Jan-pattern
Bronze Member
I've started seeing A - he's over a decade younger than me, but is aged by experience - trained as Regular, failed Physical, got into a PMC training in Africa, came home a wreck, drink, drugs, suicide attempts, etc. The classic Combat PTSD stuff.
He recognised how the spiral was going and by incredible strength hauled himself up and clear, got his own place now, and got his life back. It's maybe a pretty quiet and limited life by most early-20s' standards, but it suits him. I'm incredibly proud of him, and respect the extraordinary strength it must have taken.
I have PTSD from time as a civilian working with international forces in a civil conflict situation. I eventually got on top of mine, but it left me a little solitary, wary and sometimes moody. Mainly it's okay, but I do feel a vast gulf between me who has seen what I've seen and been up to my knees in what I've been up to my knees in, and the rest of humanity who may have read it in the papers but have no idea of the smell, sounds, sights, etc.
I'm not typical for my age group, and live a similarly quiet life.
My question for those on this forum is, how do I best help A? We are extraordinarily open with each other, and both of us are unfamiliar with feeling like this - not the whole dizzy infatuation "it's perfect! he's perfect! this is true luuurve!" thing, but just a very strong calm serenity when we're together.
It's a very new relationship and we deliberately took a few weeks after initially hooking up to think and email and discuss it, but on Tuesday I stayed at his and we decided to make a go of it. Since he saw me off yesterday I've had no replies to two texts and one call. I'm assuming he has done what I sometimes need to do: just gone into Comms Shutdown, but we haven't had time yet to talk about expectations and rules re Comms, so I'm guessing. I know he's out of range for comms from saturday for a week so will leave it today and if there's still radio silnce on Friday evening, I'll just text to say i guess he's in Comms Shutdown and that I will be thinking of him and to let me know when he's back in orbit.
Is that the right kind of approach?
I'm flying blind here. I know that it helps my PTSD to know he has related experiences, but mine aren't his experiences, and mine aren't his problems. He's a guy, for a start, plus a younger guy - I'm a woman with an ability to at least try to put stuff into words to close friends.
I'd really appreciate any advice on how to give this the best chance of working. I think maybe it's the PTSD that gives us the feeling of being at peace when we're together, not having to explain, not feeling so totally isolated - but I also know I don't want to mess him up further by not giving him space, or alternatively by being too distant so he thinks i don't care!
Many thanks
Take care
jan
He recognised how the spiral was going and by incredible strength hauled himself up and clear, got his own place now, and got his life back. It's maybe a pretty quiet and limited life by most early-20s' standards, but it suits him. I'm incredibly proud of him, and respect the extraordinary strength it must have taken.
I have PTSD from time as a civilian working with international forces in a civil conflict situation. I eventually got on top of mine, but it left me a little solitary, wary and sometimes moody. Mainly it's okay, but I do feel a vast gulf between me who has seen what I've seen and been up to my knees in what I've been up to my knees in, and the rest of humanity who may have read it in the papers but have no idea of the smell, sounds, sights, etc.
I'm not typical for my age group, and live a similarly quiet life.
My question for those on this forum is, how do I best help A? We are extraordinarily open with each other, and both of us are unfamiliar with feeling like this - not the whole dizzy infatuation "it's perfect! he's perfect! this is true luuurve!" thing, but just a very strong calm serenity when we're together.
It's a very new relationship and we deliberately took a few weeks after initially hooking up to think and email and discuss it, but on Tuesday I stayed at his and we decided to make a go of it. Since he saw me off yesterday I've had no replies to two texts and one call. I'm assuming he has done what I sometimes need to do: just gone into Comms Shutdown, but we haven't had time yet to talk about expectations and rules re Comms, so I'm guessing. I know he's out of range for comms from saturday for a week so will leave it today and if there's still radio silnce on Friday evening, I'll just text to say i guess he's in Comms Shutdown and that I will be thinking of him and to let me know when he's back in orbit.
Is that the right kind of approach?
I'm flying blind here. I know that it helps my PTSD to know he has related experiences, but mine aren't his experiences, and mine aren't his problems. He's a guy, for a start, plus a younger guy - I'm a woman with an ability to at least try to put stuff into words to close friends.
I'd really appreciate any advice on how to give this the best chance of working. I think maybe it's the PTSD that gives us the feeling of being at peace when we're together, not having to explain, not feeling so totally isolated - but I also know I don't want to mess him up further by not giving him space, or alternatively by being too distant so he thinks i don't care!
Many thanks
Take care
jan