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- #13
LoveHimThroughIt
Bronze Member
This is different advice than I have gotten from my PTSD group (remember, the group is only friends and family - no PTSD Sufferer opinions there). They expressed that I need to set my boundaries and express my feelings and my needs. I don't want to overwhelm him, but one of the girls actually has a brilliant suggestion that I wanted to share with him. Let me share it and you tell me if that would be ok.I see, it's problem not flying in and of it's self, but airport hassle stress.
As for how to behave?...
Since we're long distance, I need to know (somehow) that he is alive, what state of mind he's in and whether he is open to communicating on any given day. That has been impossible without texting or calling. But I keep reading threads where the PTSD sufferer says that some days they can't even bear to receive a text or call. I don't want to make his day worse by innocently texting him and having it push him over the edge. He can't just shut his phone off because he has kids. It isn't like he can just hide out.
So the method is to use the Google Hangout app. You don't have to go online to update the status, you just type in whatever you want it to be. I was thinking that we could use a code system. Black = don't call, don't text, don't email, no contact. Red = email is ok, but won't reply. Orange = email and text is ok, but won't reply. Yellow = email, text, or leaving voicemails is ok, but won't reply. Green = good to go. Something like that.
I think that would meet his needs of wanting to limit communication during a blackout period, as well as meeting mine for needing to know that he was alive. It would also allow me to appropriately accommodate his needs without adding additional stress to him. What do you think @Fadeaway ?