I'm just saying to take the risk. You might find that not everyone wants to hurt you and some may even wish to share your pain and try to help you.
I understand polarized thinking, and I realise that not everybody wants to hurt others. However, there is a common phenomena surrounding abuse, in that peoples minds struggle to accept the real nature of abuse, because to accept that it happened to someone just like them, threatens their own sense of safety and understanding about others.
People need to believe that they are safe and that these things happen to others because XY and Z, or that it isn't that bad and if it happened to them, they would somehow have been able to stop it or stop it from affecting them, and people react to those feelings by minimising and making excuses for abuse rather than asking questions and listening to learn more about you.
The risk is, that once you've opened up, these people need to hear that they have helped and it's all ok now. When of course the reality is that the sufferer ends up not only holding back from talking about trauma and having to deal with that by themselves, but they end up having to keep quiet and deal with the hurt and anxiety created by the inappropriate responses of others.
I live my life worrying about how others feel, and when I have tried to open up, it has been reinforced that my own feelings are secondary. But what I can't do now that I have PTSD, is take on everybody elses feelings.
Try to be open. Start with some general references to what you've been though. Then give it time and let the friendship grow. Talk more when you can or ask them if they if they have questions. I guess that would be my advice. Try to keep communication open or make sure they know it's an option.
I appreciate the practical advice. Thank you.
That is the Catch-22. As a supporter you want to protect your loved one. You don't want them to have to relive any trauma and go through anymore pain, especially if it is just to explain things to you. With that being said, you also want to understand why your sufferer is hurting so much, and avoid doing anything that will trigger or stress them. Knowing or not knowing, no option seems better than the other.
As a sufferer you want to protect your loved one too. A sufferer will go through that pain whether they tell someone or not... the difference being, that when you tell someone, that person has to see it.
But from reading the differing responses here, I think it is one of those un-answerable questions because some people will benefit from hearing, some will be hurt, some people only want to know the surface details, whereas others feel the need to understand more deeply.
To meet everyones needs is a lot of responsibility for the owner of those secrets (the sufferer) to take on.