Notgoodatnames
Bronze Member
(I waffle a bit, so paragraph 3 is kind of the pertinent one)
Hi everyone, it's been a while....
I think I last posted last August when my partner was very stressed and we had a fight about something technically very minor and he didn't speak to me for a month. Since then we've been doing better, mainly because he started feeling better, and recently we've had some real conversation about things and I think have made a big jump forward in terms of communicating. I have to say this is mainly down to him: I really struggle with communication as I have this deep fear of making myself "too difficult" and if I'm too difficult people won't be able to deal with me.
He recently observed that I don't speak up when things are bothering me, I just tamp it all down until eventually it comes out under pressure months later. He essentially gave me a green light to speak up when something upsets me, and made me feel safe to do so. Recently something happened for him - I don't know what, and I don't entirely know if he knows - that knocked him back into a bad place. One of the first signs is that he suddenly stops responding to things: doesn't answer calls, doesn't call back and I never quite know how bad it is or how long it might last.
Anyway, so this time he ghosted me for a meeting we had prearranged to talk about a big project we are working on (we have a business together), which was time critical in as much as it's a big project and worth quite a lot, and money is kind of tight right now. When he resurfaced a couple of days later I was able to tell him what was on my mind - the important parts being that it is very difficult for me when he disappears, and when he stands me up for something important it's kind of like: either he is being an asshole (which he isn't, because he is a totally wonderful person, and I wouldn't have been with him for 15 years if he were an asshole) OR it's that he's not ok. But when he won't admit to me he's not ok it makes me feel like I'm being gaslit, and also it's hard to worry that he's not ok and yet not know anything. He didn't really say anything: he just sat there with his eyes closed and then when I stopped speaking he asked "are you done?" and then changed the subject.
A big big moment for me this time around has been realising that when he does this, he is listening, but he can't respond, and asking if I am done is not dismissive, (which it has felt like in the past), it's more that he is holding out and enduring because he loves me, and he kind of needs to know when it's safe and when the hard-to-handle-right-now stuff is going to be over.
The BIG difference this time, and it feels like a real breakthrough, is that a few days later, out of the blue, he sat down and voluntarily brought up the conversation we'd had and told me that he wanted me to know that none of the times he had not shown up were because of me, or because he didn't want to be around me. He told me that he doesn't feel anything at the moment, or even feel like he knows who he is, or what he wants. And for the first time, I plucked up my courage, and asked him if anyone before had ever suggested he might have CPTSD. His answer was no, and I told him a little bit about it and some of the symptoms: not too much because I didn't want it to be more than he could handle. I did say that there are things that can be done to help manage it and to feel better.
In the past a lot of people had told me that if he wanted help he would have got help, and the fact that he hasn't shows he's not open to change, but I don't believe that. I think he is suffering and he doesn't know why he feels the way he does, but he just thinks it is something that he has to bear, and that it is just the way things are.
I feel like maybe for the first time a window has opened. My question is: what to do next? I had thought maybe of sending him some links to pages about the condition, so he could quietly look at them in his own time, if he want to. The problem is, when I started looking for sources, most of the pages talk about things like it being a "disability" or say that is happens to children who have been child slaves, or sexually abused. And the thing is I don't 100% know what he went through as a child. I know some of it, but I don't know what else there might be.
I'm afraid of either triggering him by these links bringing up something, or that because I think he may have normalized some of the trauma, that he will just reject the whole thing outright because he will feel like it doesn't apply to him, or the specific situations they mention don't apply to him. I thought about putting together a kind of fact-sheet together for him based on what I've read: that way I could list some of the symptoms that I know he is dealing with, or some of the situations I know he's experienced.
The reason I'm here, asking for input, is that while I have the best intentions, I don't want to inadvertently do something that is patronizing, or controlling, or infantilizing, and if I write something out for him is that me trying to control the narrative, or only giving part of the picture? So then I wonder if talking about it some more, might be better because it's more organic - but I worry (he freezes in high stress conversations) that that might be overload for such a potentially huge topic, which is why I thought something written might be less of a threat.
I would add that I am not trying to "fix" him. He is a wonderful, wonderful, person. He is the love of my life. He makes me stronger and better and braver, and I want to do the right thing for him because he just doesn't deserve to feel the way he is feeling right now, and I will support him in whatever direction he chooses to go.
Does anyone have any thoughts, or experience, on how to take the next step with him in a way that is empowering for him to get support if that is what he wants?
I should also clarify that obviously I don't know he has CPTSD because I'm not qualified to make that diagnosis: I just strongly suspect it based on all the symptoms, and even if it's something else I don't believe anything that he is suffering might not be so bad if he can get support for it.
Hi everyone, it's been a while....
I think I last posted last August when my partner was very stressed and we had a fight about something technically very minor and he didn't speak to me for a month. Since then we've been doing better, mainly because he started feeling better, and recently we've had some real conversation about things and I think have made a big jump forward in terms of communicating. I have to say this is mainly down to him: I really struggle with communication as I have this deep fear of making myself "too difficult" and if I'm too difficult people won't be able to deal with me.
He recently observed that I don't speak up when things are bothering me, I just tamp it all down until eventually it comes out under pressure months later. He essentially gave me a green light to speak up when something upsets me, and made me feel safe to do so. Recently something happened for him - I don't know what, and I don't entirely know if he knows - that knocked him back into a bad place. One of the first signs is that he suddenly stops responding to things: doesn't answer calls, doesn't call back and I never quite know how bad it is or how long it might last.
Anyway, so this time he ghosted me for a meeting we had prearranged to talk about a big project we are working on (we have a business together), which was time critical in as much as it's a big project and worth quite a lot, and money is kind of tight right now. When he resurfaced a couple of days later I was able to tell him what was on my mind - the important parts being that it is very difficult for me when he disappears, and when he stands me up for something important it's kind of like: either he is being an asshole (which he isn't, because he is a totally wonderful person, and I wouldn't have been with him for 15 years if he were an asshole) OR it's that he's not ok. But when he won't admit to me he's not ok it makes me feel like I'm being gaslit, and also it's hard to worry that he's not ok and yet not know anything. He didn't really say anything: he just sat there with his eyes closed and then when I stopped speaking he asked "are you done?" and then changed the subject.
A big big moment for me this time around has been realising that when he does this, he is listening, but he can't respond, and asking if I am done is not dismissive, (which it has felt like in the past), it's more that he is holding out and enduring because he loves me, and he kind of needs to know when it's safe and when the hard-to-handle-right-now stuff is going to be over.
The BIG difference this time, and it feels like a real breakthrough, is that a few days later, out of the blue, he sat down and voluntarily brought up the conversation we'd had and told me that he wanted me to know that none of the times he had not shown up were because of me, or because he didn't want to be around me. He told me that he doesn't feel anything at the moment, or even feel like he knows who he is, or what he wants. And for the first time, I plucked up my courage, and asked him if anyone before had ever suggested he might have CPTSD. His answer was no, and I told him a little bit about it and some of the symptoms: not too much because I didn't want it to be more than he could handle. I did say that there are things that can be done to help manage it and to feel better.
In the past a lot of people had told me that if he wanted help he would have got help, and the fact that he hasn't shows he's not open to change, but I don't believe that. I think he is suffering and he doesn't know why he feels the way he does, but he just thinks it is something that he has to bear, and that it is just the way things are.
I feel like maybe for the first time a window has opened. My question is: what to do next? I had thought maybe of sending him some links to pages about the condition, so he could quietly look at them in his own time, if he want to. The problem is, when I started looking for sources, most of the pages talk about things like it being a "disability" or say that is happens to children who have been child slaves, or sexually abused. And the thing is I don't 100% know what he went through as a child. I know some of it, but I don't know what else there might be.
I'm afraid of either triggering him by these links bringing up something, or that because I think he may have normalized some of the trauma, that he will just reject the whole thing outright because he will feel like it doesn't apply to him, or the specific situations they mention don't apply to him. I thought about putting together a kind of fact-sheet together for him based on what I've read: that way I could list some of the symptoms that I know he is dealing with, or some of the situations I know he's experienced.
The reason I'm here, asking for input, is that while I have the best intentions, I don't want to inadvertently do something that is patronizing, or controlling, or infantilizing, and if I write something out for him is that me trying to control the narrative, or only giving part of the picture? So then I wonder if talking about it some more, might be better because it's more organic - but I worry (he freezes in high stress conversations) that that might be overload for such a potentially huge topic, which is why I thought something written might be less of a threat.
I would add that I am not trying to "fix" him. He is a wonderful, wonderful, person. He is the love of my life. He makes me stronger and better and braver, and I want to do the right thing for him because he just doesn't deserve to feel the way he is feeling right now, and I will support him in whatever direction he chooses to go.
Does anyone have any thoughts, or experience, on how to take the next step with him in a way that is empowering for him to get support if that is what he wants?
I should also clarify that obviously I don't know he has CPTSD because I'm not qualified to make that diagnosis: I just strongly suspect it based on all the symptoms, and even if it's something else I don't believe anything that he is suffering might not be so bad if he can get support for it.
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