- Post starter
- #13
Pretty Hurts
Bronze Member
@scout86 i believe when you say he's overwhelmed. i also think he makes choices at times that add to it, whether he's concious of it or not i don't know. for example, he insisted on cooking thanksgiving dinner completely by himself. it took him 2 days. he wanted to do it alone, he wanted to do it his way saying he just didn't need/want any help. in a later discussion when i saw how much it was taking out of him and he was talking about how much schoolwork he had to complete over this weekend, i asked if there was anything i could do, but he said there just wasn't anything i could do to help him. i let him be. i began to understand he may be have a hard time with the holidays in general. during the first night of cooking he was in good spirits and opened up, shared some good memories/stories and told me the meal he was preparing was the last holiday meal his mother prepared for the family before him and his brothers were separated from her as children, and he does this every year. she died while he was in his early 20s from cirrhosis of the liver, he was away in the army and had not seen her in many years. i let him be, i understood this was a grieving ritual for him....although it seemed to me he was overwhelmed and i wished there was something i could have done to take some of the pressure off. we served our parents, but it was awkward because talk of me not participating kept coming up. it was a shock to my mom and his father actually told him he should have let me help. he told his father, "she does enough to help me."
i always collect the mail, he forgets to do it. so i give his to him. that has worked out fine. this peice of mail is in my name, because the car is registered to me. i pay insurance, he maintains it, and we both drive it. this also works out fine.
i do not generally walk around "scared to hand over the mail". but when he's like this, i try not to "bother" him too much, this is something i have to work at. this particular piece of mail just happened to arrive while he's in a bad place, so i'm anticipated an unfavorable reaction. i appreciate most of your input. and i can understand if you can not relate to how i may feel at times as a supporter, who has some issues of my own that i'm dealing with that i have not disclosed in this post. always trying to "not make things worse" and you dread the feeling of realizing you just may have unwittingly after the fact. he's generally pretty balanced, approachable, helpful...but quiet in general. we've not been/lived together a year yet, so still learning how to. yes i experience anxiety over some things, and reach out for support here because no one in my life can relate, i love him dearly and appreciate him and won't make a villain out of him to our friends/family.
i agree he's in a bad place, right now. from previous discussion, he's not interested in treatment for ptsd at this time, so i doubt he'd opt for relationship couseling, but not because the relationship is not important to him. i think just the thought of adding anything else to his roster, having to talk about feelings, potentially being offered meds would add more pressure as you described. and his mind is focused on school, everything else has to come second....because "this is what's going to make a better life for us." <----his words. it was a challenge to get him to see a dr recently for chest pains, but he came around in his own time and he's cooperating now.
as far as the gym, he is training to compete professionally one day. while it is very therapeutic....he always returns in a better mood if he left stressed...it is more than "just exercise". for him.
i always collect the mail, he forgets to do it. so i give his to him. that has worked out fine. this peice of mail is in my name, because the car is registered to me. i pay insurance, he maintains it, and we both drive it. this also works out fine.
i do not generally walk around "scared to hand over the mail". but when he's like this, i try not to "bother" him too much, this is something i have to work at. this particular piece of mail just happened to arrive while he's in a bad place, so i'm anticipated an unfavorable reaction. i appreciate most of your input. and i can understand if you can not relate to how i may feel at times as a supporter, who has some issues of my own that i'm dealing with that i have not disclosed in this post. always trying to "not make things worse" and you dread the feeling of realizing you just may have unwittingly after the fact. he's generally pretty balanced, approachable, helpful...but quiet in general. we've not been/lived together a year yet, so still learning how to. yes i experience anxiety over some things, and reach out for support here because no one in my life can relate, i love him dearly and appreciate him and won't make a villain out of him to our friends/family.
i agree he's in a bad place, right now. from previous discussion, he's not interested in treatment for ptsd at this time, so i doubt he'd opt for relationship couseling, but not because the relationship is not important to him. i think just the thought of adding anything else to his roster, having to talk about feelings, potentially being offered meds would add more pressure as you described. and his mind is focused on school, everything else has to come second....because "this is what's going to make a better life for us." <----his words. it was a challenge to get him to see a dr recently for chest pains, but he came around in his own time and he's cooperating now.
as far as the gym, he is training to compete professionally one day. while it is very therapeutic....he always returns in a better mood if he left stressed...it is more than "just exercise". for him.