joeylittle
Sponsor
I'm guessing that he told you the therapist said that. Which, whether it's true or not - does give you an opening to a conversation in which you ask him, if he had ideas about anything you could do to help alleviate anything. I think it would be worth an ask, anyway. It's even possible that you walking on eggshells and tiptoeing is part of the stress. It's definitely stressful for you, and might be for him, too.His therapist told him I was a “ source of major triggers and stress”
If you feel like you can get into a headspace where you can ask him the question, and just listen to his response as openly and non-judgmentally as you can - and then give yourself some space to process the info, think about it, and decide whether he's talking about things that you can do, or whether he's really talking about his reactions and not your behavior (if that makes sense).
By "this was nasty" - do you mean your response was considered nasty by him but you didn't mean it that way, or that you think your response was nasty?He didn’t hear and said “ I’m not even going to bother asking what you’re talking about”. I said “okay, fine with me”. This was nasty, and he said he wants out. I just leave him alone when he gets like this- talking makes it worse.He sees this relationship has very rocky.
It sounds like you are lashing out at him a little....a different response to what he said (above) would have been "it's OK, I was just talking to myself" - since you were. But it also sounds like him saying "I'm not even going to bother asking" also hurt your feelings, which might have influenced your response.
And if you are a couple who habitually engages in verbal sparring - it's possible that you and he would benefit from making a deal to be able to say "lets go easy on each other in this talk, I'm having a bad day".
I think a better framing for your problem would be, "how do we stop stressing each other?". It's a two-way street. But in order to address it, one of you will need to open the door for the other to talk about it - and that's where you could (maybe) put some energy, making the space for you both to be able to listen to each other's needs.
That's really great to know about, I wasn't aware they did that specific kind of support work. NAMI is a fantastic resource, great recommendation.I took a NAMI Homefront course to help deal with stuff, it’s something you may want to look into if you wish to stay in this.