- Post starter
- #25
Thank you, Simply Simon :)
I was really struggling with a lot more than I realised until I found this forum. I mean, I'm still struggling, but I have a far better understanding now since spending the many hours reading in here. Although not every story is the same as mine, reading about the experiences and opinions from both sides of the scales on things I can relate to has helped my thought process considerably.
When a push would happen, I'd just let her say whatever she wanted and justify it all as it "just being the PTSD talking". It did hurt early on in the relationship, but I've kind of desensitised myself to it now and I just don't let it get under my skin because that causes me to stress. Desensitising has been my own defence mechanism that I thought was the right way to handle it after a while. But having these past 3 days to reflect and process without her (longest isolation period, to date), I see that me desensitising is only me lessening my own feelings to elevate her being an ass and brushing it off as "she can't help it and doesn't really feel that way because she has PTSD". Then she returns to me, apologises profusely, I try a new approach, I end up trying my hardest to adopt the new approach to try to get her to seek the help she needs while being terrified she's not going to like it and push me again. It's not healthy for me to be working my ass off to get her to realise something she knows she needs to do, but won't take the steps to actually do it. It's like I'm pretty much in a cycle of cautiously leading a horse to water, trying to make it drink and then excusing it when it throws me off as it just being what horses always do.
This is why 3 days ago I told her we both needed to respect each other's space. Getting pushed away and then pulled back in after a few hours or a few days isn't enough time for me to properly process what's going on in my own head. I don't doubt that what's going on in her head is probably worse and that her apologising is a HUGE thing for her to do, but I need to heal too. I will still accept her apology and be here for her whenever she needs me, but I am going to have to stand my ground and let her know that she can't excuse her bad behaviour on something she's not doing anything about and still be here to get my heart whipped.
Me letting her do that is not me supporting her at all, but me enabling her to blame her bad behaviour on her disorders. I will definitely keep you all updated :)
I was really struggling with a lot more than I realised until I found this forum. I mean, I'm still struggling, but I have a far better understanding now since spending the many hours reading in here. Although not every story is the same as mine, reading about the experiences and opinions from both sides of the scales on things I can relate to has helped my thought process considerably.
When a push would happen, I'd just let her say whatever she wanted and justify it all as it "just being the PTSD talking". It did hurt early on in the relationship, but I've kind of desensitised myself to it now and I just don't let it get under my skin because that causes me to stress. Desensitising has been my own defence mechanism that I thought was the right way to handle it after a while. But having these past 3 days to reflect and process without her (longest isolation period, to date), I see that me desensitising is only me lessening my own feelings to elevate her being an ass and brushing it off as "she can't help it and doesn't really feel that way because she has PTSD". Then she returns to me, apologises profusely, I try a new approach, I end up trying my hardest to adopt the new approach to try to get her to seek the help she needs while being terrified she's not going to like it and push me again. It's not healthy for me to be working my ass off to get her to realise something she knows she needs to do, but won't take the steps to actually do it. It's like I'm pretty much in a cycle of cautiously leading a horse to water, trying to make it drink and then excusing it when it throws me off as it just being what horses always do.
This is why 3 days ago I told her we both needed to respect each other's space. Getting pushed away and then pulled back in after a few hours or a few days isn't enough time for me to properly process what's going on in my own head. I don't doubt that what's going on in her head is probably worse and that her apologising is a HUGE thing for her to do, but I need to heal too. I will still accept her apology and be here for her whenever she needs me, but I am going to have to stand my ground and let her know that she can't excuse her bad behaviour on something she's not doing anything about and still be here to get my heart whipped.
Me letting her do that is not me supporting her at all, but me enabling her to blame her bad behaviour on her disorders. I will definitely keep you all updated :)