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Relationship Why does my bf isolate himself from me?

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It's mostly something I figured out by reading the posts from this forum. He's only mentioned it in the past that he deals with it and doesn't make excuses for himself because of it so I believe him. But also based on what I've read on this forum I think with out a doubt it is what he is dealing with.
So - you don't know that he actually has PTSD.

I'd recommend that you not get too wrapped up in PTSD explanations for his behavior - 6 months, 7 months is when adult romantic relationships start to get real, as they move past the honeymoon phase.

If you knew for certain that this wasn't PTSD - how would you be dealing with it?
 
Suffer here
. This time is also a bit different because night before he ran we were at a BBQ and he struck up a conversation with another Marine and shared war stories all night a
Chances are this was the trigger. It's good to share stories but isolation can be required afterwards to decompress.

.. but does it get better? As in the frequency or the duration?
not necessarily. You just get better at dealing with it.
hat about talking to a mental health professional, does that help
therapy will probably make it worse because he will have to start dealing with his demons and that is damn hard

@joeylittle is dead on - would you allow him to treat you like this if he didn't have ptsd? Without a diagnosis it's hard to know for sure if it's a mental illness thing or if he's just being an ass. Either way you have to decide what you will tolerate in a relationship.
 
Thank you so much for sharing your point of view! I think you are spot on in that he likely raised his voice at me and acted out of character because I was pushing myself on him, but at the time I didn't know a lot about PTSD, then I found this forum and started doing some research on the effects of it.
And you're right, he is able to go to work and be with his friends and family, but somehow I am always pushed out of the picture. I struggle a lot with that and I feel like he's ashamed to be with me even though he says he loves me.
I have no idea what he is going through, but based on what you described as your hell I wish I could help him... I hate to think of the man I love curled up on the bathroom floor.
I'm very worried about him this time because usually I will get a text from him a few days in saying something at least, but this time I haven't heard anything at all and it's been over a week.
Thanks again lostforgottensoul!
Ex supporter here. It was the same for me....he could go to the movies, restaurants and so on with his male or even female friends...not with me. Spend hours with them...where the amount of time he spend with me, would get smaller and smaller the more I pushed for time and intimacy until I felt reduced to a friend with benefits....and then I broke it off after two years of push-pull. I know that it is hell for you when he pulls back and especially when he sees everybody but you....pure hell. You can try to set boundaries....but if he is anything like my guy that will only push him further away. PTSD is a bitch...I wish I had some great advice for you, but I really don’t....just respect that he pulls away....don’t push him even when you feel like screaming.
 
I think letting yourself off the hook a bit will go a long way. Stop beating yourself up! You didn't know! It's ok!

A big thing that I see a lot of long time supporters do a lot of is self care. Take care of yourself first! Be it mentally, physically, or just giving yourself a break.

You mentioned anxiety a few times. Maybe even a therapist for yourself? They can help you understand your relationship with your BF even better and it's much more personal and in depth and you can understand the PTSD aspect of it. You can learn how to lay boundries and where and how to adhere to them. But mainly, you can learn how to take great care of yourself. If my supporter isn't taking care of themselves while I am isolated, that makes it so much worse for me as well.

But, mainly, your mental wellbeing should always come first for you. Use your oxygen mask on yourself first. You can't help him during it. No one can help me while I am on the bathroom floor in the dark but my service dog but no human can help me. I have to go through it and go through it alone (human wise).

The best thing you can do for him is to help yourself. You know? Stop beating yourself up for past mistakes that you made without the knowledge you have today and cannot change those mistakes (if you can call them that as you didn't have the knowledge you do today) would be the first on the list of helping yourself. If that makes any sense.
That makes total sense, thank you! I'm realizing this time around that taking care of my self is pretty much all that I can do and in the past I've completely neglected my personal well being. I'm trying everything I can to keep myself busy and keep my mind off of him.
It's hard to say if 'it gets better' @apear1818. I have been at this many years, and I still have my moments. It doesn't last as long, and I can regroup faster. But it also depends on the causes for PTSD to begin with.

You can ask him if he would consider therapy. But let it go then. Regardless of what he says,' ya, ok, I'll try' or 'no ,not now' or NO.

He has to be the one to seek out help. You can even offer to help gather information WITH him. But not do it for him.

And it was suggested you get help too. I highly recommend that. If you are going to commit to this, you are going to need help, and have a place to go to unload.

If he hasn't been diagnosed with PTSD, you telling him he may have it, will probably not bode well. Just asking if he has considered therapy is a good question without you assuming you know more about him than he knows of himself. It's like walking in a minefield.

I can tell you don't quite believes us that 'love' won't be enough. Is him NOT going for help after a reasonable amount of time a deal breaker for you?? And keeping in mind what a 'reasonable amount of time' would be, is two different things to you and to him. What if it takes him years to go for help? Just some questions you need to ask yourself.

If he doesn't go for help, what plans do you have in place for the times he ghosts without a word from him? How long are you willing to take all the responsiblity? Can you calmly and rationaly speak to him to at least text you while he is gone to let you know he is ok? You do have the right to ask. But be reasonable. He may not be able to text every day. Or he may forget.

Not forget because he doesn't care about you, but because there is sometimes no room in the pain for a text. Sounds dramatic. It is. But honest.

And forgive yourself for not knowing. Even knowing you are going to be human. It will be great, then awful. It's a roller coaster ride. And compare what all it's taken the past few months, can you do this for years? Even if he goes for help, it is going to take years of healing.

Not trying to talk you out of being in a relationship with him. We all deserve to be loved. Just would like to see you walking in with your eyes wide open.

I truly wish you both a positive journey, together. For his sake and yours. He can not give you what he does not have. Not yet. Until he cares about himself.

We are good people. With wounded hearts and shattered sense of self and saftey. It can get very complicated and very emotional.

Wishing the best for both of you. Gentle hugs if accepted. :hug:
Thanks for the input! I am comfortable asking him if he would consider getting help because it's something he has brought up to me recently-- actually just after the last time that he isolated. He knows that something is not right with him and he want's to just live a normal quiet life but he has entirely too much going on in his head at all times (those are his words, not mine).

We haven't talked about what the isolation is doing to our relationship beyond making up after he's done it each time in the past. Before I started doing my research I attributed the isolation solely to some event that he was dealing with during those periods and I thought that he just didn't deal with stress well.

I would like for him to talk to a professional (and possibly one for myself too), but if he doesn't then I do need to have a conversation about what I should expect and why I should trust that he is not just disappearing to be a jerk. Like I've said previously, when he isolates he character and demeanor are completely different than when he is feeling like his self.

If he doesn't, or even if he does seek out professional help, I would still like to have a conversation with him about what both of us need when he is isolating. For me that would be a text every few days to let me know he is ok and alive; for him it would probably be for me to leave him the heck alone and take care of myself. I definitely don't need a text every hour or even every day, but every few days or a couple of times a week would be nice and reassuring.

So far in our (short) relationship, this is the only problem we have.. other than this I can honestly say it's the happiest I've ever been with somebody; he's an amazing man and completely worth sticking around for. I'm not here to "fix" him, but I do want to have a life with him and keep making memories and going on adventures.

Thank you again for the input. This forum has helped me cope with all of this beyond what my words can express. This is the first time I haven't felt completely crazy (or weak) for sticking around even though he's put me through all of this.
Best way to support him? Leave him alone.

I know it sucks. I’m a supporter in a relationship with a combat vet as well, and he isolates too.

When he’s isolating he is overwhelmed. He’s trying to reset. He cannot deal with his own emotions, so he really cannot deal with other people’s either. That’s why he can work, or hang out with friends, or be on social media... they don’t take an emotional toll like romantic relationships do. It’s nothing you’ve done, and nothing to do with the relationship. He just needs a break to deal with his own shit.

Giving him space is a loving act. Reigning in your own anxiety is a loving act. He’s overwhelmed and needs that love.
Thank you for the advice! I'm trying to put myself in the best mindset possible so that I do not try and talk to him and overwhelm him. I want to better understand the toll that our romantic relationship takes on him so that I might understand him better. I'm getting better at giving him his space and focusing on my own life even though I want to scream sometimes.
I’m glad you are learning more about PTSD and I can tell you really care about him a lot.

You are on the right track to do all you can to avoid contacting him, remembering that when someone says no, or otherwise sets a boundary, it’s best to respect that boundary.

It is really supportive of the person and their healing to respect boundaries they set —especially for trauma survivors, as it’s often critical to trust. Trauma is the invasion of so many boundaries... respecting boundaries is the opposite. It will show him you are safe. When you want to text him, you could remind yourself you want to show him you are safe and you will wait.

What kind of supports do you have for you? Friends or family? Diving into other relationships might help reduce some of the anxiety and worry you feel and meet your needs for connection with others.
Thank you for the reply! I do care about him a lot and I want to be there for him in any way that will help him, even if it's just knowing when to back off. In the past it's been hard for me to respect those boundaries and give him space because I didn't know why he was isolating himself, but by reading everything I have so far it's starting to make sense to me and it's gotten easier to simply just leave him alone.

My bestfriend is my main support system and she's been there for me through it all. I've also started spending more time with my family and trying to cultivate new friendships to have reasons to get out of the house or get my mind off of him. It depends on the day, but usually diving into those other relationships does help ease my anxiety about it a bit.
Suffer here

Chances are this was the trigger. It's good to share stories but isolation can be required afterwards to decompress.


not necessarily. You just get better at dealing with it.

therapy will probably make it worse because he will have to start dealing with his demons and that is damn hard

@joeylittle is dead on - would you allow him to treat you like this if he didn't have ptsd? Without a diagnosis it's hard to know for sure if it's a mental illness thing or if he's just being an ass. Either way you have to decide what you will tolerate in a relationship.
I think you're right about sharing the stories being the trigger. Before I turned in for the night he was completely fine and kissed me goodbye, but when he came back he was a completely different person.

Thank you for that insight on therapy, I didn't necessarily think therapy could make things worse, but you're right, he would have to face all of his demons. However, if that will help him in the long run to be happy then I will be there to support him in any ways I can. He doesn't like to talk to me about his time in the military, or even his life right after he got out very much, but I do recall him saying that he took advantage of the VA for a while after he got out. I cannot say for sure that he has or has not been diagnosed with PTSD, but after everything he has been through and all of the signs and symptoms he presents, it makes sense. However, I am not a mental health care professional, so I am basing my opinion on my intuition and what I have read so far. If he were to seek out help and not be diagnosed with PTSD, that would be a different story and I think I would be on the wrong forum... at that point I would find a "my boyfriend is an ass" forum; but, as of right now I am going to support him because he is worth it and deserves to have someone in his corner.
Ex supporter here. It was the same for me....he could go to the movies, restaurants and so on with his male or even female friends...not with me. Spend hours with them...where the amount of time he spend with me, would get smaller and smaller the more I pushed for time and intimacy until I felt reduced to a friend with benefits....and then I broke it off after two years of push-pull. I know that it is hell for you when he pulls back and especially when he sees everybody but you....pure hell. You can try to set boundaries....but if he is anything like my guy that will only push him further away. PTSD is a bitch...I wish I had some great advice for you, but I really don’t....just respect that he pulls away....don’t push him even when you feel like screaming.
Thank you for sharing, I'm glad to know that I'm not the only one that has been through this situation. While I am happy that he is happy, I find it very hard to deal with seeing him on social media, or knowing that he is horsing around at work.

When he is in a good state of mind we do spend a lot of time together, maybe that is something I should consider cutting back on.

I completely understand the push-pull hell. I want to pull him in when he wants to push me away. It is very difficult for me to accept the pushing aspect because of the type of person that I am. I want answers and explanations, I want to understand and if I don't get that my anxiety immediately goes through the roof. For a while the hardest part of all of this was not knowing why he was pushing away, and I thought it was my fault. I'm happy and relieved to know that it probably doesn't have anything to do with me, he just needs time to reset. With that, I am able to reel in my anxiety and respect his boundaries. Thanks again Butterfly64!
 
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So - you don't know that he actually has PTSD.

I'd recommend that you not get too wrapped up in PTSD explanations for his behavior - 6 months, 7 months is when adult romantic relationships start to get real, as they move past the honeymoon phase.

If you knew for certain that this wasn't PTSD - how would you be dealing with it?

Thank you for your input joeylittle.
No, I do not know for sure, I would like for him to seek professional care and either be diagnosed or not be, but that is not up to me and I can't push it on him. This has been happening in our relationship since the third month in where he just disappears with out any warning or reason, then comes back a week or two later like nothing ever happened. When he is gone and I try to talk to him he always says "you're making this worse" or gets angry and says that he needs to be left alone.
It is absolutely in the back of my mind that it may not be PTSD causing this behavior, and he may just not be the person I think he is; however, I cannot rule out either possibility until I speak with him and I don't know when he is coming back.
If I knew for certain that this wasn't PTSD I think I would be in an entirely different boat. I try to be an understanding person so I would first want to know why he disappears with out any notice or reason and for an undetermined amount of time, but I'm not sure how lenient I would be or how calm I would be. I wish I could answer your question better, but to be quite honest, I'm not sure how I would react or deal with it... though probably not well.
 
he struck up a conversation with another Marine and shared war stories all night and long after I turned in.

If it helps at all? The last time I kicked it with another jarhead I didn’t just isolate from people I have to be real with, but the entire rest of the world, as well. Lost a job over it, didn’t care.

Doesn’t mean I can’t hang out with other Marines full stop, or even other combat vets (that’s usually easier, esp if they’re from a different country). If I’m doing it regularly? It ain’t no thing. At least, not most of the time. Shrug. Intense shit happens sometimes no matter where you’re at or who you’re with. But the sheer level of ethos & old ghosts involved, especially if we’ve been the same places and done the same things or know the same people? Gets hard, fast. Or can, when it’s with other misguided children. A helluva lot faster, and a helluva lot harder.

If you knew for certain that this wasn't PTSD - how would you be dealing with it?

@apear1818 ^^^THIS^^^ is the single best piece of advice for dealing with PTSD that you’re actually 100% on... from my experience of mostly dating blokes with my own brand of crazy.

Because, not only does everyone’s symptom set vary to some degree... but how people deal? Is down to personality & inclination. Just as an example, let’s use a shared symptom of nightmares (since it’s not something you/he are struggling with at present, like isolating). I can date 5 blokes with nightmares, and all 5 are going to handle them differently.
- 1 may wake everyone else in the house up, lashing out and yelling at them.
- 1 may grab a shower and go for a run.
- 1 may go get very seriously, and very quietly drunk
- 1 may wake me up for sex
- 1 may arm himself and “sleep” (half waking doze) in the hallway or stairs.

(In no particular order) 2 of those? Aren’t an issue for me. 1 would be an issue sometimes. 1 I would be breaking up with the guy over, because no f*cking way in hell. And 1 of them whether or not I had a problem with it or not would depend entirely on other factors.

But that’s ME. A girlfriend of mine? Has almost the exact opposite req list. Because that’s HER. Neither is right/wrong, it’s just personal preference.

A benefit of almost exclusively dating combat vets with PTSD, is that it takes PTSD off the table, entirely. Nothing is excused because he has PTSD. Pfft. Everyone has nightmares, and panic attacks, and shit. It’s not the having them that’s important... it’s HOW they deal with it. And whether or not I’m cool with their choices.

So jumping back into the isolating issue you ARE struggling with?

Some people? Are fine with being separated from their partner for long periods of time... other people are bawling their eyes out &/or “in 50 years of marriage, we’ve never spent a night apart!” :D Most people fall somewhere in the middle. Doesn’t really matter where you fall on the spectrum, it’s knowing WHERE you fall on that spectrum. What you can be happy with. If you can’t spend even 1 night apart happy? Probably best to not date a firefighter who’s gone 2-3 nights a week, every week, for the next 20 years. Can’t spent 1 month apart? Probably best not to date active duty military, who’re going to be deployed 6-12 months at a stretch. Some people, meanwhile, can handle firefighters just fine, because they’re there week in and week out, but not military. Meanwhile people who are fine with long deployments get mad as hell over being a hunting-widow or sports-widow, because hunting and sports are hobbies, not jobs. Shrug. Everyone’s happy-zones differ. If your bloke isolates when he gets stressed out? There MAY be some wiggle room, enough to venn diagram what you need and what he needs, but neither of you can force yourselves to no longer need those things. Wants have acres of wiggle room, but needs, not so much.

My personal rec is to take PTSD off the table. How long -realistically- can you be happy with / not bothered by / irritated by / unhappy but can suck up here and there / not gonna tolerate Full Stop? Figure out your own personal spectrum. Then.., when he’s NOT isolating... have a confab with him & see if what he needs & wants can line up with what you need & want.
 
Thanks for your reply, @apear1818. I appreciate your willingness to consider the questions I asked. Just a few thoughts based on your reply:
It is absolutely in the back of my mind that it may not be PTSD causing this behavior, and he may just not be the person I think he is; however, I cannot rule out either possibility until I speak with him and I don't know when he is coming back.
Just remember - there are other mental health problems besides PTSD. His symptoms could be better explained by a different diagnosis. But in any case - the one thing I do think you can be sure of is, there's something going on. You may not be able to tell what it is, when you talk to him - either because he doesn't or can't communicate about it, or because you don't have the tools to analyze him yourself. BUT - you can be confident knowing that there's something up, and asking him to if nothing else, get help for it.
I try to be an understanding person so I would first want to know why he disappears with out any notice or reason and for an undetermined amount of time, but I'm not sure how lenient I would be or how calm I would be. I wish I could answer your question better, but to be quite honest, I'm not sure how I would react or deal with it... though probably not well.
My personal rec is to take PTSD off the table. How long -realistically- can you be happy with / not bothered by / irritated by / unhappy but can suck up here and there / not gonna tolerate Full Stop? Figure out your own personal spectrum.
I wanted to second @Friday's advice - it'd be mine as well. There are three possibilities, as far as he's concerned:
  1. He could be sick (and that could be PTSD or it could be something else entirely)
  2. He could be working his way out of the relationship
  3. He could want you to accept the relationship on these terms, with his absences going unquestioned.
You've got this time with him away to do some reflecting on what's really happening - the part where he's gone and not communicating - and how it affects you. Are you willing to tolerate this behavior? Because even if it is PTSD, and even if he does get help - he can't promise you he's going to recover neatly. PTSD is a chronic condition, and you'll be signing on for that.

And - you might not even know him well enough to really know your own feelings on this...7 months is not that long a time to be together. It's OK for you to feel frustrated, disappointed, sad, angry, confused, etc. by his disappearing act. And it's OK to decide you're not willing to do this again. Whether he's sick, whatever it is, or not.
 
Hi @apear1818 , I see this a little bit differently, but I mean this (very) gently, though I do agree with the others. When you say:
I was desperate for him to talk to me and give me answers so I would go to drastic measures that I did not realize until recently would probably only make his/our situation worse. I wish I could take back some of the things I've done and said to him while he is isolating himself... I said them out of ignorance because I did not know about PTSD
and
I'm getting better at giving him his space and focusing on my own life even though I want to scream sometimes.
as well as:
I ompletely understand the push-pull hell. I want to pull him in when he wants to push me away. It is very difficult for me to accept the pushing aspect because of the type of person that I am. I want answers and explanations, I want to understand and if I don't get that my anxiety immediately goes through the roof. For a while the hardest part of all of this was not knowing why he was pushing away, and I thought it was my fault
these ^^^ are actually reflective of your anxiety. His behaviour, fwiw, is not the actual problem outright. As @Friday said:
My personal rec is to take PTSD off the table. How long -realistically- can you be happy with / not bothered by / irritated by / unhappy but can suck up here and there / not gonna tolerate Full Stop? Figure out your own personal spectrum. Then.., when he’s NOT isolating... have a confab with him & see if what he needs & wants can line up with what you need & want.
And that is really what it will boil down to. As @Sweetpea76 and @Justmehere said: ..
Giving him space is a loving act. Reigning in your own anxiety is a loving act. He’s overwhelmed and needs that love.
Can you really be happy he gets space? Can you want to happily give it to him?
It is supportive of the person and their healing to respect boundaries they set —especially for trauma survivors, as it’s often critical to trust. Trauma is the invasion of so many boundaries... respecting boundaries is the opposite. It will show him you are safe. When you want to text him, you could remind yourself you want to show him you are safe and you will wait.
.. whether it be isolating or avoidance.

You can ask yourself, is the text for him- or for you? i.e. showing you care, or reducing your own anxiety?

I learned too, part of trust is forgiveness- a person will never trust who they have not forgiven (obviously). But it's safety, as well. Love means commitment, yes- but freedom. And trust from both.

Of course things can change, or you can help change each other, in the way that you become more secure, and begin enjoying the time away, and he learns that he has a right to have needs, and that other's do, too. Because right now, your needs are great in focus, and he's denying he has any (other than independence). But I don't think it can happen if each person thinks the other is at fault. Or simply ptsd is. And if that isn't what works for you- that's ok.
I didn't necessarily think therapy could make things worse, but you're right, he would have to face all of his demons.
They say the second time through (therapy) is worse than the first.
.. If your bloke isolates when he gets stressed out? There MAY be some wiggle room, enough to venn diagram what you need and what he needs, but neither of you can force yourselves to no longer need those things. Wants have acres of wiggle room, but needs, not so much.
And that's they key. ^^ Otherwise, you're loving the image of him, or who he might become, but not who he is. And vice versa applies to him.

Good luck with whatever you choose. But the point isn't as much to seek reassurance, as live reassured. That encompasses whether it includes ptsd, something else, or not.

Best wishes to you in your choices.
 
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Thanks for your reply, @apear1818. I appreciate your willingness to consider the questions I asked. Just a few thoughts based on your reply:
Just remember - there are other mental health problems besides PTSD. His symptoms could be better explained by a different diagnosis. But in any case - the one thing I do think you can be sure of is, there's something going on. You may not be able to tell what it is, when you talk to him - either because he doesn't or can't communicate about it, or because you don't have the tools to analyze him yourself. BUT - you can be confident knowing that there's something up, and asking him to if nothing else, get help for it.


I wanted to second @Friday's advice - it'd be mine as well. There are three possibilities, as far as he's concerned:
  1. He could be sick (and that could be PTSD or it could be something else entirely)
  2. He could be working his way out of the relationship
  3. He could want you to accept the relationship on these terms, with his absences going unquestioned.
You've got this time with him away to do some reflecting on what's really happening - the part where he's gone and not communicating - and how it affects you. Are you willing to tolerate this behavior? Because even if it is PTSD, and even if he does get help - he can't promise you he's going to recover neatly. PTSD is a chronic condition, and you'll be signing on for that.

And - you might not even know him well enough to really know your own feelings on this...7 months is not that long a time to be together. It's OK for you to feel frustrated, disappointed, sad, angry, confused, etc. by his disappearing act. And it's OK to decide you're not willing to do this again. Whether he's sick, whatever it is, or not.
I second that! Especially the disappearing act! It drove me crazy for two years! After I left him in May, I found this Forum and learned that disappearing only on the person you are involved with, is normal....I had already figured out that he pulled away just from me, because he couldn’t handle his feelings for me. Since I left he has constantly been trying to pull me back in....but I know that if I cave in and go back, it will be the same all over again....he will panick and pull away over and over again...just from me....and there is no way I can accept that he can spend hours upon hours with everybody but me! I know PTSD is a bitch and that he is hurting, but as long as he doesn’t even go to therapy...makes an effort to see me on equal terms with his friends...at least tries...then I don’t even like him anymore...love him, but don’t like him.
 
I know PTSD is a bitch and that he is hurting, but as long as he doesn’t even go to therapy...makes an effort to see me on equal terms with his friends...at least tries...then I don’t even like him anymore...love him, but don’t like him.
THIS!!!!!! Just because we have ptsd doesnt mean we get to be asshats. It's on US to get the help we need to be better partners. If we aren't willing to do that we can't expect people to stick around.
 
Best way to support him? Leave him alone.

I know it sucks. I’m a supporter in a relationship with a combat vet as well, and he isolates too.

When he’s isolating he is overwhelmed. He’s trying to reset. He cannot deal with his own emotions, so he really cannot deal with other people’s either. That’s why he can work, or hang out with friends, or be on social media... they don’t take an emotional toll like romantic relationships do. It’s nothing you’ve done, and nothing to do with the relationship. He just needs a break to deal with his own shit.

Giving him space is a loving act. Reigning in your own anxiety is a loving act. He’s overwhelmed and needs that love.
This makes a lot of sense to me and I feel like I'm going through the exact same thing right now. I keep telling myself to refrain from contacting him. It's not easy that's for sure, this is so different than anything nice experienced. It feels like he's mad at me but in reality it has absolutely nothing to do with me.
 
THIS!!!!!! Just because we have ptsd doesnt mean we get to be asshats. It's on US to get the help we need to be better partners. If we aren't willing to do that we can't expect people to stick around.

I am pretty confident that he will be open to getting help, or at least discussing his possibilities, mainly because he was the one to bring it up in the past. He is also very good about making small changes that better our relationship, especially if I bring them up to him specifically... I can always see the effort that he put's in to make the relationship work after I ask that something change. However, this is a conversation we have not had in depth yet (so far we have only brought up the topic of "help" once and it went well), and he is in an isolation period right now so I can't have the conversation with him just yet. Right now I am trying to take it day by day and manage my own life and keep busy so that I am not tempted to reach out to him and possibly prolong him isolating. Thank's for your reply Freida!
 
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