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Ptsd Relastionship Early Shut Out

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Yep, sounds great @Boosted135i. But, don't forget how you learned to climb out of the hole you fell into, work on the underlying issues or old wounds.
There is rejection everywhere & sometimes it's not as dramatic as you experienced with this women... It can delivered in loads of ways.
 
Thread update. Tragically, my father committed suicide three weeks ago. In a strange twist of fate, I feel that I was brought to this website for a higher calling; dealing with the death of my father. Everything beforehand seems so peripheral and ancillary. I should have been focusing on my father. I feel soul sick.
 
I didn't read all you wrote, so sorry if this was said.

As someone who's been through rape...when your boundaries intimately have been broken in such a major way, it's kind of hard to figure out what feels good for you after that. You kind of want to be all whole and healthy and able to let someone in completely; but if you actually manage to open up so much, it can be great for a moment, because you're on the "new relationship" high...but then it can feel vulnerable and intrusive, letting someone be so close to you long term. Even if you chose it. It can be hard to sustain if you haven't gotten okay enough. There is a lot of trial and error in it involved. Intimacy is really hard if you have been through something like this. Feels like trusting someone with your ...everything, when you barely survived whoever else broke your trust the first time.

So you want to believe that you can be you again. You have to believe that, or else how can you live?

So you take chances, you try to be open...but if you happen to meet someone compatible early on(and by early...I mean early in the time of dealing with things, regardless of when the incident occured) then you may be excited enough to get close fast. You may dive head first fast(because your idea of intimacy is distorted or because simply some people are fast in those things)....but then you have to live with someone. You have to let them in completely, but yet find a way not to feel overpowered. You have to be a couple, without losing your identity, which is already hard to do with PTSD because your life is ruled by things you don't always control. You have to allow someone to help you. You have to allow someone to see the darkest, ugliest parts of you and still let him be in your life. Parts of you, that you yourself may not be ready to deal with. And then there is the intimacy in physical way, which can push all sorts of triggers that you didn't know you still had. ...

Ugh. I'm sorry to say this but I think it's over over as well. If you push more you'll just cause more damage to her recovery. May be you guys had something, but it was too fast. And the way she is acting now, it's unlikely she'll let you in again. If she does, it will take months or years, so either way you have to live your life. If she returns she does, but don't wait. I had a lot of relationship failures in trying to recover. Most relationship didn't stick, and if they had I wouldn't have taken it well, I think. My last relationship only stuck because things between us were like you said exactly, that fast...but also, we knew each other for months before starting to date. We talked every day for hours in those months, without the pressure of dating. And still I started out head strong, dove deep, let him in....and still warned him that I'm not at a great place yet. That he'll forget me in a month and all sorts of stuff. I'm lucky we are still together years later, but I never thought we can really make it, and despite anything he said I didn't manage to get used to the fact that he loved me that way for quite a while.
 
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She no doubt wanted love, its human nature to seek love. But sounds like something changed her mind whether it was too much, or if she didn't like something an out herself, you may never get that answer. And it sucks when you feel that you really click with someone and you start to have hope for the future. But if you do really care about her then you have to honor her wishes. Pray for her to have peace. Know that you learned somethings from this experience. Not only about taking things slow, but you learned that you do have the capacity to love again. I know none of this is the answer you want. I do hope you are able to be open to love again in the future and that things work out for you.
 
Greetings everyone. It's been a long few days living inside of my own head. I'll provide a little ba...
Thanks for writing this I was wish I could have wrote this as well as you did, never the less. I am going through the same thing with a women I have no right too. But I fell in love with her any way, because these ladies that suffer from this illness are by far thee most special and loving women I've ever met. The lady whom I'm crazy about is now in a mental illness ward at our local hospital and will not give permission to let any one come see her, it was her daughter that called the police and ambulance on her and ya wonder why she has trust issues. I to wish I knew more, my girl suffers from CPTSD the worst there is. I don't know if the meds she is on are helping her. Where can I find answers? I wish you well.
 
I didn't read all you wrote, so sorry if this was said.

As someone who's been through rape...when...
Dear seeking Africa, thankyou, thank you. I pray you read what I wrote, and I have a ? Is there meds that help? Or because being close to some one is just to hard for CPTSD survivor's please talk to me more.
 
Boosted, I can't speak for everyone here, but the way I see it, PTSD is as hard on the supporter as it is on the sufferer (I'm a sufferer, btw). Unless you've had experience dealing with PTSD sufferers, there is no way you could have known what to say or do. Probably not even if you were experienced. Don't expect logic or reason.

It's easy to see that you care very deeply for her. Until she receives treatment for her PTSD, she isn't likely to be able to have any success in a relationship.

I'm sorry if I've just repeated what everyone else has said...the PTSD has taken my ability to read more than a couple of sentences... :(
 
I know this is an older thread but when I shut out my now-husband, I was triggered, said a bunch of stuff about "conditions of having a relationship with me" & then I blocked him. There was no more texting, nothing. It wasn't a conversation. I didn't threaten him with anything. As far as my brain was concerned, the situation was too "dangerous" to stay.

But, a week and a half or two weeks later, I unblocked him & sent him a text (and then immediately blocked him again for a few hours because I was afraid of the response). Later that evening, he replied. I apologized & asked if we could try again (he already knew I had PTSD, he didn't understand triggers, shut outs, etc).

For us, it's been rough dealing with my PTSD but most of the time I'm thankful I contacted him again (I do worry that he should have better - someone not so broken...we are working on that).

My point is....let's not try to get into why or if, etc...from my experience, if she does want to contact you she will in her own time. Until then, move on with your life. IF it happens, then consider where both of you are at & decide if it's the right thing for both of you as individuals.
 
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