Freida
VIP Member
Yay!!!!! So happy to hear he loved you keeping in contact!
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Thank you so much! I’m only over a year into my relationship with my boyfriend, but whatever it takes to help him get through this tough time, I’m gonna do it.It's thirty years later and my wife and I still do this. It would look different if I described it but it's the same dynamic/foundation. My heart aches for her when I can't get her to pursue me. I get mad when she's away then she comes home and I go all to pieces. Hormones and mother nature are always on 100% lol. The more I yell and tell you (her) to go away the more I want to be conquered. Loved into submission. (It's not very hard.) I don't have to make her prove it anymore. Thirty years is a long time to hang in there with the sh*t we've been through. Thanks for your thread it's lovely. I feel the sentiment. I wish you well.
Thank you so much for this. I am definitely starting to get better at self-care (again). I’m starting to develop the mentality that taking care of myself also means that I’m taking care of the relationship.I understand a lot of what you're going through. I've been doing this with my guy for almost 9 years. He just started EMDR in September and now we still talk and see each other, but in a "broken up"/"unconventional" capacity (that's what he calls it). I want you to be prepared that "a few months" is WAY beyond optimistic. I also have PTSD and was diagnosed 20 years ago. He was diagnosed in 2013-2014...somewhere in there. He's been in therapy on/off....every time he pushes away, this time he is BIG time. From what I've been reading in all of your posts here is that you're having a fairly difficult time. It's hard, and it's very likely to get even harder, so be please be careful and find plenty of ways to handle your own self care.
I don't know if my own PTSD makes it more difficult at times, but it takes me a little bit to get "settled in" even though we've been doing this for a long time. Also, I do have my own Therapist, a support group, my kids, my business, etc to keep me going. My guy stays in contact, and is generally as gentle as he can be, and it still brings up mountains of questions.
It's good to have an "I'll do anything" mindset most of the time, but if not kept in check, it can cause you a lot of anxiety too. Just be careful some of the things you "do" aren't crossing any boundaries for you or him. You MUST have them in order to survive.
I’m starting to develop the mentality that taking care of myself also means that I’m taking care of the relationship.
That’s what I meant... I’m taking care of myself in a way that helps me bring something positive to my relationship, on my end. I was on the verge of codependency early on, but just like you said, I learned that his stuff is his and that making him the person responsible for my happiness is something I do not want. Sorry for how I worded it, but by him taking care of himself and by me doing the same with my own self-care translates, to me, that we both are working on our relationship because when we do finally come together, it’s positive.I'm not sure if you meant that you realize you should stop doing this....but this statement screams co-dependence to me. No, taking care of yourself does NOT mean taking care of the relationship. They are two separate things and should be two separate things.
It's not wrong to want to work on your relationship, but to think that it's how you take care of yourself is an extremely slippery slope. It's your job to take care of you, his job to take care of him, and up to BOTH of you to work on the relationship. Relationships take work and patience and mindfulness...etc. I'm not one to advocate for "quitting" when it's rough either...my own relationship is a testament to that. However, it is not healthy for you to base your happiness on it.
It took me a long time and a convoy of truckloads to realize that the only person that can be in charge of bringing me happiness is ME. Learning that is the only reason I have enough in my cup to be able to give to a relationship at the level I have to sometimes. If you mean that taking care of yourself helps you be healthy enough to take care of the relationship...well, than that makes sense. But that's not how you have it worded....and yes there's a difference. A colossal difference.
I'm not sure if you meant that you realize you should stop doing this....but this statement screams co-dependence to me. No, taking care of yourself does NOT mean taking care of the relationship. They are two separate things and should be two separate things.
It's not wrong to want to work on your relationship, but to think that it's how you take care of yourself is an extremely slippery slope. It's your job to take care of you, his job to take care of him, and up to BOTH of you to work on the relationship. Relationships take work and patience and mindfulness...etc. I'm not one to advocate for "quitting" when it's rough either...my own relationship is a testament to that. However, it is not healthy for you to base your happiness on it.
It took me a long time and a convoy of truckloads to realize that the only person that can be in charge of bringing me happiness is ME. Learning that is the only reason I have enough in my cup to be able to give to a relationship at the level I have to sometimes. If you mean that taking care of yourself helps you be healthy enough to take care of the relationship...well, than that makes sense. But that's not how you have it worded....and yes there's a difference. A colossal difference.
No worries! I appreciate your input regardless! :-)@Jay02 , I'm sorry if I misread it. I'm glad to know you're taking care of yourself.
@EveHarrington codependency goes beyond just "fixing". "losing yourself" in someone or your relationship is codependent....that's how I originally read it, but Jay02 cleared it up that I read it wrong. That's all....no big deal.
@Jay02 , I'm sorry if I misread it. I'm glad to know you're taking care of yourself.
@EveHarrington codependency goes beyond just "fixing". "losing yourself" in someone or your relationship is codependent....that's how I originally read it, but Jay02 cleared it up that I read it wrong. That's all....no big deal.