A couple months ago, this girl asked me out and it was going very well. I finally worked up the courage to kiss her (which took a while, in no small part due to my own abandonment issues which she was unaware of at the time) and we fooled around but stopped short of actually having sex by my request- I felt it was too soon. But she was really into it and everything seemed great, except that I was putting in way more work than she was, but she seemed to be opening up more with time so I figured it was an issue of trust/comfort.
The next day we were texting and she hinted that something was wrong but didn't want to tell me. Eventually she comes to my apartment to break up with me but can't give me a reason, just asks to be friends instead. Later she tells me she has PTSD due to a prior sexual assault.
I didn't really understand what that meant, but I told her that I'd be supportive (friend or not, but I still had feelings for her so any friendship couldn't be platonic), but to please not push me away because of my abandonment issues. She never really responded- we saw each other once or twice over the next week but only for a quick hello and never really discussed it.
I did a ton of reading about PTSD so that I could understand better and be there for her. She had told me she was interested in dating me but that this was getting in the way, so I explained to her that I'm still willing to do this and I really want to support her if she'd let me, we could take it slow if that's what she needed, and find something that worked for both of us. And that I missed her and invited her to watch a movie or something when she feels up to it.
At that point, she kind of ignored everything I'd said and just told me that she flat-out doesn't want a romantic relationship of any kind, and that she "didn't want to sound harsh." At that point I needed to explain to her how she's done so many things that hurt me, that I'm still trying to be there for her, but if she was serious about being friends then she'd have to earn back a fair bit of trust. I had been hiding how hurt I was because I didn't want her to feel worse, but I also needed her to know. I think I was an experiment for her to see if she was ready for a relationship yet or not, and when she wasn't, she hoped that I'd just kind of be okay with having been thrown for a loop, and she couldn't deal with it when I wasn't even though I wanted to work through it with her. She told me that all this is too much and that maybe we shouldn't even try to develop a friendship.
I know she gets down on herself and is probably upset with herself right now, but she hasn't been able to acknowledge verbally that she did anything wrong. She's not emotionally capable right now of handling the drama that's come from me being hurt or to work on building up trust. I know it's hard, and when we try to do hard things we often fail, but I don't feel like she's even trying or willing to put in any effort here. So I agreed that maybe we should walk away because even friendship takes work on both sides. I hope I phrased things well to her....I made a serious effort to sound calm and composed but underneath I was very upset.
It's just that even though I've been hurt and part of me is angry, I know she doesn't handle these things well and it breaks my heart to know she's in pain. Aside from this, she is genuinely the nicest, sweetest person and is dedicating her career to helping people. She doesn't deserve this. Neither do I.....abandonment issues aren't quite as bad as PTSD, but they're no walk in the park either, and this situation made mine worse.
Still, I might reach out to her again in a couple months. Just to be friends once the drama's died down. I do miss having her around, and she lives right across the street. I have to look at her building every day and be reminded of this.
The next day we were texting and she hinted that something was wrong but didn't want to tell me. Eventually she comes to my apartment to break up with me but can't give me a reason, just asks to be friends instead. Later she tells me she has PTSD due to a prior sexual assault.
I didn't really understand what that meant, but I told her that I'd be supportive (friend or not, but I still had feelings for her so any friendship couldn't be platonic), but to please not push me away because of my abandonment issues. She never really responded- we saw each other once or twice over the next week but only for a quick hello and never really discussed it.
I did a ton of reading about PTSD so that I could understand better and be there for her. She had told me she was interested in dating me but that this was getting in the way, so I explained to her that I'm still willing to do this and I really want to support her if she'd let me, we could take it slow if that's what she needed, and find something that worked for both of us. And that I missed her and invited her to watch a movie or something when she feels up to it.
At that point, she kind of ignored everything I'd said and just told me that she flat-out doesn't want a romantic relationship of any kind, and that she "didn't want to sound harsh." At that point I needed to explain to her how she's done so many things that hurt me, that I'm still trying to be there for her, but if she was serious about being friends then she'd have to earn back a fair bit of trust. I had been hiding how hurt I was because I didn't want her to feel worse, but I also needed her to know. I think I was an experiment for her to see if she was ready for a relationship yet or not, and when she wasn't, she hoped that I'd just kind of be okay with having been thrown for a loop, and she couldn't deal with it when I wasn't even though I wanted to work through it with her. She told me that all this is too much and that maybe we shouldn't even try to develop a friendship.
I know she gets down on herself and is probably upset with herself right now, but she hasn't been able to acknowledge verbally that she did anything wrong. She's not emotionally capable right now of handling the drama that's come from me being hurt or to work on building up trust. I know it's hard, and when we try to do hard things we often fail, but I don't feel like she's even trying or willing to put in any effort here. So I agreed that maybe we should walk away because even friendship takes work on both sides. I hope I phrased things well to her....I made a serious effort to sound calm and composed but underneath I was very upset.
It's just that even though I've been hurt and part of me is angry, I know she doesn't handle these things well and it breaks my heart to know she's in pain. Aside from this, she is genuinely the nicest, sweetest person and is dedicating her career to helping people. She doesn't deserve this. Neither do I.....abandonment issues aren't quite as bad as PTSD, but they're no walk in the park either, and this situation made mine worse.
Still, I might reach out to her again in a couple months. Just to be friends once the drama's died down. I do miss having her around, and she lives right across the street. I have to look at her building every day and be reminded of this.
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