In their minds they don't want that at all, they want to be alone
the one time they did, I came out of it faster, could organise my thoughts and then contact them
I'm understanding all of this.... as sometimes I have to be reminded but yes... there are and have been times when I too just want to be "left alone" and it's nothing personal. Even with my own friends... well, lately with some it's because they don't want to hear about what I'm going through even though they ask, and I am really not in the mood to hear their take on it which comes from an un-open minded place of ignorance on their part. It doesn't mean their bad friends, they just aren't what I need to 'get me through' right now... sometimes I just have to quiet my mind from any outside opinions and focus within. I see and totally understand that for my sufferer...
The hardest part... at least in my case... is he usually shuts off when we are actually GOOD. It's taken a couple of rounds for me to realize as I do now - much quicker than before and because we've gotten to a more open place where he knows he needs to or is safe to explain - is it isn't about someone else in his mind... though there are stressors brought on by other people and things in his life... but it is when we start to get good, confident, and comfortable when all of a sudden he freaks out. That's a hard thing to swallow for a healthy person.
I don't think it's about committment as he keeps saying, I think in his mind he all of a sudden feels he HAS to be obligated to me. He's got all this pressure he's feeling from others, or he is taking on on his own, and that's what he does with me. My way of trying to "fix" it for him is spreading on this thick blanket of proof with words that that's not what I intended for him to feel - but that is what is not in my control. He all of a sudden feels I am a threat to
his control and is afraid he's going to hurt me and will lose me for good.
There is no middle ground with PTSD. It's one extreme or the other. Him isolating to find space is as close to the middle ground as he can get and I need to let him do that. If I push - especially about why he's doing it, "things were going so well", etc. - he retreats farther. If I don't push, he comes around and texts me 'good night', or will open up to talk a little. If me texting him in response is too much, as long as I keep it neutral and about the weather, or the day, or something of that nature, at least those are the last texts he sees and it's not about a text he may see as a threat to his space where he's trying to relieve some of the pressure he's feeling. He too is trying to reflect inward and get his life back into control as there are times I do too. Acknowledging this about myself, and understanding - aside from PTSD - that he needs to do this seperates the man from the disease and he is feeling more 'normal' so to speak...?
The first time T tried to isolate, it freaked me out... new to the disease, etc. Before he was gone completely I plummeted myself into therapy, reading, this site and backed off before I lost him completely. I can't guarantee it works for everyone, but at the same time, it was just a small part of the rest of what I needed to do FOR ME in regards to other areas of my personal life.
I think the only way we can, or at least I've tried, to seperate the disease from the man, and from trying to "HELP" too much is to realize, we aren't much different as clinically "healthy" people than they are even with PTSD. EVERYONE becomes Co-Dependant when we see someone who is sick, and in need. We jump in trying to HELP. I love my soldiers... my brother, my ex husband, my friends, my boyfriend. But they are MEN and PTSD totally cuts them down at the knees and makes them feel weak. Sends them into depressions, overindulgence of substance abuse, video games, sexual relationships, sleep, sleep deprivation, etc. They are afraid to seek help especially at the beginning because it makes them feel even weaker... but they are SOLDIERS. They aren't supposed to be weak. So we need to learn how to HELP THEM by letting them be MEN. Being there but as they need us. YES, we must have our own set of boundaries... always TAKE CARE OF YOU. It will earn you more respect when you do and if it doesn't, then he just down right isn't a good man. But let them be MEN. Let them go at their pace. If he needs space, he just needs space. He doesn't need one more person to take care of or one more person making him feel insufficient to taking care of himself. There is nothing wrong with that. That is normal. So let them be as normal as they can be.
- sorry. kind of went off on a tangent there but just feeling sort of ZEN and awake this morning -