Hi all,
I'm a supporter and mostly mingle in the supporter section of the forum. However, if you'll allow me, I'd like to pose a question to those of you who suffer from PTSD, perhaps also CPTSD.
My boyfriend experienced childhood sexual abuse by a family member for a prolonged period of time. I am the first person he has ever told, and when he did, he immediately sought treatment, wanting to tackle his symptoms head on. Since then, however, his symptoms have gotten progressively worse. Where before he "just" felt anxious and depressed, he now has very intense flashbacks, along with what I believe are body memories during which he physically relives some of the trauma. He has now even started seeing/feeling his abuser in the room with him (What could you call this? Paranoid hallucinations?) This has been the status quo, every day, for about two months now...
He says that in those moments he needs everything he has to get those images and thoughts out of his head. However, he doesn't hang up the skype call (we're long distance at the moment,) or leave the room, he goes through the entire physical experience while I'm there. What can I say, what can I do if he doesn't outright hang up, and he doesn't go along with my attempts at ending the conversation so he can focus, I'm inclined to believe there is maybe something I can do or say to get him back into the present. I tell him to breathe and breathe with him, I call his attention to his feet on the ground and his butt on the chair. I tell him it's not his fault and that what is going on in his head is very real, it happened, but it isn't happening right now. I've also tried just being silent, sitting there, thinking he just needs company (even if it's via skype,) but it just goes on and on. (Hitting himself, choking, the works.) Not much of the things I've tried seem to penetrate (though the breathing did a while back, not so much anymore.) It's easier when we're actually physically together - it helps him if I just sit there, put a hand on his arm, and do nothing. But on the phone it's a bit hard to find a way.
I'm not in this to cure or fix him, but I do wonder if there's something I could do that could make some sort of difference.
Maybe you wonderful, brave people could help a co-sufferer's girlfriend out with some of your experience?
I'm a supporter and mostly mingle in the supporter section of the forum. However, if you'll allow me, I'd like to pose a question to those of you who suffer from PTSD, perhaps also CPTSD.
My boyfriend experienced childhood sexual abuse by a family member for a prolonged period of time. I am the first person he has ever told, and when he did, he immediately sought treatment, wanting to tackle his symptoms head on. Since then, however, his symptoms have gotten progressively worse. Where before he "just" felt anxious and depressed, he now has very intense flashbacks, along with what I believe are body memories during which he physically relives some of the trauma. He has now even started seeing/feeling his abuser in the room with him (What could you call this? Paranoid hallucinations?) This has been the status quo, every day, for about two months now...
He says that in those moments he needs everything he has to get those images and thoughts out of his head. However, he doesn't hang up the skype call (we're long distance at the moment,) or leave the room, he goes through the entire physical experience while I'm there. What can I say, what can I do if he doesn't outright hang up, and he doesn't go along with my attempts at ending the conversation so he can focus, I'm inclined to believe there is maybe something I can do or say to get him back into the present. I tell him to breathe and breathe with him, I call his attention to his feet on the ground and his butt on the chair. I tell him it's not his fault and that what is going on in his head is very real, it happened, but it isn't happening right now. I've also tried just being silent, sitting there, thinking he just needs company (even if it's via skype,) but it just goes on and on. (Hitting himself, choking, the works.) Not much of the things I've tried seem to penetrate (though the breathing did a while back, not so much anymore.) It's easier when we're actually physically together - it helps him if I just sit there, put a hand on his arm, and do nothing. But on the phone it's a bit hard to find a way.
I'm not in this to cure or fix him, but I do wonder if there's something I could do that could make some sort of difference.
Maybe you wonderful, brave people could help a co-sufferer's girlfriend out with some of your experience?