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Loved One...

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TryingHard

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This is a very special, caring website.

I was looking for help in how to relate to someone close to me who suffers from PTSD. It's a new, romantic involvement that I would like very much to see survive. I hope you all can help me understand PTSD better.

I have been alert enough to see that stress is his most prominent trigger, and he's very, very stressed right now. He's shutting me out and trying to sabotage the relationship. He's not sure he even wants to continue it. He's probably doing the right thing by intensely focusing on one task at a time; all the tasks are very stressful, even for someone without PTSD. I'm trying to be understanding but am finding myself walking on eggshells and giving him the space he says he needs.

When he is able to reduce his stress, he's a joy to be around and we have a great deal of common interests. I'm just afraid that he's actually setting himself up with situations that will invariably be stress-inducing, or maybe I'm misreading it, and he is just so unable to cope with stressors that it would only appear he is creating them. It breaks my heart to be shut out. I'm trying so hard, but I don't know what I should be doing to help him.

Even if we weren't involved, I would still care about his health and his future. I know he wants to have someone in his life and is very lonely, but unless I learn (or a woman in his future learns) how to relate, or he learns better management skills, he is destined to be lonely the rest of his life.

He's held high-level positions in his professional past (before PTSD), and I think that he believes if he pushes himself hard enough, he can handle the load like he used to be able to do. He's very, very intelligent and quite capable, and wants to be who he used to be. But his way of pushing himself hard just undermines his efforts to fight the PTSD.

I'm so sad for him. I don't know if it's possible for him to ever be there for me should I need "shoring up." Probably sounds selfish, but it seems everyone needs a shoulder to cry on once in awhile but I think it would just cause him more stress.

He sees a therapist but I'm not privy to what they discuss. The therapist asked him, shortly after he and I met, what he was going to do to mess up this relationship.

Is there any hope?

Heartbroken
 
I know as one who suffers from PTSD that it is difficult to be a supporting partner when these episodes come out of nowhere or at least it seems from nowhere. I appreciate my boyfriend for hanging in with me for 6 years. I am still afraid to commit to marriage. He allows me space and one thing he does that I appreciate is he doesn't treat me as though I have a problem. After my mom passed away I went from work aholic to suicidal within a month. I have little recall of how it all went down, but he took me to the hospital. He did not come to see me but sent meals that were my favorite, and my favorite hygiene products. After leaving the hopital I still felt very uncomfortable being around people...anyway....I believe the choice is up to you. I really do not know if everyone experiences PTSD in the same way so there is no way I could advise someone else to stay in a relationship that offers such a challenge. I begged him to stay away.....he chose to stay. I hope the very best for you. One day at a time.
 
Hi TryingHard, welcome to the forum. We have a whole section dedicated to supporters.

The therapist asked him, shortly after he and I met, what he was going to do to mess up this relationship.
I am not sure what kind of relationship he and his T share, but this sounds a little appalling to me. When entering a new relationship, I am already constantly asking myself what I will do to screw it up, and I wouldn't need that externally reinforced.

Wishing you peace.
 
Hi TryingHard, welcome to the forum. We have a whole section dedicated to supporters.

I am not sure what kind of relationship he and his T share, but this sounds a little appalling to me. When entering a new relationship, I am already constantly asking myself what I will do to screw it up, and I wouldn't need that externally reinforced.

Wishing you peace.
I was shocked by his T's question as well. Could be she expressed it in a more professional manner, but that's the way he told it to me. What surprised me more was that he shared it with me. It would suggest to someone new in his life that he has a way of ruining relationships; not a great bit of information one would like a new love interest to know. Don't know what that means in relation to his PTSD, but after reading every post in the newly-found "Carer's" section, I've discovered so many commonalities of symptoms among PTSD sufferers. I didn't know isolation and withdrawing was a function of PTSD until reading it here. This is a great forum for carers and sufferers. Thank you for being here.
 
I actually often try to sabotage my relationships, and I often begin relationships by telling the person I am getting to know romantically how horrible I am, how I am going to ruin them, how everything I touch turns to ash. Maybe it is a defense technique. I am not saying that this is something all sufferers deal with, but I know that sometimes the prospect of intimacy sparks this reaction in me.
 
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