• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Relationship I Guess I'm That Girl...

Status
Not open for further replies.

mackenzieco

New Here
Sorry this is so long....

So I've been having a long distance relationship with a special forces officer in Denmark. He suffers from combat PTSD apparently quite severely. He had a severe break about 5 years ago when he caught his fiancee cheating on him with a good (he thought so anyway) friend. He went into a rage and nearly killed the guy and ended up in a psych hospital for a few months. He's been in therapy ever since, managed to return to active duty and finally felt like he was ready for a relationship. Finally, I enter the scene, we seemed quite compatible as people, enjoyed talking to each other, things were great. He mentioned that he had PTSD and basically said it just affected his sleeping. An understatement at best, things progressed, then we started having tiny arguments, it seemed he was always annoyed with me about something. Then he opens up that PTSD is more than what he said it was, I then start doing research to see what I am dealing with and luckily find his site among others.

So going forward we function basically on a roller-coaster, I noticed the arc of of being okay to kind of okay to not okay to explosive argument to separation to back to being okay. I think everyone of you know what I am speaking of. When we managed to get together, half of the time was great, half of the time was a bit of a nightmare to be honest. I hadn't expected perfection, no such thing when PTSD isn't in the picture and certainly not when it is. And considering he was having a hard time just speaking to me for any length of time on the phone in this particular period. A lot of reasons for this I think, owing to PTSD, his last relationship, and how the meds affect his sexual performance. Before I visited I told him that it would be okay if we couldn't spend the entire time together because I thought he would need space from me. He had planned to run quite a bit while I was there, a way for him to spend some time along (I was okay with this) and it was good for him to get exercise.

Like I said, it was equally good and bad, but the visit ended poorly. My last day/night there,he became extremely agitated, went back to the base early and apparently became extremely ill after that (in bed for over a week). There was a lot going on that day emotionally--I was leaving in the morning, we visited his mother's grave together....they didn't have a good relationship, and he showed me the house that he loved--that he lost after the incident with the fiancee, when he was suspended for 9 months for severely beating the "friend". So much so, that he had to retire early than he had intended. We knew he would be retiring this year, but he was hoping to hang on until the Fall for financial reasons.

We seemed to get things back together sort of, it was quite tentative. He was angry because he felt like during the visit I had an attitude that he didn't like. He says I rolled my eyes at him quite a bit when he asked me not to laugh so loud, speak loudly, etc. From my side it was more looking to heaven and asking for help to be honest. Especially because, he would ask me sometimes to speak up (he has a hearing aid that he wasn't wearing) and I felt like everything I was doing was wrong in his eyes.

But we did get to a better place, but I could still see and sense that he was in a vulnerable position. He was concerned that I didn't love him because he was talking much and I told him that I understood. I told him that I just wanted to check in with him now that he was living off of the base (something that made me very nervous, we had spoken of this before and he himself said he didn't think his living alone was a good idea).

Finally we had a huge argument, more from his side. He thought I was cheating with someone else (I wasn't), that he couldn't trust me (he couldn't tell me what made him feel that way) and that he needed space. I said okay, but that I wanted to know if he loved me....he's said lots of things but he's never said he didn't love me. So he said, "I don't love you anymore...there I said it". And yes, there are obvious reasons why I would want to believe it, but in all honesty it was that convincing when we had started the conversation with him telling me that I had to contact him if he sent me a text. I hadn't answered a text because by the time I had received it, he should have been asleep. And because he does have trouble sleeping I didn't want to disturb him.

Cut to a week or so later, we're still talking even after all that was said above...and he finally says that he needs a two week break. That I should understand that I am pushing him away and that I am not helping him at all.

Today, I realized that he has changed his cell phone number and he want reply to an email I sent.

I am somewhat surprised, not entirely, but I am hurt because stupid me thought we would eventually be able to work things out. I hate that he has completely closed the door on me.

Any thoughts...anything would be helpful to me at this point I think. I just need to talk it out with people who might understand...
 
stupid me
You're not stupid.

Not that things are going to work out between the 2 of you either, but you're not stupid. I can't explain what's going on with him, but, obviously, something is. I hope he gets through this ok, but he doesn't sound like he's ready to be in a serious relationship just now.

I have PTSD. A week ago, I emailed my therapist and called him a liar, more or less. It was uncalled for, out of line, and kind of nuts. (But, he might being lying to me....) I've done stuff like that a few times, now that I've thought about it. Sometimes the person really WAS lying. Sometimes it was about something else. Sometimes the friendship survived, sometimes it didn't. However it works, it works. I wish I could explain it, but I'm sort of at a loss to understand it myself. I don't know that anyone needs to be in a serious relationship with someone who does stuff like that.

You sound like a good and compassionate person. I don't know that you could have done anything differently to achieve a different outcome. You're not stupid.
 
Hi Scout,
Thanks for the message. You made me chuckle a bit with the first two lines. I needed that. I also appreciate your saying that I am a compassionate person. I have really tried to be as understanding and caring as I could.[DOUBLEPOST=1399855887,1399855823][/DOUBLEPOST]I think it just may not be meant to be....and I think you are right. He's not ready for a serious relationship with anyone.
 
I think that at this point he is not ready for a relationship and I don't think you could have done anything better to have ensured a more positive outcome for the two of you. He has pretty much spoken at this point and he has told you that he does not want you in your life anymore. I think that the best thing you can do is accept it and move on rather than hold out hope that things are going to suddenly change. I'm going to recommend a behavioral therapy concept to you known as radical acceptance. You can google it to find a more in depth description, but basically it allows us to simply accept what is without judging it as good or bad. Accepting the reality of the situation allows us to move forward. We don't have to like the truth to accept the truth, but it is this acceptance that helps us move forward. I don't normally suggest therapeutic tools to supporters, but I think this one is a good one that could really help you and I oftentimes recommend it to other sufferers. I see other supporters who hang on too long and want their sufferer to come back, but oftentimes it doesn't happen. I just don't want you to hold out hope when he has shut you out so cruelly.
 
It is so easy to excuse a sufferer's actions with "He has PTSD, so it excuses X,Y or Z"... but that is not healthy for either one of you guys. It's good to ask yourself the question "would I put up with this crap if he didn't have PTSD?" There is a good chance that if a perfectly healthy man treated you like that, he would hit the curb in 2.5 seconds. PTSD is no excuse to be accusative, or cruel, or ignore you. It may be a reason why somebody does something like that, but it is not a valid excuse.

Supporters tend to be very compassionate and selfless people, but you cannot make yourself a martyr and still have a healthy relationship. It will never work. If a sufferer is ready to be in a relationship, then they have to be willing to work at being in a relationship. That means they have to be able to contribute as well. You cannot be a nurse or a target for his moods 100% of the time just because he is the designated patient, or it is going to be exhausting. He has to work at the relationship too. He has to learn to love, have compassion, and be there for you... even if it is not in a way that he may have been able to do pre-PTSD. If he cannot even attempt that, then he is not ready to be in a relationship.

I can sympathize with the urge to protect him and take care of him, my sufferer has bad spells too, and there is nothing more heartbreaking than when the one you love is in so much pain. Those spells are not our norm though. When he is feeling normal (or whatever passes for normal in his PTSD world now), he works hard at being a good partner to me. He may not be able to do all that he wants to do in that aspect, but I can see the effort that he is making, and that in itself is enough for me.

You just have to decide what is enough for you to make it worth all the rough times.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$980.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  54.4%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom