It's just tough to hear that he's struggling/hurting and I can't do anything to help him, you know?
Yep. I think this is one of the hardest things about being a supporter. It’s hard as a sufferer too. It happens for people with any number of conditions and illnesses. It’s hard to see pain and not be able to remedy it.
To also be fair, many sufferers of PTSD tend to easily believe the halfway distorted idea that no one will be able to endure the darkness of symptoms because they just won’t get it...
I mean. That’s half wrong. But it takes time to learn that.
Part of what’s really great about peer support is that it’s much harder to say folks won’t get it.
I recently told someone that they just wouldn’t understand xyz about my life. They challenged me on it. A year into a relationship, I would have told them stuff it. It wouldn’t have been helpful for them to say this to me, so I’m not recommending you say this to him. At all’s Frankly, there is plenty about war and trauma that even those with PTSD that haven’t been there wouldn’t understand. Even with my own trauma history, there is much people without PTSD won’t understand.
But having been a number of years into this, and in this relationship in my life, this person was right to tell me that it was a little unfair to say they couldn’t be understand so I can’t rely on them about it. They did actually understand more than I thought and they didn’t have to entirely understand it to be connected to them when things were hard.
(Again, I wouldn’t suggest you challenge him on his resistance to connection. I want to be fair though that sufferers can get a little too caught up in the idea that “no one will understand me” at times.)
but how do I reassure him that he can rely on me when he's feeling this way?
Great question! I think this is going to look a little different for every sufferer.
Most of all, it will take time. Learning to trust others when I’m struggling has been the slowest part of my recovery.
Plus, as others have pointed out, one of the hardest things about PTSD for me is that believing someone is really there for me... that doesn’t always mean it’s helpful for me to connect to them when I’m struggling. Sometimes it is, sometimes it’s not. Sometimes it just stresses me out more, even when I trust them. My therapist has explained that when people begin to feel safe in a relationship, symptoms can spike even more. It can be destablizing. So if a sufferer is saying to you that they are too symptomatic to connect... it actually may be really wise for them to pace connection as they get their feet under them.
It’s sort of like having a broken leg. I can trust others are there for me, but it doesn’t mean I can climb a mountain. Or that trusting them will mean I can climb a mountain. I have to go through the whole process of her leg healing and learning to walk again on that leg, physical therapy and etc....
One of the things that helps me when others take space from connection, including those with and without PTSD, is to remind myself that while unchecked isolation isn’t healthy, boundaries are healthy. When someone says “no,” it means I can trust their “yes” all the more.
So when he takes space, try reframing it as being glad he’s doing what he needs to do to take care of himself, and that you’ll look forward to connecting again when he can. When people say that to me, it makes it easier.
One option to explore with him later might Ben ways you might be able to be there for him before he has to shut down, including ways that don’t require you to step into the worst of it and him to sustain trying to let someone into the worst of it.
Example: when my stress cup is starting to get full, and before I just can’t do it anymore, I’ve learned to reach out and say just, “hey, I’ve had a bad day. I don’t want to talk about it, but it might help for me to go run/see a movie/escape life for a bit and destress in xyz way... want to come along?” I’ll only risk that with people who can be really cool about knowing there’s problem they can’t fix or know about, but we can do something to distract together.
He may not have the skills or ability yet to flag those times for himself, but maybe down the road it could be an option to explore. (But wait until things are in a good place to ask about this.)
Glad you are reaching out to learn more!