This is really hard.
I'm new here and I'm still learning about PTSD.
Jenkins, I would have made the same mistakes, and I did, with a wonderful friend that I met a couple of years ago. She changed my life. I can't be the same anymore. I feel as if she's part of my family and I can't lose her.
I never really respected her isolating wishes, not knowing about PTSD. We communicate mainly by email, which is the best way to respect everyone's privacy and time. I can't believe that we're still friends after all the mistakes I made. I think she had a lot of patience with me and I'm terribly grateful.
I think it must be different in "love" relationships though, as the need for contact is certainly greater. Although I worry so much about my friend that I need to hear from her more often than what she can "offer". She's been isolated for such a long time that she doesn't have the same "reflexes" as "we" have, to just drop a line... just to let people know that we're all right.
I wonder if sometimes "leave me alone" is not exactly the real wish of a person. I wonder if respecting the wish could be interpreted as "not caring enough".
I didn't know my friend had PTSD and I behaved in all sorts of silly ways. The relationship was "ended" by her more than once. But I never respected her wish, and I wrote apologies, trying to understand what went wrong, asking what I could do to improve it (but then often I couldn't respect her wishes). What happened is that I felt treated with contempt and disdain, and I couldn't handle it. I assumed it was nastiness towards me and I got angry. At the end I ended up apologising for my reaction but she never apologised for her words. And then... back to normal emails, as if nothing happened.. And she stopped telling me about her life, saying that I couldn't understand anyway.
It all started in a similar way as yours, Jenkins. I was apparently the only one whom she told what happened to her (child abuse, especially by father, huge depression as a young adult). She had also mentioned PTSD, but I concentrated on the "child abuse" part, and tried to read things about it. And then fortunately I later went to look for PTSD and I found some answers. But only in this site/forum I could find comfort, seeing that the other "carers" have the same reactions, the same concerns, the same distress! I thought I was going crazy! Or that I was being fussy!!
Reading what other sufferers write helps me to understand my friend better (because she doesn't want to talk about it anymore). In this way I hope we will have less bad moments, and more joy together. She's the most amazing person I've ever met in my life!
From what I read, I think I have to give up thinking that I can "cure" her. I thought that love could cure, but I have to accept reality now.
Jenkins, are there any news?