grimalkin
Gold Member
@simon12 - Such changes kind of go hand in hand with c-PTSD relationships, especially if the sufferer is not getting treatment or dealing adequately. You can read my story around the board in various forums - 5 year marriage, 7 year relationship gone because my sufferer was triggered by something I said & did, after an incredibly stressful 6 month period. But, because he won't deal with his c-PTSD (and it didn't come out that was the problem until 4 months after the triggering event in which I was involved), he ran.
He could be the most loving, caring person one day, and the next (or sometimes the next minute), be completely awful towards me, while saying I was the one being awful. I, too, got "You are no better than my abusers," when he was symptomatic, and denying he even said such a thing later.
It's a very tough thing to deal with. Unfortunately, I did not have good boundaries, and ended up codependent through the course of our relationship, which did not help either of us. It requires the supporter to have firm boundaries and a support system (and life) outside of their relationship. It's suggested all over these forums (and I agree), that BOTH parties should have their own therapy - the sufferers for obvious reasons, and the supporter to get that mental support and knowledge and sounding board that is not family and friends (IE, a professional who understands mental illness, and whose first advice won't necessarily be "run!" and can help you figure out your own stuff).
Without the sufferer, at the very least, dealing with their illness, long term doesn't seem to work too well. Without the tools to cope with everyday stresses, even a good relationship can get to be too much for them. And without treatment, they may very well believe that triggers are because of other people/things, and not their illness.
He could be the most loving, caring person one day, and the next (or sometimes the next minute), be completely awful towards me, while saying I was the one being awful. I, too, got "You are no better than my abusers," when he was symptomatic, and denying he even said such a thing later.
It's a very tough thing to deal with. Unfortunately, I did not have good boundaries, and ended up codependent through the course of our relationship, which did not help either of us. It requires the supporter to have firm boundaries and a support system (and life) outside of their relationship. It's suggested all over these forums (and I agree), that BOTH parties should have their own therapy - the sufferers for obvious reasons, and the supporter to get that mental support and knowledge and sounding board that is not family and friends (IE, a professional who understands mental illness, and whose first advice won't necessarily be "run!" and can help you figure out your own stuff).
Without the sufferer, at the very least, dealing with their illness, long term doesn't seem to work too well. Without the tools to cope with everyday stresses, even a good relationship can get to be too much for them. And without treatment, they may very well believe that triggers are because of other people/things, and not their illness.