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Deleted member 47099
I usually post in the other section of the forum, because I have PTSD myself.
My last relationship, which ended 2 years ago, was with a fellow PTSD sufferer, C.
The breakup was so painful, that I'm still working through some of the stuff that happened with my ex, two years later.
I've written about some of it in my trauma diary - I'll try to add some details here later, so there's not so many gaps.
Basically, I had a similar thing happen to me like @jandk5721 - my partner slipped into crisis, went mute and disappeared.
When he started dysregulating and slipping deeper into crisis, he went from someone incredibly loving and present to someone who was totally absent, who was strangely mute/ silent (he would try and talk and no words would come out of his mouth).
He was obviously slipping into crisis faster than he could deal with it. Instead of trying to reach out, trying to get help, he just spiralled deeper and his actions became more desperate and chaotic and messy.
It was an emotional rollercoaster that started with next to no warning. We were so incredibly close, before it started. We wanted to get married. Things were incredibly beautiful.
Then he started spiralling and his behaviour became erratic and bizarre.
He was drowning and he clung to me, to stop himself going under. But he damned nearly pulled me under too.
Things got more intense, more crazy, more painful, more desperate, more dysregulated, more bizarre.
What upset me the most is that there was no meta-level to any of it. At no point did he realise he was spiralling. At no point was he able to say "Sorry, Sophy, I'm spiralling"
He just went over the edge, full-force, head first and let the chips fall where they may.
For me, it was like watching someone die, but not physically. He stopped existing, before my very eyes. But he obviously wasn't "dead" cos his body was still moving and existing.
It's taken me two years to even begin to understand it and to feel a sense of calm about it.
Reading through the supporters' section of the forum, it seems this stuff is pretty common, that it happens a lot.
That people with PTSD spiral to the point that they just disappear, go incommunicado, stop being themselves... just disappear from the face of the earth, as if that's normal... as if that's something people just "do" sometimes...
At the time I didn't know what was going on and I've never felt so betrayed in all my life.
It was really bad - it was awful in the kind of "Wow, this is as bad as childhood trauma" kind of way.
The most painful, berieving experience of my adult life.
To get closure on this finally (because it's been such a painful, crazy-making mystery for the last 2 years) I've been working through it and sending some emails to C, just to be able to speak my truth about the situation. Just to be able to say *what it was like for me* so I can put it to rest and walk away.
Bizarrely, I've been getting really positive, caring, gentle emails in reply.
I totally lost my shit and wrote back some really angry, scornful, scathing emails full of swear words.
Just couldn't believe that after putting me through 2 years of painful relationship breakup hell, he's gone back to being sweet and nice.
I nearly f*cking threw up on the laptop when I read his emails.
At first, I thought he must be f*cking kidding. It felt like such a head-game. Like he was being "fake nice" on purpose, just to make the whole situation even crazier.
It's taken me weeks to start getting my head around it.
It seems that when he did his crisis/ dysregulation/ spiralling/ mute/ disappearing/ survival thing, he is/ was totally unaware of the impact it had on me.
He seems to think that "all" he did was to "prevent himself from drowning" and that that's a good thing to do, so why the heck am I so upset about any of it?
I don't know if he's got some sort of protective amnesia thing going on, about the worst of it.
Or whether he didn't even notice most of it, because he was drowning and hence not aware of anything else?
He's basically saying that after two years, things are still really raw and he's still struggling. But that he thinks after 10 years he'll have recovered enough to be able to talk about stuff. And that given 2 years have passed, in 8 years time we'll be able to be friends and talk about this stuff properly.
Again, when I read this, I was sooo close to puking on the laptop.
Just CANNOT believe he'd put me through hell at 40 and then think that I'll want to DISCUSS it at 50...???
Discuss this stuff with someone who's so f*cked up that he needs a DECADE to stop being mute and to be able to talk about stuff???
Ugh.
Sorry if this hasn't made much sense/ has had lots of gaps. I'm too emotional to write about it properly at the moment.
I just need to keep processing this. I need closure. I need to fully heal from this.
I need to view this through a supporter lens.
It was his PTSD that made him spiral so messily.
It's not my fault. It's not his fault.
But I need to move on.
My last relationship, which ended 2 years ago, was with a fellow PTSD sufferer, C.
The breakup was so painful, that I'm still working through some of the stuff that happened with my ex, two years later.
I've written about some of it in my trauma diary - I'll try to add some details here later, so there's not so many gaps.
Basically, I had a similar thing happen to me like @jandk5721 - my partner slipped into crisis, went mute and disappeared.
When he started dysregulating and slipping deeper into crisis, he went from someone incredibly loving and present to someone who was totally absent, who was strangely mute/ silent (he would try and talk and no words would come out of his mouth).
He was obviously slipping into crisis faster than he could deal with it. Instead of trying to reach out, trying to get help, he just spiralled deeper and his actions became more desperate and chaotic and messy.
It was an emotional rollercoaster that started with next to no warning. We were so incredibly close, before it started. We wanted to get married. Things were incredibly beautiful.
Then he started spiralling and his behaviour became erratic and bizarre.
He was drowning and he clung to me, to stop himself going under. But he damned nearly pulled me under too.
Things got more intense, more crazy, more painful, more desperate, more dysregulated, more bizarre.
What upset me the most is that there was no meta-level to any of it. At no point did he realise he was spiralling. At no point was he able to say "Sorry, Sophy, I'm spiralling"
He just went over the edge, full-force, head first and let the chips fall where they may.
For me, it was like watching someone die, but not physically. He stopped existing, before my very eyes. But he obviously wasn't "dead" cos his body was still moving and existing.
It's taken me two years to even begin to understand it and to feel a sense of calm about it.
Reading through the supporters' section of the forum, it seems this stuff is pretty common, that it happens a lot.
That people with PTSD spiral to the point that they just disappear, go incommunicado, stop being themselves... just disappear from the face of the earth, as if that's normal... as if that's something people just "do" sometimes...
At the time I didn't know what was going on and I've never felt so betrayed in all my life.
It was really bad - it was awful in the kind of "Wow, this is as bad as childhood trauma" kind of way.
The most painful, berieving experience of my adult life.
To get closure on this finally (because it's been such a painful, crazy-making mystery for the last 2 years) I've been working through it and sending some emails to C, just to be able to speak my truth about the situation. Just to be able to say *what it was like for me* so I can put it to rest and walk away.
Bizarrely, I've been getting really positive, caring, gentle emails in reply.
I totally lost my shit and wrote back some really angry, scornful, scathing emails full of swear words.
Just couldn't believe that after putting me through 2 years of painful relationship breakup hell, he's gone back to being sweet and nice.
I nearly f*cking threw up on the laptop when I read his emails.
At first, I thought he must be f*cking kidding. It felt like such a head-game. Like he was being "fake nice" on purpose, just to make the whole situation even crazier.
It's taken me weeks to start getting my head around it.
It seems that when he did his crisis/ dysregulation/ spiralling/ mute/ disappearing/ survival thing, he is/ was totally unaware of the impact it had on me.
He seems to think that "all" he did was to "prevent himself from drowning" and that that's a good thing to do, so why the heck am I so upset about any of it?
I don't know if he's got some sort of protective amnesia thing going on, about the worst of it.
Or whether he didn't even notice most of it, because he was drowning and hence not aware of anything else?
He's basically saying that after two years, things are still really raw and he's still struggling. But that he thinks after 10 years he'll have recovered enough to be able to talk about stuff. And that given 2 years have passed, in 8 years time we'll be able to be friends and talk about this stuff properly.
Again, when I read this, I was sooo close to puking on the laptop.
Just CANNOT believe he'd put me through hell at 40 and then think that I'll want to DISCUSS it at 50...???
Discuss this stuff with someone who's so f*cked up that he needs a DECADE to stop being mute and to be able to talk about stuff???
Ugh.
Sorry if this hasn't made much sense/ has had lots of gaps. I'm too emotional to write about it properly at the moment.
I just need to keep processing this. I need closure. I need to fully heal from this.
I need to view this through a supporter lens.
It was his PTSD that made him spiral so messily.
It's not my fault. It's not his fault.
But I need to move on.
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