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Relationship Please Help Me Understand His Need For Intense Privacy

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feetfirst

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I don't think S realizes the degree of privacy he requires at times is very stressful for me. I'm trying to understand what might be going on in his head to create such an extreme need for privacy and to figure everything out alone. When I hear Sufferers explain what's going on in their head leading them to act in a certain way, it helps me immensely.

I'm also struggling with his difficulty in letting me help him. He's freely admitted he struggles "not to make horrible decisions." A couple of months ago, I read a blog post that was helpful, especially "...they need to regain a sense of control in their lives and if they do what you say they lose that. So even if what you are saying is the right thing, saying it may be the wrong thing." He's asked me "guide him," but he still won't open up or let me show him options he can't see. It's like he puts blinders on when he tries to make important decisions and can only consider the options he initially sees. When I offer, sometimes beg, to show him other, potentially better options he should at least consider, he doesn't want to hear it.

Here's the context. On top of cPTSD, S found out he has cancer about six months ago. We have yet to have a real conversation about it. I know the absolute bare minimum. Initially we went round and round about his unwillingness to tell me his treatment plan or even give me an idea of how long treatment would take. At one point, he told me he'd "never, ever, ever tell me the details" and he hasn't. After researching, in July I told him I was going to assume his treatment would take a year (chemo, surgery in Dec, chemo). I dropped the issue and this has been the time frame I base our discussions around. That seemed to be working until last week. Dec 12 he found out he has an inoperable brain tumor and told me he'd let me know the biopsy results "tomorrow" when he gets them. He still hasn't shared the results, except to say it wasn't what he expected. On the 12th, he also told me the person he's been staying with for the last few months in the Midwest is abandoning him on 12/18 and moving back in with their parents. So cancer, brain tumor, abandoned out-of-state with little money and no transportation, trying to get back to Boston and let's not forget cPTSD.

Given the current state of affairs, it's been difficult for me to find a middle ground. Is he dying? I have no idea. I feel either completely detached and shut down (which is probably my own defense mechanism) or I want to ensure he sees all the options for both getting back to Boston and how to proceed. I don't want to decide for him. I just want to know he's considering all the options. Just having cancer and a brain tumor is enough to make decision making difficult for anyone; how much more so must it be for him adding cPTSD to the mix. I hope gaining a little understanding of what might be going on in his head (obviously from a PTSD perspective) might help me stay detached but eliminate me being shut down due to my feelings of helplessness while I live in this state of not-knowing as to whether he's going to be dying soon or not.
 
Would how you are treating him now be any different if he was dying? I know my uncle wanted his family to overlook the dying part and try to be themselves as much as was humanly possible around him. He wanted to know he was loved for who he was not what the disease had made him.

Unconditional love and caring can go a long way. Try not to use sarcasm if you can help it. Keep it simple like, "I'm doing this today, would you like to join me?" "I thought I'd pick up a coffee, can I get you one?" Even, "How's the weather?" Discussions requiring simple answers may allow the walls to come down after some time. I know I need to feel comfortable and grounded before bigger topics can be discussed. If I am immediately triggered or a stressor is the first thing discussed, I will push away fast even if it is my closest supporter. Slow and steady no matter how eager you are for answers. He will be hypersensitive to your voice pitch, tone, body language, etc. if he is like many of those with ptsd.

Don't detach, but just be. Be with him in the moment. Be calm and strong when you are with him. Be mindful of your own limitations and needs as you won't be any assistance to him if you don't take care of yourself.

Hope this helps.
 
@Link Removed Obviously I'd prefer him not to be dying in the next six months, but even if he is, it wouldn't change the way I treat him. I'm not one to think that death is a horrible thing to be avoided at all costs. I've had a DNR/DNI in place since my mid-40's (I'm 52). He knows I'm not death averse.

More to the point though, this is about me trying to wrap my head around the situation as it is. For both of us, I need to be in the best possible place I can be. Being completely shut down is not that place, nor is trying to impose my help on him. I'm hoping that understanding what may be going on in his head in terms of why he feels he needs to be unrealistically private may be useful, as it has been in other situations. I'm beyond trying to change him. He's not going to tell me anything until he's ready to talk, if at all.
 
I'm hesitant to post- I don't really know how your relationship is? I thought I remembered you saying at some point you should let him go, or he was using you?

Maybe it's not a brain tumour, is what he meant by 'unexpected'? Idk.

Fwiw, & only my experience because of many deaths, DNR/ DNAR are really not the issue we expect them to be, because, quite frankly, by then the person has 'died', & (especially with cancer), there's not much left to resuscitate.

But, what about loss? I realize you don't fear death, but are you emotionally impacted? Or has there been too much betrayal, or just not connection?

Best wishes to you.
 
I don't think S realizes the degree of privacy he requires at times is very stressful for me. I'm tr...


I hope this doesn't sound rude, but my concern is: Are you doing something for your self-care?
What is he doing for you? Sounds like you are giving, giving, giving,....

It's your relationship, so maybe I should not say the above or what I am about to say.

Please forgive me, but it sounds like you are getting a raw deal all the way around.

I wish you the best, and I think YOU deserve better.
 
I don't think S realizes the degree of privacy he requires at times is very stressful for me.
For some reason, that statement got my attention. Do you think, if he DID understand, it would change his need for privacy? In that case, you should probably try to explain it to him. But maybe you've already done that? But what it sounds like to me is "He MUST not understand, because, if he did, he'd surely handle it the way I want him to."
I'm also struggling with his difficulty in letting me help him.
This could be 'just me'. When I read that, what I actually 'heard' was that you struggle with his difficulty letting you tell him what to do. That might not be what you MEAN, but it's what I got. If it happens to be what he gets too, that might be a problem.
I want to ensure he sees all the options for both getting back to Boston and how to proceed.
It sounds like you've made it totally clear that you want to be involved and you want to help. If he wants your input, I'm pretty sure he'll ask for it. Really. He might make 'the wrong' decision. He might royally screw up. Or he might have a great plan. Or something in between. In the end, it's his life to screw up any way he wants to. He's a grown up. He might be feeling overwhelmed, but that's his problem to deal with.

One of the things I see 'supporters' engage in a lot is the desire to 'fix' someone. I suspect having that inclination might be part of what makes being in a relationship with a person with a problem seem like a good idea, at least sometimes. Personally, the more I get the vibe that someone wants to 'help' or 'fix' me, the less information I want to give them because it's just going to give them more ammunition and make things more complicated down the road. I'm not saying that's what he's doing. He might have a totally different way of looking at things.
 
Please forgive me, but it sounds like you are getting a raw deal all the way around.

I definitely feel that way sometimes. I committed to having minimal expectations of him for a year, beginning in July, so he could get through his stomach cancer treatments before making any decisions about our relationship. Chemo definitely intensifies PTSD symptomatology. Now that he's been diagnosed with brain cancer (PCNSL), unfortunately it may turn out to be a moot point.

I'm doing the best I can to focus on and take care of myself. Otherwise, I'll won't be able to support him.
 
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