. I try not to make it his problem, but I've been triggered and had panic attacks around him and I sometimes just can't help it. .
The articles below ... (Just a sec, updating)
https://www.myptsd.com/threads/the-ptsd-cup-explanation.13737/#post-173960
https://www.myptsd.com/threads/understanding-post-traumatic-stress-disorder-ptsd.86476/ click on the attachment
& this part of your question above... Some unsolicited advice: I've dated a lot. Was also married for a decade. Some of my boyfriends have dug my PTSD side of me, some it's been neutral, some it's been incredibly stressful & difficult for them, and some have outright hated it.
That's no different from someone liking, tolerating, frustrated by, or hating
anything else about me. From my character to my political leanings, the way I relax or play, the way I get angry or the way I get silly, the way I look to my chosen field of employment. Et cetera. All of the varied components that make us individuals.
Trying to make
any of these aspects walled off, or -only our problem- doesn't work long term. And part of what dating is about, arguably the biggest part, is finding someone for whom we are mostly in alignment.
I don't know if by not his problem you mean not hurting him, or you mean this in a way that he is incrediably stressed out by, or hates this aspect of you. If the latter? Both of you deserve to find someone who you are in Sympatico with. Just like one guy will hate how fat his girlfriend is and make it a problem, but the next guy doesn't give a rip, or finds it sexy as hell... As people we simply gel better with people who don't hate us or are stressed out by us. Again, not saying this is you & your relationship. But one thing I've found is that while I'm conditioned to not accept someone hating the way I look, I'm conditioned the other way that "my disorder" is "my problem". Well. No. Not really. It's part of me. Which means anyone I'm with needs to be okay with it at the very least. Lots of opposites have full & rewarding relationships. Even more turn into 50% divorce ratio. At least in my observation, it's the opposites who don't loathe or get worked up by their opposite, but are neutral to engaged in the dynamic who work out well. With each partner raising the other person up. Instead of one or both being "the one with the problem".