Thank you for sticking by me. My thoughts are all over the place. BTW, today is Buddy Check 22 (an event to raise awareness of the 22 Veteran Suicides daily and an effort to reduce that number). Reach out to your Vets today if you haven't already.
So to summarize: My reactions are my own, but he hasn't done anything wrong or crossed any lines with me. There is nothing he has done that would cross a boundary. All he has done is isolate. He has been as communicative as he can be. He has been supportive and caring. I set expectations in my mind and when they didn't happen I reacted badly - again, no boundaries crossed, just unfulfilled wishes on my part. The result of my reaction, was the original post. You all have helped me to see that
my thought process caused my feelings, not his actions.
He hasn't done any lashing out, or arguing or anything because as
@Sweetpea76 said, I believe he is trying to hide the bad from me. He is in full on isolation. That is the PTSD. So for
@The Albatross when you mentioned that none of what I write sounds like his PTSD, it is because he has isolated and I have no information on his PTSD other than it is affecting him very badly, worse than previously, and he is unsure of when he will feel better. The only thoughts and feelings that I really have to go on are my own reactions to his isolation. I am struggling with his isolation and how the disconnection is making me feel. I hate the lack of communication, and the distance, and the fact that there is nothing I can do to help. All I can do is sit back while he suffers. It feels all wrong.
I guess that is the dynamic you were speaking about
@The Albatross. Yes, he is worth it to me. He told me that when this happens "you do you, and I'll do me, and it'll be all good." Basically, that I needed to take care of my own needs and I couldn't help him and he couldn't help me either during that time. I am filling my time with my own things - I'm on vacation this week and so I have more free time, but normally I work a full 40 hour week. I have my volunteer work and I'm packing and renovating my house to get it ready to sell so I can move. While I've been down here visiting my future home, I found all of the local beaches (heaven!) and drove around to find the best neighborhoods to live in. I've visited several grocery stores and even hit up Walmart. Saturday, I'm participating in a 5k. In between, I'm participating in PTSD Support Meetings, reading and talking here because that is all I can do.
@Sweetpea76 His behavior has been admirable considering how he is feeling right now. I believe that it took everything he had in him to pick me up from the airport and drive me to the hotel. Based on a response from a Combat PTSD Vet in the support meeting I attended last night, I understand that in an intimate moment, a PTSD sufferer may feel the need to connect to their significant other, but may go into full isolation again afterwards (hence the roller coaster of emotional confusion from the supporter - that they can turn it on and off). Looking back and re-assessing the situation from the Vet's point of view (rather than my freaked out one), I can see that there was a significant difference in our intimacy on Friday - it was more serious, less playful and I realize that he never once let me go and he never took his eyes off mine.
I am at the stage in our relationship where I am trying to figure out my place in his life. I'm unsure of where I fit in. Yes, that is my issue to deal with. The fact that it coincides with his isolation shook me up because I didn't understand what was happening. At the beginning of his isolation, he just disappeared. He had told me that when he is suffering, he isolates but because we had just had such a wonderful weekend, I guess I had forgotten that he had that side too. The PTSD was not the first thing that I thought of. I thought he was breaking up with me. I reached out to him and asked him and he took the time to respond.
I have realized though, from talking to the Veteran, that routine is the backbone of a Combat PTSD Sufferer's world. Keeping in mind that they were trained in routines and rules, they establish their own set of routines and rules once they're discharged. He said that an unexpected break in their routine can throw them into a spiral. It isn't a trigger but is a significant stressor that can cause them to isolate as well. A Combat PTSD Veteran will put up a wall and there are people on the inside and people on the outside. The people on the inside, they may force themselves to communicate with because they are part of the routine (children, spouses, employers, coworkers, and so forth). If you're not part of that routine, you get shut out. I believe that my Vet wants me to be part of his life, but there is no way to add me to his daily routine while I live in a different state and even once I move, it will take him a while to take that step. Now that I realize that, I have come to better terms with the situation and I realize just how significant his actions towards me during his isolation have been.
He was willing to give me his truck for the week - his primary source of transportation. It would have thrown off his entire schedule for the week. I didn't feel right about it and got a rental car. At first I thought that was a mistake and he was upset with me and that is why he wasn't being conversational (he tells me I'm too Miss Independent - he's the first gentleman I've been around in a while and I'm not used to someone holding doors or carrying my bags. He wants me to let him do things for me). I now realize that by getting the rental car, I allowed him to keep his routine for the week. He no longer needed to worry about me. The fact that he has stayed in isolation tells me how badly he is affected right now. I know that if he could break out he would be with me every day. But, I had to hear a stranger tell me how my actions would have made them feel better, and that I understood what they needed, in order to feel better about my decision.
Of course, I would rather hear it from the horse's mouth, but when the horse isn't talking...
As for my final paragraph in my original post, I forget that you guys don't know me. When I told that same thing to my battle buddies, they laughed their faces off because they know me. That is what happens when I don't re-read and filter my posts. I just let it all out that day. He wasn't being manipulative. I was just re-living the conversation we had. I said that to him "hey you're not fighting fair, you know I can't think when you do that." We were laughing and smiling the whole time. We were not fighting at all. If I had said to him "no, stop kissing me, I have something to say." he would have. That is an ongoing, inside joke I guess, between the two of us.
I have had to send him several emails previously because his voice makes me forget what I wanted to say to him. It is like he is directly wired into my brain and it just goes all mush. When he kisses me, forget it. Yes, I know - honeymoon phase and I'm sure there will come a time when I'm perfectly able to form sentences while he's speaking to me with that smooth southern drawl lol, but now is not that time. That last paragraph wasn't really me being upset or angry, just feeling like an ass because I forgot to write down the things I wanted to say to him and then got so caught up in the moment that I forgot to say them.
Sometimes I just need to get out of my own head. So, again, thanks for bearing with me. I am in a much better place now, than I was before. I appreciate all of your support through my rough weekend.
P.S.
@The Albatross ... I forgot a comma - it changes that whole sentence. "I am aware that he cannot process what he is dealing with, let alone what I am dealing with
, because of the PTSD" meaning that I acknowledge that he can't process anything right now because of the PTSD, so I can't go to him with my issues or questions.