Hi,
I'm a supporter and fairly new here, but have learned so much from browsing already. Thank you!
I have a question about broaching difficult but important subjects with a PTSD sufferer. I've been with my boyfriend for a little over a year. He has PTSD from severe childhood sexual abuse that was latent during most of his life, but pretty much exploded when we became involved. (Lucky me.) It started when 3 months in I caught him in a lie/dishonesty about the extent to which he was in contact with other women in his life. He swears he has never cheated on me, but, so he says, as a symptom of his trauma, he's always had the habit of stringing other women along and engaging in strange power game conversations with women he knows would like to get involved. He is ashamed of this habit, and he claims meeting me has opened his eyes, causing him to seek out therapy and get a handle on his underlying issues. He swears up and down that he has ceased all communication with other women.
Fair enough. However, I'm now distrustful and hurt by his lying. I don't know half of what actually went on/or could still be going on, and I have deep seated urge to speak to him about these things. Needless to say, however, his relationships to women and sex in his life are a trigger - and every time I try to speak to him about it, trying to arrive at some form of status quo, he has a panic attack and freaks out. He says there are things he can't "tell me just yet" about his trauma that have something to do with other women/lying/cheating/the works. On the on hand, I believe him, on the other, sometimes I think he uses his PTSD as a cover for shady behavior.
I know that if I decided to stay with him, I should also decide to trust him. But it's hard when it's next to impossible to actually have a clear and honest conversation about things without him getting attacks and flashbacks. I don't want to keep triggering him, but I being a supporter is hard enough without feeling like there might be cheating involved. Can anyone relate to this problem of not being able to talk about quite important issues due to their triggering content?
I'm a supporter and fairly new here, but have learned so much from browsing already. Thank you!
I have a question about broaching difficult but important subjects with a PTSD sufferer. I've been with my boyfriend for a little over a year. He has PTSD from severe childhood sexual abuse that was latent during most of his life, but pretty much exploded when we became involved. (Lucky me.) It started when 3 months in I caught him in a lie/dishonesty about the extent to which he was in contact with other women in his life. He swears he has never cheated on me, but, so he says, as a symptom of his trauma, he's always had the habit of stringing other women along and engaging in strange power game conversations with women he knows would like to get involved. He is ashamed of this habit, and he claims meeting me has opened his eyes, causing him to seek out therapy and get a handle on his underlying issues. He swears up and down that he has ceased all communication with other women.
Fair enough. However, I'm now distrustful and hurt by his lying. I don't know half of what actually went on/or could still be going on, and I have deep seated urge to speak to him about these things. Needless to say, however, his relationships to women and sex in his life are a trigger - and every time I try to speak to him about it, trying to arrive at some form of status quo, he has a panic attack and freaks out. He says there are things he can't "tell me just yet" about his trauma that have something to do with other women/lying/cheating/the works. On the on hand, I believe him, on the other, sometimes I think he uses his PTSD as a cover for shady behavior.
I know that if I decided to stay with him, I should also decide to trust him. But it's hard when it's next to impossible to actually have a clear and honest conversation about things without him getting attacks and flashbacks. I don't want to keep triggering him, but I being a supporter is hard enough without feeling like there might be cheating involved. Can anyone relate to this problem of not being able to talk about quite important issues due to their triggering content?