Justmehere
Sponsor
For me, surviving the trauma was being numb, like if one’s body is shoved into ice. Hurts. Never stops hurting. But the body adjusts and goes numb. Then when I got out of the trauma, it was like getting out of the ice. If you have ever had a body part freeze, you know that warming up can hurt like crazy. With trauma, there can be a process of warming up, and then beginning to feel all the pain that had been stuff for so long to survive. When surviving trauma, one has no time or space to grieve what is being lost. It all eventually comes, sometimes when someone feels safe.Can you speak more to this? Because it is the exact thing that has haunted me ever since my ex-gf broke things off.
Sufferers vary wildly. There are so many possible reasons for someone not contacting an ex.What I don't understand is why, when the symptoms calmed down, wouldn't she (or you) look back at the relationship you just left and be like, "Wait... that WAS a healthy relationship." And contact that person? If you think they'd be open to reconciliation, why would you go out into the dating world in search of a good relationship when you have one waiting for you right there!
Several of a million possible reasons: they haven’t figured out it was a good relationship even when it was, the person hasn’t worked on what triggered them, their stress cup didn’t have room for the stress of rebuilding a relationship, they just were not into the person anymore, etc, etc.
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