I'm going to be blunt, but it is only to be clear because I care, and I don't think you are seeing the situation for what it is.
If you think she is in danger of ending her life, then call 911 and let them know. She will likely hate you for doing so, and want even less to do with you. Short of that, there is nothing else you can to do "help" her or rescue her or save her.
One of the hardest things for PTSD supporters to understand is this: you. can. not. save, her. It is harmful to her for you to even try.
Furthermore, not respecting her very clear boundary and pushing for that boundary to change is a big turn off for most women, and freaks out most people with PTSD. She has told you No. Very bright and clear. Respect the No.
I know it really hurts really bad to lose her, but the best thing for her and you is to let her go. Reach out for support to go through the pain of letting her go, but do not ever violate that very clear no she has communicated to you. Even if it makes you angry, even if it is not fair. You can not convince her with your anger or love to change the no to a yes. You gotta let her go.
If you do contact her at this point, she could call the police and have you arrested for harassment. I know you do not feel like you are harassing her, but dude, if you live in the US, and someone has told you no contact, and you contact them again, you better be comfy with the idea of sitting in jail, because that is what you are risking at this point. Seriously. Even if you want to help her and pay for therapy for her, you still legally have to back off. Period.
I know you do not mean to harm her at all, and you care for her deeply, and you feared for her safety, but your only option to "help" her is to call 911 if you fear for her imminent safety and let
professionals help her. Not you. Be aware that if you call 911 and she is not a clear threat to her immediate safety, she may let the officer know of any contact from you that she did not want and feels was harassing...
In my mind, we are over...but I can't help but feel like I am abandoning her in a time of need. Help?
You can not abandon someone who already doesn't not want you there. I think you feel abandoned by her, not the other way around. This could be something that is called projection. I also don't think you have really accepted that you are over based on some of the other things you have written.
Thank you for the response. I feel bad that my last texts seemed a little harsh. Is she likely to come back if she senses I'm angry or did I completely push her away?
I'm not sure how anger would bring her back. Anger and pushiness freaks out many PTSD sufferers.
Does that mean she doesn't want to see me anymore?
No mean no. No contact means no contact. No contact means no dating, no seeing you, no contact at all.
.I know we haven't been going out that long but I was extremely depressed when she met me
Depression is tough. No relationship can ever really cure a mental health condition. It seems like it is probably a good time to go back to see a good therapist who can help with your depression. The healthier you are on your own, without a relationship, the better you will be able to find and attract into your life that special girl who will stay for a long time.
All I asked was for her to keep me posted. If she would have said she needed space before hand I would have understood. But the last thing she said before today was that she couldn't function and that left me concerned (then dropped out for two weeks).
I understand that the way it played out was very painful. She struggled with a very serious condition and in the course of the struggle with that condition, she abandoned having a relationship with you. You can't change her or what happened. You got to let her go and find someone who can stay in the relationship. That person is not her.
So you are basically telling me that you wouldn't be upset if your girlfriend (who you talked to frequently everyday and hung out frequently) stopped talking to you after you you wouldn't be upset?
You have a good reason to be upset and to feel very hurt. I would be crushed if I was in your shoes. I would be a pile of tears. But, even though this is so painful and unfair, that doesn't mean you have any right to bust her clear boundaries.
I'm sorry to offend anyone here on this thread, but having ptsd or not, it is not fair not to let the other person in the relationship know if you are ok or not. A simple "im ok" would have made all the difference. I kept thinking that she harmed herself the whole time.
I don't think this is an offensive stance to anyone here. A simple "I'm ok" is not unreasonable to ask for. It doesn't mean its ok to contact her when she says no contact.
My guess is that this situation would have happened sooner or later. People with PTSD often "fall of the face of the planet" repeatedly in relationships. Look up "shut outs" on this website and you will see many threads about that. You will see that there is pretty much zero cases of someone posting, "hey, my girlfriend with PTSD shut me out and I got angry, raged, now she is coming back to me with open arms because I was angry at her for shutting me out." It's not how this works...
If you were to be in a relationship with her, I think it's reasonable to expect that she would shut you out on a regular basis, and it would really upset you, and she would shut you out more, and you would get more upset and feel more abandoned...
If she shut you out because she had cancer and was too weak to respond, would you be so mad? PTSD is like that. This is her not being able to be in a relationship with you. It is very painful. It doesn't mean she is the horrible person I think you have probably implied to her that she is. She is a person who NEEDS SPACE to heal. The more you push, for anything, the more you delay that very healing. The more you show her that no does not mean no to you, and this will inadvertantly reinforce the trauma she has endured at the hands of a man who really didn't take no for an answer.
The best thing you can do to help her is to show her you, as a man, can respect that no means no. Period. Letting her go will help her heal.