Better day today since I got a full night's sleep for the first time in a month so maybe I can articulate things better for you all. If only the hotel lady hadn't vacuumed the hall outside my room I might have slept longer.
Such awesome feedback. I need to respond to certain points. I just hope by opening my mouth, I don't insert my foot into it. Be gentle folks.
I get the sense that you are almost frustrated with us, and think we are overly concerned for you.
:(:sorry:That is my own issues with "parenting" because of the neglect and abuse I suffered from my mother. I am more sensitive to feedback from females and reject any type of concern from them - I guess I don't trust it. My apologies as I know you are all trying to help. I did get defensive. I have been working on that for a few decades now and it was at bay, but seems to be flaring up for me in this situation. Emotions are running hot. I will work more on that and try not to put the guard up. It is harder to process when I am tired.
I will say that some of the advice does come across as me being scolded for doing things wrong, or that feeling a certain way will make me a doormat (which I assure you I am not and will never be) and that is hard to take since this is new to me. I didn't know that I was doing anything wrong and it is hard to feel like you're being told you shouldn't feel a certain way because I can't just turn my feelings them off. Not without turning them all off. I did that for a while when I was younger and it is not good and I don't want to go back there, so unfortunately for me I can either feel nothing at all or everything.
First of all, people talk about the timeline because if you do too much too fast, you will increase the shut down, both in frequency and duration....Go too fast, and you may actually trigger symptoms to come up fast and furious, and this will blow up the whole relationship. And you and HIM will suffer needlessly.
That is a completely different approach to the feedback I've been getting - Thank You. Communicating it that way (more clinically, I guess) makes more sense to me. So even though he is the one who set the pace as fast and furious, you're saying I need to pump our brakes. This is not all me here. We both went very fast and that could be part of what is triggering things.
I think that
@Sweetpea76 understood where I was coming from when she said that it isn't that he isn't worth it. I'm tired of being told that he's not worth my time because the relationship is so new - get out now - run for the hills. I've been hearing that a lot from people who don't know anything about PTSD and again, sorry I took that frustration out on you guys. I got on the forum after hanging up from a very negative conversation with my closest friend where she told me that he's an a$$hole for not spending the week with me and I should forget about him. I don't want to be told what decision to make towards him. I want to be supported in my decision to support him and be given constructive advice (criticism if you must) on how to work through this. Sometimes it feels as if I'm being told to give up and that lights a fire in me to fight harder.
I'm especially sensitive to the concept of just rejecting someone because of a medical issue that is out of their control. My own medical issue has social implications for me. I have lost countless acquaintances (I won't call them friends anymore because friends don't abandon you) because I wasn't worth it. So now you know a little better where I'm coming from. I do want to be clear that I don't just stay in something for no good reason. My never give up approach does not have a 100% success rate.
Don't get me wrong, I'm divorced, so I have "given up" in the past. I know that in a relationship it takes two people. I fought hard for my marriage and my ex wasn't willing to do any work or take accountability for any of his actions, so I asked him for a divorce and that is over and done with. My vet is divorced. He fought hard for his marriage and his ex wasn't willing to stop sleeping with other men, so that is over and done with too. We are both tough and stubborn and believe that as long as the other person is committed to the relationship, they are worth fighting for. PTSD adds a layer of complication (I know I'm putting it mildly), but he's shown me even through all of this that he's committed. He's still fighting for me in his own way and so I will stand by him. I hope that makes sense.
(OK... mini-rant over. Soapbox is stowed away. Onto other questions/comments)
Why do you think he will see you face to face once you move?
He said that things will be different once I move and we can see each other in person. I am taking certain queues from him.
I have observed that he doesn't isolate 100% from the people he interacts with on a day to day. His kids, his ex-wife, his neighbors (he takes care of their pets and properties). He has built them into a routine and he goes about his routine. The communication is minimal but it is there.
When I move down, the relationship dynamic will be different because I will be physically here. We might run into each other at a gas station, or grocery store - that kind of thing - versus me being in another state. So I guess I look at it as two different kinds of isolation. He is averse to talking on the cell phone, texting, etc but when necessary, will talk face to face. He doesn't lock himself away, he still goes out and does things - like I said, his "routine".
He has said that there is no face to face while we're long distance and that will change when I move here. He struggles with me being so far away. It bothers him and that may be a whole other can of worms.
You clearly hope he will change and shut you out less.
I didn't say that. You can't go into any relationship hoping to change someone. I'm going on things he has said in the past. You guys aren't psychic so you have no knowledge of those conversations, which makes sense that you would react that way. He has indicated that things will be different once I move down. But in terms of his not isolating me (or not being able to shield me like he wants to), what I also meant was that instead of just ignoring a text or phonecall, if we are face to face and something sets him off, I will likely receive the brunt of the frustration, rather than just being ignored/shut out. That was what
@Sighs was saying about me maybe wanting him to isolate instead of taking out his anger/issues/etc on me.
My advice, for your sake and his, mostly his, is to respect the timeline - i.e. respect the need to slowly pace out the process of becoming closer or more connected with him.
Now we're going to have to call out an old Marine Corps term "Semper Gumby" always flexible. This isn't just about me respecting the timeline of becoming closer, it is me adapting to him changing the timeline as he needs to.
Trust me when I tell you that the timeline was at warp speed prior to this - with him driving the ship. I'm not even sure that he realizes that he needs to put on the breaks on the romantic stuff. I don't think he's been in a relationship since getting blown up, so he may not realize that moving as fast as we did the first month was a trigger. If he didn't realize it then, I hope he does now.
My suggestion to you is to build a friendship first. Leave romantic expectation out of it for a while. At least until you are moved and settled in.
Oh boy. Sooooo... he set the pace! I put the brakes on at the beginning because he was moving so fast and I was out of my comfort zone, but the more we talked, the longer durations and depth of conversation... feelings came anyway. He came on heavy with the emotional stuff and I didn't at first, but I caught up and once we met in person that sealed the deal for me.
Its a little too late to have this be just a friendship, but if you're saying to focus on the friendship aspect of the relationship, I can do that. I will tell you that he doesn't want just friendship. He has expressed that he wants me to send him hugs and kisses via text periodically so he knows I still feel the same. So, I just need to walk that fine line between reassuring him of my presence and overwhelming him.