I'm working a lot on intimacy with therapist. Even a conversation about intimacy in our therapeutic relationship takes me a lot of effort to stay seated on the couch. It's so hard to trust. Especially because I don't know what I'm feeling a lot of the time. Therapist said that was noteable because how we feel is the beginnings of a basis for intimacy.
Nomedic is it possible that you either keep everything hidden (ie no emotional intimacy at all), or let it all spill, which results in your being too vulnerable all at once?
I think I was raised to be too trusting. Which, I think now has become just completely untrusting. I can be open, but that's different. Actually it's tricky because I learned at some point in high school that *oversharing* can produce a barrier to intimacy. If we share more than the other person has, it sets up a dynamic where we are more exposed, and the other person may back away, feeling as if they have to share as much as we just did. There's an idea of reciprocity in here, I suppose. And having PTSD, if we share feelings or any experiences because we think we feel it safe to, can backfire if we've wrongly estimated the other person. Or maybe I can say, if the other person has unknowingly conveyed they can be trusted, but had no idea the level of sharing that would come up with us.
This is just my experience. But it came up from your last post about putting your heart in some people's hands. Being truly emotionally intimate in a personal relationship is different than being able to post things on an online forum. That's the equation for me, anyway. I had a long distance relationship with my spouse for a long time and then I moved to another country to be with him, and it all changed, because instead of interacting over an online forum (not here) or on skype or in email, we were faced with a need for intimacy, every day, in ways I emotionally couldn't provide. It's in part been our downfall : (