Never_falter2
Diamond Member
Yesterday we watched Christopher Robin (the Disney movie, not to be confused with “Good Bye Christopher Robin“ which seems to be a movie about Milne having ptsd and we never watched it). For those who do not know it here is a quick info: Christopher Robin is a grown up man in the movie, his parents have send him to a boarding school, he is a vet of WWII and he is working to much when Winnie the Pooh visits him.
I am not sure if I mentioned before that vet was send to a boarding school and while he made friends and thinks he got a good education he was also a bit sad about it.
So yesterday we watched Winnie the Pooh and when the kids were asleep my guy said that this movie explained why he was feeling suicidal sometimes and of course I asked him to explain. He answered he could not explain but asked me if I noticed Christopher Robin was a Vet in the movie. I told him: Yes, of course and if he wanted to talk about that. He said no, he did not want to. I asked him what it was he wanted to talk about. He said there was nothing he wanted to talk about. So I asked him “but you are talking to me now. Why? There is something you want to discuss with me?“. He said “Don‘t know“. He told me he was not feeling suicidal right now and then after a while that watching the movie explains ptsd very well. Not the avoidance and hypervigilance part but the rest. I cuddled him but to be honest I am still not sure what he is talking about. Asked him to explain again but he only shrugged his shoulders.
I only watched a movie about a man, Christopher Robin, who is working too much (and my Vet does work too much) and who was send to a boarding school (like my vet was)... but I cannot see a symptom of ptsd in Christopher Robin.
I feel helpless in a talk like this. I do not know how to help him if he cannot even explain to me how he feels... and i really do think that he CANNOT verbalize it or he would have done it by now. He never verbalizes how he feels but when he does, he does it in a very cryptic way and when you ask him to explain he stutters or says dunno or shrugs his shoulders.
It is still very early in the morning over here and he is asleep but I think I will talk about the topic again as soon as he wakes up if the kids are still asleep.
I am not sure if I mentioned before that vet was send to a boarding school and while he made friends and thinks he got a good education he was also a bit sad about it.
So yesterday we watched Winnie the Pooh and when the kids were asleep my guy said that this movie explained why he was feeling suicidal sometimes and of course I asked him to explain. He answered he could not explain but asked me if I noticed Christopher Robin was a Vet in the movie. I told him: Yes, of course and if he wanted to talk about that. He said no, he did not want to. I asked him what it was he wanted to talk about. He said there was nothing he wanted to talk about. So I asked him “but you are talking to me now. Why? There is something you want to discuss with me?“. He said “Don‘t know“. He told me he was not feeling suicidal right now and then after a while that watching the movie explains ptsd very well. Not the avoidance and hypervigilance part but the rest. I cuddled him but to be honest I am still not sure what he is talking about. Asked him to explain again but he only shrugged his shoulders.
I only watched a movie about a man, Christopher Robin, who is working too much (and my Vet does work too much) and who was send to a boarding school (like my vet was)... but I cannot see a symptom of ptsd in Christopher Robin.
I feel helpless in a talk like this. I do not know how to help him if he cannot even explain to me how he feels... and i really do think that he CANNOT verbalize it or he would have done it by now. He never verbalizes how he feels but when he does, he does it in a very cryptic way and when you ask him to explain he stutters or says dunno or shrugs his shoulders.
It is still very early in the morning over here and he is asleep but I think I will talk about the topic again as soon as he wakes up if the kids are still asleep.
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