Communication is huge to me. You can give me the silent treatment, and not want to hear me out, but i should at least know why. So that in the mean time I can do what I need to make it right on my end.
Makes total sense in a rational world. And when I'm not symptomatic? No problem. When I am symptomatic?
Ever had the flu and still had to go to work? When you just can't
think straight? Can't think. Do stupid stuff. Read the same line on a page over and over. Just sit and stare at the page because you can't even see the line... It's just all,a big swirl of meaningless words. End up staring at something (nothing) because your brain just isn't working? Then get sicker and can barely even go to the bathroom, much less drive a car and go to work?
That's the closest example I can give to "I don't know" or "he probably doesn't know himself, give him a few days" that you hear in PTSD circles quite a lot. When we're symptomatic, our brains shift into survival mode. Which is
great for survival. Very, very useful, in fact. But it means that many things we are
literally unable to think of. The "I can't think about this right now" may sound like "I don't
want to think about this right now"... But it isn't. It's our minds literally stopping. Unable to pass go, or collect $200. It's honestly very different from being sick-sick (flu, etc.), because we can still think about
other stuff just fine. Usually. Sometimes is becomes global, and just like with the flu? Tend to go back to bed.
Given a few hours, days, weeks, etc... We can
usually process the impossible information. If there isn't any added stress. Added stress turns a 1 topic no-fly zone, into pure fight or flight all topics not directly related to survival are no-fly zones. We shut down. Or lash out.
In a rational world... Both parties are able to think about the XYZ that just happened. And do. Usually a lot. And, ideally, each minding their own side of the street and coming together to resolution. Unless one of them has the flu, or just got into a car accident, or found out their mom is dying...in which case the matter gets tabled until they're not in crisis anymore. When they can actually turn their thoughts to the problem.
A PTSD person? Isn't thinking about the problem they can't think about. They may be trying to be, they may be doing the things that will let them be able to think about it... But it really is like trying to have a rational conversation while heaving your guts out or sitting upside down in your car whilst it's on fire. Brain has other things it's trying to get done. And each added stress? Just kicks things up higher. Puking from the flu while upside down in a car that's on fire. Then puking from the flu while upside down in the car on fire with your beloved mom dead beside you. Then... You see the point? Each "push" only makes the situation even more intractable. It's not that we don't
want to be able to handle the stress... It's that under times of stress we to immediately into life or death.
We're still rational in every
other way. It's not like while hanging upside down in the car we decide to make jell-o or to learn Swahili. No. We need to extricate ourselves from the vehicle as quickly as possible. That requires rational thought. Survival mode doesn't turn us into idiots. But it does make some things literally (not figuratively) impossible to deal with given the same time frame as people who aren't. And it takes awhile to back down from survival mode. Hence the hours, days, weeks, etc... Before we're even
able to think about it. Much less discuss or come to some kind of resolution about it.
*** I'm usually better at using "I" statements, instead of generalizing. As well as tends to, and other caveats, because individuals always vary. Please note I'm not speaking for all PTSD people, here. All of the above are just my experiences, observations, and opinions. I'm just too dang tired to be able to edit, right now. And if I don't post it now, I'll forget. ***