You are smitten, and care for her deeply, that is really clear.
e. Like I said, abandonment fear kicked in and I went into "fix this" mode.
I have done this. Oh, it's so hard. I want to do ANYTHING to make things ok so the person I care about doesn't leave or isn't in pain. It's not healthy, and usually does more harm than good, but it's really understandable.
Something to remember for the future is best described by a Henry Nowen quote: “When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives mean the most to us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand. The friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, not curing, not healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness, that is a friend who cares.”
This applies not only to supporting someone with PTSD (or any other kind of battle or hurt) but towards ourselves. Life is going to throw us all very painful curve balls at times, and sometimes, the most important thing to do is to not try to fix our pain, but to listen to it, live with it, be there for ourselves and find others who can be with us in those moments and help us put down all our desperate efforts to fix and make the pain ok.
It seems like she had a lot she was dealing with and fixing you may have been her way of trying to get out of that pain, and same for you - you trying to fix the relationship was you trying to get out of the pain of her leaving you.
Historically I'm very selfish.. But when I find someone that I connect with, I'm selfless.
I have PTSD. Being able to compromise and work things through and yeah, being selfless in the right ways, is helpful in a supporters. However, there is a way that selfless becomes co-dependency and co-dependency is very overwhelming. I need a supporter, especially the guys I date, who are not selfish, but who also have a self, and an ability to say no. I need a partner/supporter who doesn't wrap up their life and happiness and even sense of self so much in me and our relationship or else I will sabotage and/or bolt and run. I have spoken to a number of people who feel the same, just his weekend, on a class on boundaries in dating. Not being selfish is good, but being boundaries, having a self, having the ability to say no, and avoiding co-dependency in all it's ways are key to a healthy relationship. Otherwise, you are not really in a relationship with each other, the real you and the real her, but your mutual idealized version or fantasies of each other.
So don't be selfish, but do have a distinct self and do be willing to express what you like and don't like, what you want and don't want, and some people will find it very attractive and some sufferers will find it less overwhelming than someone who is willing to bend at every request.
I'm just curious about the processing of these emotions. She knows she hurt me. And she even stated it was really hurting her to tell me to go away. She expressed guilt over the fact that she's unhealthy and I deserve someone healthy, someone who I don't have to worry about, etc... Is this guilt ridden behavior common in sufferers? Does their struggling to cope with their trauma bleed over into them feeling unworthy of happiness?
Many sufferers think they are a burden, and feel very unworthy of anything good. Self contempt can be common, especially for survivors of sexual abuse. They internalize the message of the abuser that they are unworthy and terrible and ect. Self contempt is maladaptive way to cope with the pain of abuse. It's done to survive the abuse itself, and the later ongoing pain of the trauma.
If I am unworthy of kindness, then I deserved the abuse, and life makes sense. It's all my fault. It hints at a deeper thought that I am in control.
It's kind of a bandaid to the deep pain of the reality of the fact that the abuse was undeserved, and I am worthy of respect, and this horrible thing that isn't my fault happened, and I wasn't in control.... etc. That's much more painful, although truthful, to sit with and work through.
She's in her late 20's now. She has attended therapy sessions. She kept justifying her decision to walk away by saying "my physicians, my family, and my friends all said I can't be in a relationship." I never got to ask the question but I wanted to ask "what is it that YOU want."
Think about it like this: I have an autoimmune disease. My doctors, my family and my friends all agree I can't drive right now because it affects my ability to see. Is not driving what I want? Goodness no. Could I hop in a car and drive anyhow before treatment is done and my eyesight is stable? Yes, I could. Is the outcome of doing that likely going to be good for me or anyone else? No, I'm likely to crash and hurt myself and others, which is bad enough, and I am also likely to set back my own recovery from my autoimmune disease as recovering from those injuries will delay the treatment for my disease.
She may be in a place in her recovery from the trauma that for her, getting into a relationship isn't good for her right now, even if she wants it. She is likely to crash and burn and hurt herself and others in the process - and not only that, she could set back her recovery, because unsteady of stabilizing her PTSD and processing the trauma, she would be using therapy time in processing the hurt and confusion of a relationship.
There was a time in my own recovery process where I couldn't date, and I have been told by my therapist that this isn't uncommon for PTSD sufferers to go through a time where they don't get into new dating relationships until they are further in their recovery. When I was in the place where I couldn't date, I tried anyhow, and would get triggered left and right, and my heart broken in a million ways, and there was nothing left for me to also go through the hell of trauma therapy. I got worse and worse. We couldn't deal with the underlying trauma because all my effort was spent on dating and how to handle it. So I stopped dating for awhile and then I finally got better and got to a place where I could date again. It's still of and on for me now, but I'm actually making progress now.
Trauma therapy is REALLY HARD. it's not a walk in the park. It typically makes symptoms worse for awhile and that's a tough time to start a new relationship with all the normal and natural good and negative stressors and changes it brings. It can then increase symptoms through the roof to a point where something has got to give for survival sake, and sometimes, it's giving up dating for awhile.
It also sounds like for her, she identified ways she was using the relationship to escape the hard work she needed to do.
Is it what she wants? It may not matter at all right now. It may be best for her to choose the path that will help her get better so that down the road she has the best chance at having the life she wants, dating and all.
I have to take in that happiness is my choice, and that I have the ability to connect with someone
That is a great thing and a wonderful way of looking at it!