it going south. The sheer fact that I'm so limited in time asking my questions and having them answered leaves me feeling unsatisfied. If I envision the convo of my dreams it would be like:

Me: So why do you think she'd think it's okay to get in touch with you on a random Sunday night if you just exchanged a few emails about work months ago?
Him: Hm, the emails we exchanged about work were kind of jokey and fun, so maybe she took a liking to me and wanted to give it a shot?
Me: Did you like her too?
Him: I didn't think about her twice, honestly.

Just some normal, human conversation about this would help me understand who this woman was and give me some peace. The other convo about transparency and trust would have to go the same way. My views, his views, common ground...or not, you know.
 
@Hojay, he came home with a different attitude. First when he stormed out of the house. He was only gone for about 5 minutes. And in those few minutes he was able to calm himself. Slow his breathing and heart rate. We didn't discuss what happened at that time. We packed his lunch and kissed and hugged goodbye.

He knew his reaction was over the top and he knew he was in PTSD mode. So when he came home later he was calm and we were able to talk about what happened.

Is it your diary that's titled... You don't let me calm down? This is definitely important! Seriously, if he's in that place I don't say anything. I drop the subject immediately. I wait until he's in a better place. More often than not he comes to me when he's calmer.

All of this is because we are working together. He has learned alot about himself and he doesn't want to be the angry veteran that he's been for so long. That was easy. Be a di*k, no one wants to be around you. Then you don't have to worry about hurting anyone. Etc.

Sometimes he can be in PTSD mode for days. This is when we communicate less. I keep conversation minimal and light hearted. And hang with my friends and family. I give him his space. Why wouldn't I? So I can deal with grumpy grumperstein? F that!
 
@Hojay, just compromise as best as you can so you are both satisfied with this and can move forward (without compromising your gut feelings, which I think are also important)
 
OK, that makes sense. Can we keep being specific for a bit?

What's your idea of "going south"?

He probably has a definition of "going south" too. Would you be willing to hear and try to understand what his definition is, as well as giving him your definition? I don't mean you have to try to read his mind and "do the right thing". I mean actually ask him and see if you can work within the parameters of his answer. (Assuming he gives you one.)

If he has the conversation, will you be willing to drop the subject? Or the relationship, in the event that you don't like his answers? If I was in his situation (I've BEEN in his situation) I'd be more likely to give this a try if I believed I wouldn't have to do it again.

I have to confess, I have a totally different way of looking at this situation. To me, the question was asked and answered, end of topic. Again, the way I see it, I'd either believe him, or not. If I don't believe him, I have to decide if the relationship is worth going forward with. But, that's ME. I've been in a couple of relationships with people who seemed to approach things like this more like you do. I don't see it as right and wrong as much as different. But it IS different for different people.

Now, suppose you have that conversation and you ask your question
So why do you think she'd think it's okay to get in touch with you on a random Sunday night if you just exchanged a few emails about work months ago?
and his answer is something like, "I have no idea."? I ask, because that would be MY answer. Unless this is someone I know well, or have additional information about, I don't know why she called, I can't read her mind and don't feel inclined to try, and I'm probably going to be a little annoyed that my SO is asking me to either read this person's mind or they are assuming I have more information than I do. I also don't know how HE would answer the question, but the answer you gave isn't something I,personally, would have thought of. (Not that it's a bad answer, it's just not something I'd have thought of.) So, will you be ok with a totally different answer, as long as there's a conversation?
The other convo about transparency and trust would have to go the same way. My views, his views, common ground...or not, you know.
That conversation is probably the most important one, isn't it? Because the whole thing comes down to what he can do to convince you you can trust him? Or how do you know you can trust him, or something like that? (Can you see how a relationship between a person who has a hard time trusting and a person who has a hard time NOT being trusted is pretty challenging? Not because either of you is wrong, but because your needs are so contradictory?)

I think that idea about having a conversation without it going south is important, and that it would be worth the two of you exploring what your versions of going south are. I think it would help if you knew, very specifically, what he's afraid of. I'd bet it's more specific that you realize, maybe even more than he realizes. If he can pick that apart, there might be a way to have to conversation so it feels safe for both of you.
 
Oy, @scout86, thank you for being so patient with me and talking me through it :) I have to admit, I was calmer and easier before this thread. I should have never explained what it is about. I sort of knew it would turn into this--everybody has their opinion when it comes to secrecy and transparency.

And here we are. I was quite okay actually believing him that this woman is harmless and just wrote out of the blue. But explaining myself here, and especially hearing that the whole thing was "no big deal," has left me feeling a little crazy. It's all blown out of proportion now.

You know, when you've had one too many experiences with people whom you trusted implicitly (parents, partners) go to insane lengths to lie and cover up, your sense of "no big deal" kind of goes out the window. They always want you to think it's "no big deal," that you're making a mountain out of a molehill, or imagining things. That's the go-to strategy someone uses to make you shut up.

I've learned that acts of hiding, paired with anger and avoidance, are sure fire signs of lying. BUT, and this is a big BUT, there is PTSD in the mix here. So it really mitigates how I interpret his behavior. I think he should cut me some slack for trying to understand him and his reactions, and not just deciding he's lying and leaving him.

It's really breaking my brain that he's expecting me to "just trust him" after the circus he himself has unleashed because of all this. The conversation we need to have is really quite simple.

I feel like I need to explain myself. I'm not controlling, nor do I want to know every last little detail about what he does or who he speaks to. I think he created his own problem by trying to hide something that was harmless. I didn't ask for it. Like I said, it's not the other woman, it's the hiding that creates suspicion. That's just pure logics to me.

So for the record, I want to talk about trust, secrecy, and why he felt he needed to hide things. End of story. That other woman, well, I'll know how to feel about that when we have that the more important conversation in the bag.

What's your idea of "going south"?
My idea of it going south is me opening up, making myself vulnerable, telling him my thoughts, and him distorting everything, lashing out and subsequently panicking himself into a prolonged episode, ergo, no answers and no productive conversation + him having to suffer through all that.

He probably has a definition of "going south" too.
Yes, I think his idea of it is me asking one too many questions, which then sounds to him like I don't believe him, which will cause ^^

Mind you, me asking questions isn't because I don't believe him. It's because I genuinely want to understand. He can be cryptic at times. And frankly, "yes, honesty is important. period. no more discussion" is not an answer I expect from a man of his intelligence and capacity for insight, especially after he so blatantly didn't translate that into action.

So here is what I proposed: I won't talk about myself or how I feel, and I won't ask any questions. I will let him talk and not jump on what he says. His answer was "yeah, that may work."

It's really an absurd proposition if you look at it, given that I'm the one who is confused and should have a voice in this. But then again, PTSD.

see if you can work within the parameters of his answer.
Well, that's the tricky one. It really depends on how he answers. The only answers I got until now were delivered in a full-on panicked, screaming, crying tone. If I got those same answers with a reasonable degree of sanity, I'm sure I'd have an easier time "feeling" it too.

So, will you be ok with a totally different answer, as long as there's a conversation?
Yes. I don't have the perfect answers prepared for him. You just feel it when you feel it. As I say ^, there is a certain manner of conversation that feels sincere, honest, and open.

Because the whole thing comes down to what he can do to convince you you can trust him?
That's the heart of the matter. Because he broke my trust. Not other way to turn it.

(Can you see how a relationship between a person who has a hard time trusting and a person who has a hard time NOT being trusted is pretty challenging? Not because either of you is wrong, but because your needs are so contradictory?)
Oooh yes, I see the challenge and contradiction. But I would modify that: this is a relationship between a person who has a hard time trusting and a person who has a hard time NOT being trusted, who is acting in not so trustworthy ways.

I've worked hard on my trust issues, he's working on his issues with not being trusted too. Him not acting in trustworthy ways throws a giant wrench in the process.

So yes, it may well break us up. But not because I was too paranoid to trust him. Because he couldn't fulfill the basics of what building a relationship means.

That would be horrendously confusing after all we have been through and how far we have come. And it would leave me feeling incredibly guilty for not just "having trusted him." But really, it takes two.
 
everybody has their opinion when it comes to secrecy and transparency.
I totally agree. And I don't think it's really a matter of behaviors (not talking about cheating) being right or wrong. It's a matter of what people are comfortable with. To feel comfortable, it sounds like you need a lot of transparency on the part of your partner. And, to feel comfortable, it sounds like he needs more privacy. At least right now. That doesn't make either of you wrong. It doesn't mean he's trying to hide something or that you're trying to control him. Although both of those things could be true.
You know, when you've had one too many experiences with people whom you trusted implicitly (parents, partners) go to insane lengths to lie and cover up, your sense of "no big deal" kind of goes out the window.
I get that. It's why it's hard to trust my T. If someone's being nice, it usually mean they want something and it's a trick. It's hard to entertain the possibility that there are trustworthy people out there. It's also hard to get past the idea that the world won't literally come to an end if the person somehow lets you down. But the actual fact is, it won't. I totally understand you about how this works and I'm going to guess you're SO would too, if he heard it that way. (He's probably going to lose track of the idea and go into survival mode if things go south.)

That's part of what makes this so hard. Once a person starts to get triggered (either of you, in this case) the rational part of your brain quits running the show and the lizard part takes over. For both of you. That's not a PTSD thing, it's a human thing. It's just that the threshold is different with PTSD.
Yes, I think his idea of it is me asking one too many questions, which then sounds to him like I don't believe him, which will cause ^^
You might be right. It really is probably something he needs to think about carefully. It may not exactly be "one too many questions". It might be something like getting asked versions of the same question over and over, with no way to answer it that will bring the questions to an end. I say that partly because that gets to me, big time. Where do you go from there? How to you escape? Everyone needs some kind of "right answer", you know? So, sometimes if the person you're talking to doesn't understand, it can come off the same as if they don't believe you. It's a perception thing. It's real and needs to be addressed somehow.
Mind you, me asking questions isn't because I don't believe him. It's because I genuinely want to understand.
That's fair. It can, sometimes, come off like you're going to keep asking until you get the answer you want. And, I don't mean YOU as a person, I mean anyone who keeps asking and asking once you think you've answered. This is tough, because he may, honestly, not be able to explain himself to you in a way that works for you. Not because he doesn't want to, but because he literally can't. (He could be messing with you too, but you've made him sound like a pretty decent guy.)
So here is what I proposed: I won't talk about myself or how I feel, and I won't ask any questions. I will let him talk and not jump on what he says. His answer was "yeah, that may work."
Actually, I don't think there's a chance in the world that would work and I think he said what he said because he thought it was what you wanted to hear.

You HAVE to talk about how you feel and I can't imagine you not asking questions.That's who you are and what you need in this situation. Pretending otherwise isn't going to work. For either of you. Now, letting him talk and not "jumping on what he says" is something else again. Some people do have a tendency to interrupt and not wait to hear the whole answer etc. That might be something you could work on, yourself. But I think asking you to not talk about how you feel or ask questions isn't going to work, and he knows that. Which brings up another thought, for me. I've BEEN in conversations where my partner makes that kind of promise. As things played out, what it meant was they were running out of patience with the situation and were saying anything they could think of to get me to stay with the situation. To ME, and this might be a PTSDish way of reacting, I knew that what they were proposing wasn't going to work, it seemed like "a trick". (Which means something a little worse to me than it does to most people.) So, FOR ME, when I hear someone making those kinds of promises (promises I know they can't/won't keep) it kind of sends thing south right there. It seems like a lie. Even if they don't MEAN it that way, and often they don't.
Well, that's the tricky one. It really depends on how he answers.
Fair enough. That right there is an answer that I, were I in his shoes, would be comfortable with. Because it's honest. It opens discussion to the next step. "Let's talk about what we each need here and see if we can come up with some ground rules that will work." Maybe you can, maybe you can't, but you have the conversation and find out.
As I say ^, there is a certain manner of conversation that feels sincere, honest, and open.
Because he broke my trust. Not other way to turn it.
I'd like to reword those statements a little.

It seems more accurate to say "There is a certain manner of conversation that feels sincere, honest, and open TO YOU." There are going to be different conversations that feel that way to different people. There are going to be specific things that YOU interpret as trustworthy and they may not be the same for everyone else, even to other trustworthy people. True?

And, it's true that your perceive his behavior as breaking your trust. And, if you had an agreement that he was going to show you text messages like that one (as an example, because that's all that incident really is is an example), but if he'd agreed to show you messages and then went back on that agreement, I'd agree that he broke your trust when he broke that promise. If there was no such agreement, then I'd agree that he did something that caused you to be suspicious of him. In a way, this trust thing is like "making someone happy". You CAN'T exactly MAKE another person happy. That person picks their own feeling. They might be happy because of something you've done, but you can't force them to BE anything. You might intend for them to be happy and yet they aren't. Likewise, you might intend for them to trust you and they don't. You might intend for them not to be angry with you, and yet they are. He did what he did and you trust him less because of it. That doesn't, necessarily, mean the behavior was wrong, just that it produced the response that it did. He can't control your reaction to stuff. (Even if he wants to. Which can be scary.)
who is acting in not so trustworthy ways.
"Who is acting in ways that YOU PERCEIVE as untrustworthy." :) No value judgement there. It's your perception. Might be accurate, might not be. It's just information.

I don't think you have to feel guilty for not trusting him. You have reasons. They're perfectly valid. He's got reasons too and they are, likewise, valid.

As an example of a different way of looking at this. If my ex-husband, or another SO had deleted a message like your guy did. Exact same situation. It would have attracted my attention, because it seems odd. I'd have made a mental note of it and waited to see if a pattern developed. Because, to ME, there are a lot of reasons that might explain the behavior. "Cheating" is only one of them. And, in the end, if it turned out he'd been cheating? Then dump the bastard and move on. Nothing more, or less than that. (Because I really DO hate being lied to and you only get to get caught doing it once. No second chances, if it's something major.) But, to ME "lying" and "hiding something" aren't the same thing.

If I remember right, your SO had a really bad experience with a T, which left him not wanting to take a chance on therapy, ever again. You might explain to him that your own trust issues are kind of like that. (I think they probably ARE kind of like that.) I honestly think the two of you would have a better chance of sorting this out if you had a competent third party (couples T, in other words) to guide you through it. You both bring baggage to the table that's going to make it hard to see the middle ground, even if you're both trying to.

My T likes to say that we all have our own road map of reality. Some are more accurate and up to date than others and he encourages working to be as up to date and accurate as possible. But, in the end, they are only road maps, they are NOT "reality", and they will all be different. That doesn't make them right or wrong. Mine might be in black and white and yours in full color with illustrations. They are different and we'll handle the world we navigate differently as a result. You and your SO are GOING to have different road maps, because you're different people with different experiences. Doesn't mean either of you is right or wrong, although at times one of you might be operating from a more accurate map than the other. One of the interesting things about the world is, we never, absolutely for sure, know what someone else's map looks like.
thank you for being so patient with me and talking me through it
You're welcome! I'm only doing it because you seem like you're willing to keep trying to work through it yourself. (Besides, I'd really like to believe that some relationships actually work out. I'm a sucker for a happy ending. :confused:)
 
Wow, there is so much in here to think about! I don't want to hog your time, just want to spell out my thoughts about the many great things you pointed out :)

And, to feel comfortable, it sounds like he needs more privacy. At least right now.
He does, yes. About more than just Text Gate at the moment. I think all this is difficult for him because he's going through some things he wants and needs to keep private from me. I don't question him on those things, I leave him be. But somehow he's started lumping that in with stuff I do have a right to know about...this whole debacle.

Once a person starts to get triggered (either of you, in this case) the rational part of your brain quits running the show and the lizard part takes over.
Totally correct. I went lizard brain on this situation for a while. Now I've calmed down and have some perspective, also know a bit more about what I need and expect, so I'm trying to find a good and healthy way to tackle this. He, on the others, due to his illness, is having a hard time keeping lizard brain in check. Best I could do for now was wait until he's back and balanced. Took 2 months, but I think it's time to get cracking on this convo. It is essential.

So, sometimes if the person you're talking to doesn't understand, it can come off the same as if they don't believe you.
Yeah, that makes sense. What's tricky for me here is that his answers, mostly, ARE really hard for me to understand. I have to keep asking questions to really just grasp what he's saying. He often thinks he's speaking clearly. He's not. Most of his answers only leave me with more questions. So I take what he says, then have to ask more questions because what he just said doesn't align with what happened or what I remember happening, or what is simply logical to me, or or or. So it's not that I don't believe him. It's more that his answers aren't satisfying in the sense they are making.

This isn't so much a problem that we have SUCH different views of these matter. He's not giving me an answer that is just too different from me to understand. He explains behavior that negates other behaviors, that don't align with what I thought I understood before...questions abound.

Actually, I don't think there's a chance in the world that would work and I think he said what he said because he thought it was what you wanted to hear.
Yeah, I agree with you :) It's not going to work. I'm thinking of something more along the lines of: I'll let him speak and shut my trap. I will take what he says and really think about it, then come back with a measured response later. I just don't see us having a natural back and forth, given that he's tending toward distorting what he's hearing. So this is really the only thing I can think of :(

"Let's talk about what we each need here and see if we can come up with some ground rules that will work."
Yes, good god, I will use this exact sentence with him. I think I often make the mistake of talking about ME, how I feel--I'm a well-trained I-statement monkey at this point--which at this point seems to only serve to make him feel guilty. So that statement above sounds more balanced and might open up the conversation to what we mutually want and need.

And, if you had an agreement that he was going to show you text messages like that one (as an example, because that's all that incident really is is an example), but if he'd agreed to show you messages and then went back on that agreement, I'd agree that he broke your trust when he broke that promise.
I think it's important for me to explain that there is some backstory to this. In the beginning of our relationship we had a somewhat similar situation. We were together, what 2 months, and he we went on a day trip with friends from out of town. Long story short, weeks later (long process) I found out that he didn't go with friends from out of town, but a female friend who had the hots for him. Yeah, he downright lied about that. He swore on his life that there was nothing going on with this person, but that the didn't want me to get the wrong impression, so he lied to avoid the whole conversation. 1. I HAVE NO PROBLEMS WITH HIS FEMALE FRIENDS, 2. This set the stage for me to say, I don't GAF what you do and with whom, don't lie to me about stuff like that ever again. He agreed! He apologized! He said he was afraid. I believed him. Took a lot to do that with my history.

Over time I learned to slot that episode in as a confused misguided attempt at keeping me happy and I learned to trust him that he wouldn't do that again.

And now this. So he broke his promise. We need to go back to the drawing board and REALLY take a look at if he's capable of being as forthcoming as he claims he wants to be.

What I honestly think is that he doesn't take my trust issues quite seriously. In his mind, what he's "hiding" is harmless anyway, so why the big deal. I don't know if I can explain it to him with the conditions we have right here.

It would have attracted my attention, because it seems odd. I'd have made a mental note of it and waited to see if a pattern developed.
Exactly, unfortunately, there's a pattern. So this is a make or break convo.

If I remember right, your SO had a really bad experience with a T, which left him not wanting to take a chance on therapy, ever again. You might explain to him that your own trust issues are kind of like that. (I think they probably ARE kind of like that.)
I can't believe I didn't think of this: The fact that his trust issues with Ts closely mirrors my trust issues. I think I can make him understand this if I bring it as an example for him to get the gravity of the situation. (Cause to him it's also just a stupid text...) Brilliant!

the two of you would have a better chance of sorting this out if you had a competent third party
I know :( I wish. I used to dream of owning a tree house in the rainforest. Now I dream about couples counseling.

I'm only doing it because you seem like you're willing to keep trying to work through it yourself. (Besides, I'd really like to believe that some relationships actually work out. I'm a sucker for a happy ending.
I am willing to keep my side of the fence clean and effective. Also a sucker for happy endings, and I think there is a chance this can work out :) Thank you again for all your insights!
 
What's tricky for me here is that his answers, mostly, ARE really hard for me to understand. I have to keep asking questions to really just grasp what he's saying.
I'm not surprised. Here's another bit of wisdom from my T. "Words matter". That seems obvious, but they matter in some subtle ways.

There are different ways of asking what's basically the same question. For example, "What did your mean by that?" sounds different that, "Ok. I think what you mean is XYZ. Is that right? I'm kind of confused by Z. Can you explain that a little more?"

The first question can, sometimes easily, trigger that lizard brain. If you're used to be accused, it can sounds like an accusation. If you're used to being "not believed", it can sound like the beginning of that. To me, personally, it sounds like someone getting ready to tell me I'm "wrong". To find your way through this, you have to find ways to keep both of you thinking, not reacting.

That first incident makes a difference. I can see how it would make a HUGE difference to you, especially. (Just to make the point that there reallyare different road maps, and they can be VERY different, I'd have made note of both those things and be starting to give some thoughI to what I going do next, in event my SO had found someone else. No harm, no foul, no anger, maybe some other stuff though.)
So this is a make or break convo.
It's an important conversation, for sure. Here's another one of those "words matter" things. The conversation is "make or break",, if you want it to be. That's an option, and there's nothing wrong with it. But, "make or break" to me, is different than "important". To me, "make or break" means you both get exactly one chance to get this "right" or the relationship comes to an end. What does it mean to you? You might want to ask yourself if you want to put that much pressure on yourselves?

It wouldn't totally surprise me if, at some point, you can talk him in to couples therapy. A good T isn't going to take sides, they are going to make sure BOTH people get heard.
 
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