caligirl03
Silver Member
Hi all,
I've been providing emotional support to someone with combat PTSD. We were in a relationship off and on for a few years. Things didn't work out romantically between us, but we've been best friends since childhood and will most likely always be in each other's lives in some way or another.
Throughout our time together, I've learned a lot about how to establish and enforce boundaries, which I think I've gotten much better at. While I understand letting him know I simply won't be engaging if he escalates over essentially nothing, I view that as more of a "micro" boundary if you will. My question is, should there be big picture boundaries? For example, if your sufferer frequently explodes, should there be a bigger boundary set, like letting them you won't be hanging out as often if these blow ups keep happening every time?
I'm torn because in the past he would explode and not even so much as acknowledge it, and at times wouldn't even really remember what he said, which I'm guessing was most likely due to dissociating. More recently, he may still get angry over trivial things but to much a lesser degree than his blind rages of the past, and he also now always apologizes right after each time and is able to de-escalate largely on his own (THANK you therapy!) So I'm not sure how to navigate rewarding his progress, giving him space to be human and have an off day, but also still encourage him to keep going!
I've been providing emotional support to someone with combat PTSD. We were in a relationship off and on for a few years. Things didn't work out romantically between us, but we've been best friends since childhood and will most likely always be in each other's lives in some way or another.
Throughout our time together, I've learned a lot about how to establish and enforce boundaries, which I think I've gotten much better at. While I understand letting him know I simply won't be engaging if he escalates over essentially nothing, I view that as more of a "micro" boundary if you will. My question is, should there be big picture boundaries? For example, if your sufferer frequently explodes, should there be a bigger boundary set, like letting them you won't be hanging out as often if these blow ups keep happening every time?
I'm torn because in the past he would explode and not even so much as acknowledge it, and at times wouldn't even really remember what he said, which I'm guessing was most likely due to dissociating. More recently, he may still get angry over trivial things but to much a lesser degree than his blind rages of the past, and he also now always apologizes right after each time and is able to de-escalate largely on his own (THANK you therapy!) So I'm not sure how to navigate rewarding his progress, giving him space to be human and have an off day, but also still encourage him to keep going!