@Sing2me every relationship and partner in a relationship have for a better phrase call them "bad habits". No its not okay for him to restrain your independence, but that doesn't mean the relationship is shot. It just means he needs to understand and you probably find that difficult to communicate this to him. Please try. Have a sit down and talk about it session and stay on topic. Same with his constant attention seeking, you must tell him when he needlessly distracts you for selfish reasons. As for privacy on this forum that is a must for you and in all relationships both partners have their musts and must not. Its a learning and communicating process and its also called respect.
Give him the opportunity to tell you why he is doing these things, let him talk till he is totally finished. Then kindly tell him that you are learning to heal and give the relationship everything that you can for now. Remind him that he is in a relationship too and your expectations of each other are going to be different until you meet somewhere in the middle. He may think you are trawling a date website when you are on the forum here. He might be mystified by the fact that you come here to seek opinions and read about PTSD. All you can do is tell him he need not be worried because you are not the kind of person to be in a relationship just to be in a relationship. This is not a chick flick for you. You are trying and obviously he is being trying.
All relationship must grow from somewhere. Your not wasting your time or his. I do hope you stick with it and try to communicate on a level where he can understand. Obviously, setting boundaries regarding needing space is important to you. The thing is, maybe if you can get it through to him that you need that space to come back to be close to him, he may not resent it.
I lost my husband because he could not stand my PTSD apparently after 10 years and he had been having an affair for the last two years before I accidentally found out. He pushed the PTSD button every time there was an issue that came up because he knew it would knock me down. Since our separation he has jumped from woman to woman to woman, He loves to fall in love and when the first flush of romance wears thin, he finds fault with the woman and leaps into another false relationship. He's a dud. I actually feel foolish I married a dud, but then again we all make mistakes.
I have now been alone for 7 years. I don't like it. I am scared of another dud coming along with juvenile ideas of what relationships are and how they have no idea of the honesty, trust and hard work they take. I know it feels 'safer' to be alone, less complicated and all that stuff. But, you don't have a dud I think. So give him a chance to see and hear the real you and your needs and give him the same in return. See if it improves. Remember he is not psychic you are going to have to communicate clearly and kindly how you feel, think and need. Do the same for him. Hope this helps.
Best of luck.
B1