Hi,
I've been extremely close to someone for well over a year now.
I have my own problems due to untreated c-ptsd like symptoms which have been diagnosed as all kinds of separate things over the years (depression, panic disorder, agoraphobia, social anxiety etc etc etc), but basically they (and another issue) has got the better of me and I really don't function well at all.
So I want to really help this person but feel at a loss...
Onto the actual topic: this person has been so, so good to me, and basically the first person in my life who has really clicked with me.
But this endless, constant kindness and compassion comes from a complex place and although I never expect him to help me and often encourage him to do something directly for himself he feels a driving need. I think he feels if he fixes me I can fix him and we can build a life together and everything will be okay.
He is a lovely, funny, charismatic person, but had a hard time throughout his life, been very lonely, with neglect from his parents, abuse, and terrible bullying at school, although I don't think I will ever know the full extent of it. His dad left when he was young, doesn't appear to care a lot about him. He spent years just living with his mum, caring for her from about the ages of 11-15 before she died. He also suffered bouts of severe mental illness that meant he was in hospital a couple of times, for the years after her death. He was diagnosed with aspergers (i.e. ASD) a few years ago and got even worse generally after that -- he tried to seek out help that did far more harm that good, very patronising, and treated him like an idiot (he's perfectly intelligent).
Sorry for being all over the place in this post. I think the reason I started writing this was because I am so sad over the lack of care he is getting, and I don't feel that he is telling mental health professionals all that he needs to tell them so that they can try and help him best they can. There are things he has told only me about where he heavily implied sexual abuse from his parents. And he hasn't told the professionals this.
I can't begin to image how difficult and risky it must feel for him divulge this information: obviously it has to be the right person. But, he's 30 now, and drifts along, not wanting anything -- he has the kind of fundmental damage to his spirit and self-esteem and ambition that the things he goes through and has been through will be responsible for. I don't want his future to be compromised anymore and I don't want him to waste it trying to help me and get me decent professional support.
But really I think I just want to know how I could go about encouraging him to speak honestly with mental health professionals, especially as I don't want to pry too much and am nto really in a great place myself.
I know this is a long ramble, sorry. Advice would be really appreciated.
I've been extremely close to someone for well over a year now.
I have my own problems due to untreated c-ptsd like symptoms which have been diagnosed as all kinds of separate things over the years (depression, panic disorder, agoraphobia, social anxiety etc etc etc), but basically they (and another issue) has got the better of me and I really don't function well at all.
So I want to really help this person but feel at a loss...
Onto the actual topic: this person has been so, so good to me, and basically the first person in my life who has really clicked with me.
But this endless, constant kindness and compassion comes from a complex place and although I never expect him to help me and often encourage him to do something directly for himself he feels a driving need. I think he feels if he fixes me I can fix him and we can build a life together and everything will be okay.
He is a lovely, funny, charismatic person, but had a hard time throughout his life, been very lonely, with neglect from his parents, abuse, and terrible bullying at school, although I don't think I will ever know the full extent of it. His dad left when he was young, doesn't appear to care a lot about him. He spent years just living with his mum, caring for her from about the ages of 11-15 before she died. He also suffered bouts of severe mental illness that meant he was in hospital a couple of times, for the years after her death. He was diagnosed with aspergers (i.e. ASD) a few years ago and got even worse generally after that -- he tried to seek out help that did far more harm that good, very patronising, and treated him like an idiot (he's perfectly intelligent).
Sorry for being all over the place in this post. I think the reason I started writing this was because I am so sad over the lack of care he is getting, and I don't feel that he is telling mental health professionals all that he needs to tell them so that they can try and help him best they can. There are things he has told only me about where he heavily implied sexual abuse from his parents. And he hasn't told the professionals this.
I can't begin to image how difficult and risky it must feel for him divulge this information: obviously it has to be the right person. But, he's 30 now, and drifts along, not wanting anything -- he has the kind of fundmental damage to his spirit and self-esteem and ambition that the things he goes through and has been through will be responsible for. I don't want his future to be compromised anymore and I don't want him to waste it trying to help me and get me decent professional support.
But really I think I just want to know how I could go about encouraging him to speak honestly with mental health professionals, especially as I don't want to pry too much and am nto really in a great place myself.
I know this is a long ramble, sorry. Advice would be really appreciated.