@Muttly - I know my husband would echo all your comments, here! Including the "not knowing" yourself! He struggled, so, with this aspect, and for many years. :) :( And I think it's super sweet that your friend noticed the speaking in "plural" .. !! :hug:
@aut555 - If you want to speak to your like-like friend :) about what you've observed, Muttly's remarks about the friend that
noticed the "little boy" and the use of plural pronouns would be a GOOD example of how you could
TIP-TOE into the conversation in a
KIND way without causing further trauma. Better to be too slow than too fast on this one!
Additionally - notice how Muttly's friend
simply making observations - as if it's "
no big deal" and perfectly
acceptable and
SAFE inside the relationship! - has the effect of being acknowledging/affirming? This is how it was for my husband and I, too, especially in the beginning. :)
And I think, as an aside, you make another CRITICAL revelation - about
liking ALL of your friend's parts .. My husband and I had a little different situation in that my husband didn't even know all his own parts when we were transitioning from friends to more-than-friends. So we were BOTH kinda discovering as we went. But once we were pretty confident we knew everyone inside, and each part had a role AND a "right" (!) to their own feelings about US as a couple, I knew I
couldn't accept a marriage proposal from him until he was in
"internal agreement" about moving forward.
Once I was aware "everyone" inside LOVED me and was HAPPY about "us" - even if each part related to me a little differently - only THEN could I in good conscience move forward. Because I didn't want ANY part of my man to feel left out or stepped over or disregarded, even a little bit.
And in the end, this WAITING and uncertainty really paid off, because BOTH of us are confident we have made the right decision in choosing each other. And my willingness to wait helped the rest of my now husband feel SAFE and unpressured in each stage of our relationship development. And the DISCOVERY process was more HONEST, then. :)
As I've met more people through this site and another dedicated to DID and DID supporters, I have heard many SAD stories of relationships where one person was only "in love" with only one PART of the DID person, and that just makes for all kinds of struggle and difficulty, and usually eventually the relationship itself ends up in trauma and broken in the end. :(
And I know I post this a lot around here, but oh dear, to love ALL of him, to HAVE "all of him" inside OUR relationship .. it was SO worth the wait. :) :inlove:
~WU