I feel really bad for making you think I was angry, I'm not.
Oh no! :( I don't want you to feel badly
@NaeNae75 , and I'm glad it didn't offend you, I seem to have hurt plenty irl lately. :(
I won't carry on here but I will try to say only one thing, despite the fact it's through my myopic perspective colored by my own thoughts, beliefs and experiences. Which, however, I've had decades to think on, as regards ptsd.
I relate to this:
I am extremely in tune to my environment. I've had to be. I've had to make choices in my life based on what was happening around me and to me. I've chosen one trauma over another. I have had to be on high alert and walk on eggshells or I would suffer. I've had to read expressions accurately, if not I would have suffered more and have, because I didn't. I'm very aware of body language, things out if place and sounds. I'm aware of my own body language, my own breathing, any sound I make. I try to protect myself at all times. (These things are constant, but are amplified 100 times when I'm symptomatic) ... I'm not an unfeeling person, I realize that I'm hurting you and I do feel guilty, and I have to deal with that later, but I can't help it.
Whether it be relationships, or work, or whatever; there can be stress-stress-stress, then one day you can't stand it any more. That includes self-imposed stress. Not intentional, but needless to say devastating.
Best for who in this scenario? The sufferer or supporter? I think here enlies the biggest disconnect of this entire conversation.
^^ I think when it comes to relationships there is something that's rarely mentioned: somewhere there can be cognitive dissonance between what needs 'fixing' and 'acceptance', ie I accept 'you', but your behaviour hurts me; "you (the sufferer) can't 'help' all of it, I accept that, but why won't you (X- whatever is thought to help). Why can't we be logical together"- but this is a disorder in many ways on a day-to-day-moment-by-moment basis of response- fight/ flight/ freeze- reaction not logic. . But as
@Mumo said, not necessarily intentional, and leaves a sufferer with guilt, too. Why disappointing someone can be crushing. And even knowing, say that 5% of the population has ptsd (random figure, not meant for scientific fact), well 95% of other people don't- and life for a supporter would be easier, more fulflling, and (x- fill in the blank) with one of the 95%. And they- as a great partner- deserve more, they deserve the best. They deserve simpler, happier. They deserve
their dreams fulfilled.
The best way for me to deal with others, at least the ones I love...is to just love and accept them for who they are, flaws and all....then maybe they'll accept me back, flaws and all....
^^I think (JMHO) this is the funny thing about love; it is a mirror between people. Which is why it's easy to give (no expectation) and can be hard to receive. Because people always think of mirrors positively, but in reality they reveal all, the good the bad and the ugly. When people love each other they see reflected back what is best- and worst- about themself. Along with goodness they may not know they have, they can see (or experience- and the key is not blaming someone else for their experience) all that is unloving; unselfish; or in any other way not good for another person. Or perhaps 'good' is a poor choice of words: joyful, fulfilling, loving; what makes them feel secure and loved (and is absent, even by virtue of ptsd alone). I think, inherently, we may not know what love is, but we know what are unloving words, actions, and choices towards another person. So it can be intended to be a loving act, to not accept that love.
I think dialogue, perhaps honestly of fears and thoughts, is a place to begin. Because really, if it didn't bother you, you wouldn't be here on the forum. But if it didn't bother you at all, you might not care much at all, either, and ironically those kinds of relationships no sufferer has to flee from, because there is nothing loving about them.
I guess I'm "being strong", because he's earned it. He helped create my ability to feel strong.
I would say he held up a mirror and enabled you to see your own strength, that was always there. And being who he was/ is or how your relationship is, you had the courage to look.
Friday said it in another post, that (for some of us) we can be more or do more when we 'see' ourselves through the eyes of someone else. That is not co-dependence; co-dependence is not knowing where you begin and they end. Which is very different than feeling 'you complete me', which really is you allow me to see myself more fully, or realize who I am already.
If that makes sense. Probably a stupid way to put it. :(
Hugs to you, xox.