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Relationship He Lost Part Of Himself

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The timing of my relationship was both perfectly and wrongly timed. My fiancé and I met just prior to the incidence that caused his PTSD. I knew from early on that I loved him and he was the one for me. I watched him go through the PTSD and hurt right along beside him. He doesn't remember a lot of it, but I do. His mind has shielded him from the bad memories somewhat but I am still bothered by them. He has began to heal, it's been almost a year. But I still see some of the personality traits and the little things that have changed in him. In no way will it make me stop loving him but it hurts to see some of the things I fell so madly in love with are gone because of the PTSD. Do those things come back in time? I am still crazy about him and love him endlessly but is it wrong for part of me to miss those parts of him? He recognizes that he is a different person to an extent and feels guilt for it, like he dragged me into something I don't deserve to deal with. We are planing a wedding for next spring and I couldn't be happier but some days I miss those little things.
 
There is no way to tell if a certain trait will come back in time. PTSD and trauma can cause permanent changes in us. I think that the best thing for you to do is work on grieving the parts of him that are gone and then if they do come back, it will be like the best Christmas present you've ever gotten.

Its not wrong for you to miss those parts of him that are gone. However, I don't think it is helpful to you or to him to hold out hope that those parts will come back. The best thing that you can do is to accept things as they are and if the situation improves, then all the better.

I wish you the best.
 
@BehindBlueEyes

My heart goes out to you. You should know, first of all, that you deserve a huge amount of credit for remaining with your fiance through such a time, in the face of seeing him "become someone different from the person you fell in love with", most especially. It speaks volumes of the depth of your character that your loyalty would remain undiminished in the face of being dealt such cruel hand by fate as to see the one you fell in love with disappear, to be replaced by what must in many ways seem to be a stranger. So many seem to see any commitment made to a previous relationship invalidated by virtue of the fact that the relationship seems for all the world to be with a person different from the one to whom the original commitment was made, in the first place...almost as though as a mortgage on a house would be voided if the house turned out, in fact, to be only a cardboard cut out, for example.

And I'm very glad you've sought out support from this forum, and suggest that you do so from other sources of information and support---as PTSD almost inevitably turns out to be a much more complicated and involved--and challenging--than anyone first imagines.

I don't say this to discourage you, by any means, as without knowing the specifics of your fiance's history and symptoms, etc, it's impossible to speak to his case, specifically--or anyone else's really, as PTSD takes such different and nearly wholly unique forms, in each sufferer. Nor do I think it would be wise for you to invest a great deal of significance in the advice or opinions of those other than a specialist personally involved in your fiance's treatment, at least regarding your his specific circumstances, diagnosis, and prognosis. While laypersons such as the contributors to this forum can provide insight into the condition in very broad terms, and support for you in your experience, accepting as gospel the input of anyone without credentials, especially at long distance, can be a recipe for disaster.

To that end, I hope you'll seek support through the "Supporters" forum either here or on other related forums, where you'd find others whose experiences would resonate with your own, and with whom you'd be more likely to identify, and therefore get a sense of another being "in your corner", who has been intimate with the trials you find yourself facing.

I strongly encourage you to begin reading materials related to PTSD. I would recommend Trauma and Recovery, by Judith Herman, M.D., to start. But many resources exist online, as well.

Speaking from my own personal experience, when I first began to display symptoms at around 22, my then fiance couldn't have been more bewildered...especially as there was no obvious recent trauma responsible, and neither I nor other healthcare practitioners had any idea at the time either the origin of my symptoms, or how to address them.

To her credit, she stood by me for far longer than she could have been expected to, given the severity of my symptoms, and the universal quality of my accompanying personality change. Again, just as an example, and without any attempt to suggest that my case might be similar to that of your fiance...my symptoms persisted at a severe level for almost 20 years, thereafter, rendering me unrecognizable to everyone from my former life.

I think the question...whether aspects of someone with PTSD "come back"...may itself be setting yourself up for disappointment. I do know that my own view of the "condition" was similar to that of what I've become familiar with as the average response to anyone facing a healthcare crisis of any kind...and the reaction of the loved ones of any such person: There seems to be an understandable expectation that, like a fever, or appendicitis, after treatment, the patient will be "healed" entirely, which implies a complete and total return to the individual's state prior to the ailment.

While I can by no means speak for all of those who have experienced PTSD, and am by no means a specialist of any kind...all I have read, and all of whom I've personally heard speak of their own cases....suggests that unlike a physical condition that responds to surgery or antibiotics, PTSD is more a matter of gradual "rebuilding of a self", on a large scale--and just as a structure which has been torn down cannot be rebuilt with each brick exactly in the same position, and with the same mortar, as it previously existed...neither can an individual, after an experience so traumatic that it results in "breakdown".

I have noticed, however--as have family members who knew me prior--that previous character attributes have resurfaced and reasserted themselves...but not in the exact quality, or identical in manifestation.

In my own opinion, you would be setting yourself up for discouragement and disappointment, were you to view it in these terms...as your expectations of your fiance suddenly "snapping out of it", and into the identical person he was when you met him, would likely cause you to resent the fact that he has not done so. I believe it also is likely to result in an unconscious resentment toward your fiance...as "the stranger who stole your love, and took his place"...even though that of course wouldn't be a conscious thought process.

Bless you for your loyalty and determination, and I hope you'll continue to seek out more information, and support, from others with experience.
 
Uhm, sorry previous poster, but by your own post, this forum should exist because none of us are professionals (except a few who happen to have PTSD and be a therapist). I don't find it particularly helpful to tell people they need to just consult a professional because we don't know anything as laypeople. I think you completely misunderstand the purpose of this forum.

I COMPLETELY understand what the thread poster is asking, and there have only been two times in recent memory where I have actually said that you should consult a professional as it is out of the expertise or experience of those on the forum. That is not the case here, as I can pretty much guarantee that a professional will tell her just as I have...that those traits may not come back at all, and that it does no good to dwell on the fact that they are gone for now.

Do you understand the purpose of a peer-to-peer forum?
 
@[DLMURL="https://www.myptsd.com/c/members/solara.1860/"]Solara[/DLMURL]

Uhm, sorry previous poster, but by your own post, this forum should exist because none of us are professionals (except a few who happen to have PTSD and be a therapist). I don't find it particularly helpful to tell people they need to just consult a professional because we don't know anything as laypeople. I think you completely misunderstand the purpose of this forum.

I'm curious as to which "previous poster" this post refers. As my version of the forum shows no posts subsequent to my own, yet previous to that made by the above member, I'm forced to assume that the reference was made with regard to my previous post...despite the fact that none of the statements in the above quote appeared in that post, nor were in any way implied. If such was the case, I'd certainly appreciate being made aware of exactly how.

An actual reading of my previous post would have cleared up any confusion, if such reference was intended:
Nor do I think it would be wise for you to invest a great deal of significance in the advice or opinions of those other than a specialist personally involved in your fiance's treatment, at least regarding your his specific circumstances, diagnosis, and prognosis. While laypersons such as the contributors to this forum can provide insight into the condition in very broad terms, and support for you in your experience, accepting as gospel the input of anyone without credentials, especially at long distance, can be a recipe for disaster.

"...invest A GREAT DEAL OF SIGNIFICANCE in the advice or opinions of those other than a specialist"..etc.

This is quite a far cry from saying that NO significance should be invested...or that such opinions are totally without value-much less that this forum should not exist because no contributor is a professional.

The above statement was worded as such in effort to safeguard a new and potentially impressionable member from taking a potentially irresponsible or errant post, of which there has been known to be a few, on the internet....and allowing to affect her relationship with her fiance, or overall idea of PTSD. No more.

"I don't feel it particularly helpful to tell people that they just need to consult a professional because we don't know anything as laypeople"

Not only was any such statement completely absent from the previous post...the same post encouraged Behindblueeyes to continue to seek out support and information via forums like this, and others:

And I'm very glad you've sought out support from this forum, and suggest that you do so from other sources of information and support---as PTSD almost inevitably turns out to be a much more complicated and involved--and challenging--than anyone first imagines.

Perhaps a closer read of the posts you intend to quote would eliminate confusion, in the future.
 
We all change characteristics and personality wise as we grow - PTSD or not. I am not trying to minimize the impact that your SO's condition has on you, so please trust in that. However, change is to be expected. I guess the question I would ask myself is, does my SO recognize that he has work to do in developing the 'new him' that will grow from this experience or is he in denial. Denial - not so good. Just my two cents.
 
Thank you all for the words of encouragement and support. He has yet to have any professional help and it's almost been a year he's been going through this. His employer pretty much hung him out to dry and didn't offer any kind of help and dropped his insurance. He has been working through a self help book and journaling in the beginning but I think now he just wants to act like it never happened.

I feel it's putting a huge strain on our relationship and I am becoming very irritable and snapping a lot at him because I feel like I have been supporting him and helping him through everything on my own. My only outlet is here and writing my thoughts out. I don't have many trustworthy close friends whom I would trust with something like this. M and I are trying to work on building our communication back and trying to be patient with eachother. I handled it all very well for awhile and over the past few weeks I just feel very overwhelmed and frazzled.
 
Hope you can find a support group for Supporters of PTSD Sufferers...even if only online. There's a Supporters resource on this site, in fact. You'd likely draw even more strength and satisfaction from the resonance you find there. But so glad you're looking for opportunities to both vent, and learn more. I believe that's crucial to remaining in a relationship with a partner suffering from symptoms related to trauma. Take care, and feel free to PM me, personally.
 
PTSD isn't something that spontaneously disappears so, while I understand his desire for it to just go away, it isn't and it won't. From my (external and happy to be corrected) perspective, it's something that becomes manageable rather than something that goes away. This process takes a lot of work, and a lot of support and energy. It's not possible for you to be able to provide all of this support and energy. Some of this support and energy has to come from outside. It's just physics ;)

My point being, he needs therapy to get well. And you can really benefit from therapy while supporting him to get well (cause it's haaaaaaaard and I'm guessing, like me, that you hadn't supported someone with PTSD before so it's also a pretty steep learning curve). We've been dropping a not insignificant portion of our savings on all our respective therapy, and are on a waiting list for a trauma-informed couples counsellor so we can spend even more on therapy, but it's been a very very worthwhile investment that I cannot recommend enough.

That said, recovery (from anything) is a painful and frustratingly slow process. It's ok to need to take breaks from it! But both of you have made a choice to be a team, which means his decisions directly impact on your life, and if he is deciding to take a rest from recovery work then that decision needs to be made in partnership with you. In my opinion.

And I totally understand the ebb and flow of being able to cope... I can be managing great, then totally overwhelmed, then just getting by... changes all the time depending on so many factors. This forum helps a lot. And overall, things are improving :) I hope things start to feel easier for you soon too.
 
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