Which leads back to communication like Bilby outlined.
So sometimes, that isolation or seeming coldness has a lot more love behind it than people get.
The only way my partner and I have kept sane is by constant communication and checking in with the other person. He often doesn't understand why I'm hiding upstairs in bed (isolating) or snappy at him when he complains about things that I know are my fault.
Scenario 1.
Him: "Come downstairs and spend some time with me, you're always in bed."
Me: "No, you come up here or shut the door and f*ck off."
Him: "Why, what the f*ck did I do?"
Me: "I've had a really shitty night's sleep, and the nightmares were really bad."
Him: knowing that it must be bad if I'm still affected after 14 hours; "What were they about this time?"
Me: "I dreamt that X happened, and Y and Z were there too."
Other half now knows that I'm struggling to deal with anything, and so want the only safe, comfortable place away from noise (his beloved Star Trek), and not trying to ignore him.
I'll come spend a bit of time downstairs later, or he'll come up so we get some time together.
I'll end up feeling bad, and apologize for being a rude asshole in a bit, once I've managed to swallow my pride.
we come back to responsibility where, while it is a Sufferer's condition, they choose to seek support from their partner or project it upon them
Scenario 2.
Him: Seeing new dishes when coming home... "Babe, why the f*ck can't you just rinse your plate when you're done?"
Me: Ahhhhh shit. "I was too tired to do them, my brain isn't with it."
Him: Smelling bullshit..."Bullshit, it only takes a few seconds, don't be f*cking lazy and just rinse one."
Me: Now grouchy from being called out, and sensitive to confrontation: "f*ck off, sometimes I'm too wrecked to do it."
Him: "Yes, but only one won't hurt, just f*cking try, you're looking fine today!"
Me: "I am trying!"
Him: "Bullshit!"
Me: grouches and goes and washes dish. I know full well I was a lazy f*ck and was hiding behind excuses that didn't exist that day.
it doesn't hurt for us (sufferers or supporters) to question our reactions, and whether we could make adjustments.
Scenario 3.
Him: "Coming to MIL's for dinner?"
Me: "Yeeeesssss..."
Him: laughs. stops laughing. "My brother is going to be there, are you going to be ok?"
Me: "Yes, but I've been feeling pretty vulnerable at the moment, please step in if he's being a prick?"
Him: "Yeah, but you and I have different versions of 'being a prick'.
Me: "He IS the definition of 'a prick'. "
Him: "Why do you always have to pick on my family, they are the ones that are fine, not you!"
Me: super f*cked off: "What exactly do you mean by that?"
Him: "Well you're the one with social interaction issues....."
Me: "And? I don't make him try to pick on me, pick on my religion, try to get a rise out of me, make nasty comments about people on benefits, or dig for information he can use against me later, or ask leading questions to make me look like a jobless, uneducated loser or......."
Him: "..........What do you want me to do?"
Me: "You know when he's being a prick.....tell him to f*ck off like you do when he decides to start on you."
Him: "I suppose. You do have interaction issues though."
Me: "Are you trying to start shit? I can't have interaction issues if I refuse to interact with him!"
Him: "But you have to interact with him!"
Me: "No, I don't! Anything and everything that I say is used against me later, I'm better off looking sullen and keeping my mouth shut than dealing with the asshole later. My heartrate and anxiety goes through the roof a few days before I have to deal with him, you should be pleased I've let him live!"
Him: ".........I didn't know that. I'm sorry, I've been trying to do damage control, but it's done more harm than good, as you know. But I'll keep an eye out."
Me: "Please do.....he's super sneaky, and half the jabs you miss because he waits until you aren't listening."
Him: "Ok, but do me a favour, you really ARE sensitive, more than usual, and he will pick on that. Try to ignore him, and let me deal with him. If he gets really out of hand, I'll let you do your thing and rip a chunk off him."
Me: grumbles....."argh......fine."
I don't know if I'm making sense here, but for me the above scenarios, which HAVE happened in the past, are indicative to me of several things.
1. Communication
2. Responsibility
3. Flexibility
You have to have all 3, or be willing to try again in a little, and state as much, or the supporter is going to go mad.
I had some things of my own that I really needed to discuss with my sufferer and every time I tried, I was told that it would "have to wait".
I can't be denied of certain things in my relationship for an indefinite period of time, or to be made feel that my issues aren't important, because they are.
Case and Point.
It's really easy as a sufferer to become wrapped up in our suffering, and let it be projected rather than contained and worked on. When my supporter reaches breaking point I concede that I have let it go too long, but if he DOES want to talk, it has to be broken down into small bits that I can work on, otherwise it really will "have to wait".
The dishes scenario is a really mild example of how we hide behind excuses and allow parts of our personality be vindicated by our symptoms, rather than owning it and admitting that, like me, I really was a -insert appropriate term-.
The confrontation that blows up into an argument when we dig in our heels rather than admit a fault is purely the sufferer's initiation.
I don't think telling a Supporter that your opinion is for them to leave a relationship is saying that the Sufferer is a bad person either.
It is possible to label a behaviour without labelling a person as a whole, and that is what I believe is happening.
And I would go so far as to add that it is unwise to council supporters that they simply have a cruel and selfish partner because their partner has PTSD and is struggling with it in a way that we find distasteful.
As a sufferer, you would know that people often trigger us unintentionally; regardless of the intentions, the effects are there and hurt.
I would be very interested to see how many posts contain content to the effect of "what they are doing is X" VS "he/she is X", as there is a MASSIVE difference between the 2.
What someone does and who someone is, are completely different.
If I am being a yelling, abusive, intolerant asshole due to (insert reason here), then that doesn't MAKE me those things as a person, but it DOES mean that I am
forcing someone to experience those things, which is entirely unacceptable, and my supporter has every right to question me, or distance himself from me to avoid hurt to himself.
We often talk about knowing where our boundaries are, and expecting others to follow them, but regardless of intentions on the sufferer's part, the supporter has their own boundaries, and has every right to walk away from something that is unhealthy.
Regardless of why something bad is happening, no one should stay if they are getting hurt. That is called being a martyr, and I'm sure many of us have been hurt by doing that.
PTSD is only an excuse when it is NOT used as an excuse.
Despite everything I've said above, I think it's important that we establish what you are trying to say.
Because as others have pointed out, you are saying what it is NOT, not what it IS.