Ok, I am a supporter, so this is coming from a supporter perspective. My responses tend to look out for the supporter and their well being first. I’m not attacking your guy, I don’t know him. My advice is focused on you and your own mental state.
now that I have found this Forum I know, the way he acts...running, coming back...is “normal” PTSD behavoiur and I that has helped me immensely to understand him better...I know he wants a relationship with me....I know he loves intimacy, but holds it back, because as he said two weeks ago...if I give you my little finger, you will take the entire arm...meaning, if he opens up for intimacy just a little he will be in a relationship before he knows what is going on...and he cannot handle that...he has a hard time taking care of himself!
Did he tell you all of this, or is this what you’ve concluded from reading the forums?
There is no “normal” PTSD behavior. Everybody responds to stressors differently. Some isolate, so relationship hop, some are promiscuous, some avoid... and on and on. Keep in mind these are coping mechanisms, not symptoms. He is choosing his behaviors here, for whatever reason.
You have to be careful if it’s from reading the forums... a lot of supporters come here looking for reasons to explain or excuse the way their sufferers are acting. It helps the heartbreak. So be careful not to try and mind-read or excuse everything because he has PTSD. That is a HUGE supporter trap. HUGE.
Keep in mind, if this behavior is not acceptable for anybody else, it is not acceptable for him. PTSD is not a free pass.
The past two years have been full of hurdles...getting his early retirement....struggle for over 6 years to get that, then waiting for the settlement he was promised, then buying a house...no energy for therapy...unfortunately!
Hon, there is always something. If he wanted therapy he’d get it. That’s a universal truth. Excuses are easy, treatment is hard.
It is in his interest to get better...that has nothing to do with me.
You can see that... probably everybody but him can see that. It doesn’t mean that he wants to. Getting better is hard. Trauma therapy is brutal. He has to be ready to take that on. He may not be able to.
There is nothing that you can do or say to fix this. He sounds like he isn’t healthy enough for a relationship. That suuuuuucks from the supporter side. Loving you has nothing to do with it. You could be the most perfect, smoking hot, patient, understanding woman in the world that he loves madly... it won’t make him better. You can’t love the PTSD out of him. He won’t heal himself out of love for you.
PTSD relationships can work. Some of us here have been with our partners for years. The trick to it is, like
@LuckiLee said earlier, a partner healthy enough for a relationship and lots and lots of work from both parties.
What I would suggest is sitting down and thinking about what your needs are, what your boundaries are, and what you can realistically deal with. I’m not saying leave. I’m saying take the love goggles off and look at reality. Supporters don’t get love goggles. Our partners are mentally ill, and we have to live in reality land.
Think about these questions - Can you live with things the way they are now? What if he gets worse? What are your deal breakers? Does he make you more happy than sad?