joeylittle
Sponsor
^^^I have a 20year friend who understands and respects me on many levels. If he did have concern he would come check on me long before he would call police. But that being the case is because he knows what to do based on our agreements. If you had no prior agreements and want to see if you can patch this up then start there. If she wont listen and join you in making a safety plan that respects you both then curtail it.
(I bolded the really important bit, but the whole post is right on point)
It took me a long time to fully grasp that if I wanted people to react to my illness in a specific and informed way - it was my responsibility to communicate about it.I had a friend of 20+ years, someone who does not understand trauma and has never really attempted to sit down and understand what I go through
In other words, I needed to be willing (and able) to really talk with them about what I was dealing with. For me, being ready included having done enough work in therapy to be able to talk about the disorder and enough of the trauma to provide a context, without losing myself in emotion or dissociation.
I know it's a very hard thing to do. But - do you feel like you've made a solid and clear attempt to tell her what the disorder is, how it affects you, and get honest about what helps and what hurts?