- Post starter
- #25
E
Epel
I personally believe you are right Hosol. I'm a supporter, my husband is the sufferer. And because his withdrawal, avoidance and irritability affect me, I in return affect him with the way PTSD works.
But relationships take 2. And if I want to be in this relationship I must work on me and allow him to work on himself. I have to be willing to allow him his moments and work hard to not allow his PTSD to control my emotions. Self worth comes from within. It's a partnership and each one needs to hold their own accountability for it to work. It's my choice on how I allow the PTSD that sometimes to consume him, not to let it consume me. So we as supporters can not blame our insecurities on our sufferers. We and only we can control our thoughts and find strength within!
But relationships take 2. And if I want to be in this relationship I must work on me and allow him to work on himself. I have to be willing to allow him his moments and work hard to not allow his PTSD to control my emotions. Self worth comes from within. It's a partnership and each one needs to hold their own accountability for it to work. It's my choice on how I allow the PTSD that sometimes to consume him, not to let it consume me. So we as supporters can not blame our insecurities on our sufferers. We and only we can control our thoughts and find strength within!