She told me that I was going to make her completely cave if I didn't stop pushing her. I wasn't even pushing her...even though it really put my feelings completely on hold...I actually placed her needs ahead of mine by being patient and understanding. But low and behold, I get a horrific text message instead.
I just edited out your conditional language (it felt as though...stuff like that) - so you could see the progression as it relates only to you a bit more clearly.
It is really great to read your ability to see how you haven't been doing anything to harm her. In fact, you
have been putting her needs first.
No, no, no, a thousand times no, you are not the reason she is stressed. Is this PTSD alone? I really doubt it also. But (as
@nursenurse wisely said),
I don't think it matters anymore what else it is or is not. The behavior is consistent in its inconsistency, if that makes sense. She is showing no acknowledgement of her actions as they relate to and hurt
you. I'm not trying to villify her -I'm only saying what has been happening in all the posts I've read of yours. So, whatever is going on with her, she's not committing to change or help herself.
And without that, who cares what her diagnosis is, honestly. I'll be a little overt for a moment. If you read a story about someone in a relationship with a person who physically harmed them all the time - hitting, punching, slapping, beating, etc. - and the person being hit was staying in the relationship because their partner, although incredibly dangerous, was diagnosed with PTSD, and maybe was missing a diagnosis of something else...but their partner was in therapy...so they just tried to be patient....and also, their partner told them all the time that the stress that made them shove their partner into the wall was, in fact, the partner's fault...but the violent one always came back with re-committing to the relationship...
I don't even know if she's ever physically abused you - but her words affect you just as strongly. And, like the example above, it's totally possible she actually doesn't know the extent of the damage she is doing.
But that doesn't mean you are making her do it - it means she is blaming you for her own behavior because that is the way it looks to her. And until she has learned the skills it takes to
be aware of how she affects you and invest in building a mutually respectful relationship - even one that is full of sparks, fine, but one where
both parties know how to interact with one another in a healthy way - until she can do that, she is really just not capable of contributing anything to your relationship with her, even though you think getting her smile and her good moments is contribution enough.
It's not. It reminds me a little of a person who kneels in the desert with their mouth open to the sky, waiting for rain, while there's a well just on the other side of the sand dune. Even though it's true that water will sometimes fall from the sky, it's not a solid long-term solution to thirst. And if they would just keep walking, they would find a ready source of water not too far away.
I'm not meaning, honestly, to be critical of you, or demonize her. I just want to validate so hard that
you are not the cause of her suffering. That belongs to other people, and herself.
But you are suffering because of her. And we will do that, when we love somebody. But it sounds to me like this is beyond what we do for love. She is using you as a container for her destructive behavior. No-one should be abused in that way. And if you have that little voice in the back of your head that says "but I'm not really that great, and I maybe even deserve a relationship like this" - well, I just want to say to that little voice: shush. Because it's lying.
I don't know if we all
get to have the relationships we want; but I know that we all are deserving of - even entitled to - relationships that feed us, not ones that starve us. And eventually it's only up to us, whether we keep starving or start walking around and seeing where else there might be food.
Something like that. My analogy-maker is busted this morning.;)
I'm sorry you can't get away. But, go ahead and look at the calendar, and figure out when you will be able to. There is always a way to make space for a get-away, and there's nothing wrong with delayed gratification. Make a plan so that you can stick to it. Get somewhere you can breathe. It's good you are busy with school - I hate to say study your feelings away, but sometimes being a work-o-holic can be helpful, if only as a very very potent distraction.
And no: none of this is caused by you. None of it. You are giving so much patience, and kindness, and tolerance, and love. My hope for you is you can continue down the road of seeing that, and admiring that about yourself, and realizing that you do, in fact, deserve a life where you are not being hurt all the time.