Iron_Angel
Silver Member
Long distance relationships are very hard indeed. I think all you can do is just tell him sort of in the same way you just told us. Start with "I love you." and tell him what is in your heart. It may cause him a bit of stress to read it, but he needs to know how you feel. After that, you have to let him decide. It takes two people to make a relationship, and if he doesn't want to participate -- even a little if that's all he can manage -- then you have to accept that and move on.
I know from dealing with my friend that his PTSD caused him to push me away, hard, a few times. I wasn't willing to abandon him, or leave just because he was telling me to go. I knew it was his disorder talking, and not him. But I did tell him that if he really did want our relationship to be over, then he had to make that clear in a way I could understand, and I'd respect his wishes, even though I didn't want us to break up. Him saying "It's not fair to you to be in a relationship with me" was something I would not accept. It was a noble gesture, and I told him I appreciated him thinking about my welfare like that, but he wasn't going to be able to get rid of me that easily.
As you've probably learned from elsewhere on this site, PTSD is forever. There's no "cure" but the symptoms can be lessened and the effects controlled to some degree. Be sure you have thought long and hard about your willingness to live with it and cope with it as a factor in your relationship. Your friend is giving you an "out" if you want to take it. Now is your time to decide if you really want to be involved with him. If you do, then tell him so.
Good luck to you. I hope it works out for you. Hugs!!
I know from dealing with my friend that his PTSD caused him to push me away, hard, a few times. I wasn't willing to abandon him, or leave just because he was telling me to go. I knew it was his disorder talking, and not him. But I did tell him that if he really did want our relationship to be over, then he had to make that clear in a way I could understand, and I'd respect his wishes, even though I didn't want us to break up. Him saying "It's not fair to you to be in a relationship with me" was something I would not accept. It was a noble gesture, and I told him I appreciated him thinking about my welfare like that, but he wasn't going to be able to get rid of me that easily.
As you've probably learned from elsewhere on this site, PTSD is forever. There's no "cure" but the symptoms can be lessened and the effects controlled to some degree. Be sure you have thought long and hard about your willingness to live with it and cope with it as a factor in your relationship. Your friend is giving you an "out" if you want to take it. Now is your time to decide if you really want to be involved with him. If you do, then tell him so.
Good luck to you. I hope it works out for you. Hugs!!