Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Sorry I'm not experienced enough at this to know how to pick a screen name correctly? Any other actions of mine I need to explain?
Apologizing is fine, but it gets old after you've heard the same apology for the 100th time for the same offense.
I feel you on all of this, except there are no children involved in my situation. We have the same a...
Will he go for couples counseling?I want to be able to communicate without him trying to always blame me for an issue that's not there.
HAHA! Benevolent fairy. I struggle with being a benevolent fairy too lol. I make the mistake nearly every time of trying to rationalize with my SO when he is in this mindset, thinking that surely there is something that I can do or say that will help "snap him out of it". But there's not. One time I flipped out bad like @Hojay mentioned....actually twice. The first time, I got physical and he got physical back. That was a mistake on my part to initiate something like that when, in retrospect, I knew that would further escalate things for him. We've been dealing with it since. But at the time, it was hard to remember the right way to do things. Sometimes it's hard not to get caught up in the emotional hurricane. The second time I got physical with the wall lol. That kind of surprised him, as in @Hojay's situation, but in reality all it left was more of a mess for me to clean up after everything was over. Didn't really fix anything at all.There are some people on here who can disengage like that and float out the room like a benevolent fairy. I can't, I get pissed, even though I know it is not him who's talking.
You have to show them this with your boundaries and your consistency with them. In the moment, you will not be able to rationalize with them. You will not be able to have a productive conversation about what is going on. I cannot stress that enough.In other words, yes, his behavior WAS actually as bad as he thought and I was SHOWING him the consequences.
Thank you for this nuanced and vulnerable account of what you're going through. I'm under no illusion that PTSD is a cakewalk. As a non-sufferer, I can't even imagine. I'm on the fence, however, with this quote here. I understand that you need someone when suffering from PTSD. However, the risk his high of turning co-dependent as a supporter, completely losing yourself in unacceptable behavior, while being told that you need to understand more, learn more, take yourself back just a little more. As horrible as a sufferer's situation is, it is their trauma to solve.I'm stating this from my own personal experience: He needs someone.
Totally second that, tiredtexan. I learned that the hard way. Now I don't reason, I walk away. And if he crosses the line in his tirade, he will learn about that soon enough. But yeah, I'm far from a Dalai Lama in those situations. It would be going against all I believe in to go all sweet and kind while he is tearing a hole in my soul. I also don't think that would do him much good.You have to show them this with your boundaries and your consistency with them. In the moment, you will not be able to rationalize with them. You will not be able to have a productive conversation about what is going on.
Incredibly well said.If what is needed as a basis is someone who is unconditionally around and takes themselves back emotionally, physically, and psychologically that's the definition of a therapist, not a romantic partner.
Thank you for this nuanced and vulnerable account of what you're going through. I'm under no illusion tha...