Stephen,
I have never quoted anyone in the forum, so I hope I am doing it right. Sorry if It does not turn our right.
I am concerned about your comment regarding your therapist being attracted to you. If it is on a personal level, then it is definitely out of bounds and that would be inappropriate and unhealthy for you to see her. The relationship must be a professional one or the therapeutic dynamics change as objectivity is lost. I also
am not sure that your therapist needs to be using you for practicing on. Your issues are not superficial and deserve an experienced therapist who is familiar and experienced with PTSD. You do not need to be a learning project for anyone and if that is the case, you most definitely need a new, experienced therapist, maybe one of the same gender as yourself.
I think my counsellor was attracted to me and i kind of played along with it for a while. I didn't want to lose her support. I am someone who never wants to let go off relationships. I have always prided myself as someone who would never walk away from anyone and to be honest it has cost me very dearly this attitude. But i cannot walk away. People push me away.
It is good that you try to be a loyal friend & not walk away from friends, but you should not be paying an emotional price for that loyalty. Because we suffer from PTSD, we are different from those who do not have serious trauma in their past.
We think differently because we have been exposed to a debilitating event in our lives. Like it or not, it is a part of our PTSD & we have to realize that our supposedly normal friends can not be expected to understand our emotional states and levels of anxiety. We have basic trust issues. We tend to be tenaciously loyal to our friends, because we try to be a good friend and expect the same in return. I have also had what I thought were true and loyal friends that bolted on me when I had a mental meltdown. I have come to think they push us away because they have no concept of what we are dealing with and the level of debilitation is has brought to our lives.
I am sure you have had friends ask why you can't just let go of your past, or it's over so you should put it behind you. I may be way off base, but in my own personal experience, I have found that only another who suffers with PTSD can fully understand PTSD.
It is incredibly hard for us to understand why those we care for back away from us.
I have found it is because they don't have a clue what we are dealing with as far as anxiety, social fears (like having a flashback or dissassociating in public), and being afraid to sleep because of the nightmares. ---That is why I am glad you are here.
The people in this forum are walking the same path as we are. Granted, not all of our situations are the same, but the fact that we are in great pain is our common denominator. We share that bond. You can share your story if and when you want to. You can test the waters here until you see for yourself that this site is moderated very well and it's okay if you are having a bad day and you just want to vent.
I hope I haven't been to pushy or invasive in this post. I would never presume to know everything about my own PTSD, much less anyone else's. I do know about flashbacks, anxiety, isolation, and hypervigilance. I have been seriously suicidal in the past and have done things I don't remember and am not proud of. I lost a wonderful job about 10 years ago that I loved because I had a mental meltdown when someone slammed a door at work. PTSD is unmerciful and relentless. It does not care who you are or how good a person you are. To me, it is pain on a much deeper level that physical pain. It is always there.
Keep coming to this forum. You are welcome here with all your bumps, bruises, insecurities and emotional pain. You are amoung others similar to yourself. I am glad you are here, it is a good place for support and comfort. At least we know on some level that we are not alone.
Take Care, Tracie