blue_eyes18
Silver Member
My partner had always been trained and reinforced over and over again through therapy that she should always have an escape plan for practically all situations. And that if she felt triggered, she should just leave and utilyze that escape plan. I couldn't agree more with this and it has helped her greatly.
Problem is, storming out and leaving is an emotional trigger for me. I'm a very calm and rational person 99.9% of the time. For some reason, this act just tears me apart when it's geared towards me, and it really hurts.
Most of the time, I'll try to initiate communication about something that is bothering me, like normal communication between couples, and then next thing I know, she gets overwhelmed, shuts down, and storms out in a panic - often times telling me we are better off breaking up in the process, as she's leaving. It's not all the time. Just when she seems to be particularly stressed, I suppose. But I never really know when the right and wrong times are to approach her and she doesn't know how to communicate it. She just does the leaving so suddenly (fight or flight, I get that) and it hurts so bad. I don't understand this side of her. The problem is that this just stabs me through the heart, and I feel abandoned and left, and I then lash out at her and react in ways I'm not comfortable with. I could almost deal with the sudden leaving if she would just take the breaking up off the table and just storm out. Then I would at least know she's coming back and could calm myself down. But at this point, I'm so conditioned to know that if she storms out, there's usually a break up coupled with it. Then she calms down and regrets it later.
The pattern usually resembles this, exactly: I try to communicate my feelings with her about something; she gets overwhelmed and panics; She cuts me off and storms out, telling me we are better off breaking up; I panic and try everything to get her to calm down and just talk to me and not do this; She inevitably leaves anyway, and I feel devistated and abandoned, and then react by messaging her and telling her that she really crushed me and how could she do that to me when I was just expressing my feelings, etc; she feels I'm attacking her; we don't speak for a week until we've both licked our wounds and have had time to realize the other didn't intend to hurt the other.
But the storming out, whether intentional or not, is KILLING me. And it's pretty much ruined our relationship. And it's reinforced so many different times not to ever express my feelings. That if I do, this exact cycle will happen. But how can two people ever be healthy together if they can't openly talk about their feelings?
She says normally she can work through the panic in her head, but sometimes she just can't, and it over takes her and she just reacts. It's hard for her because it's been so ingrained into her head through therapy to just leave when she feels panicked. But that's not conducive to a healthy relationship when you're just trying to communicate. And this is an emotional trigger for me. It makes me respond in a way I hate and am completely uncomfortable with when I am the person this fight or flight is directed towards. This response of hers towards me has deeply hurt me on many occasions. I don't know how to handle it. Any suggestions? Can it ever stop? And at this point, has there already been too much damage?
Problem is, storming out and leaving is an emotional trigger for me. I'm a very calm and rational person 99.9% of the time. For some reason, this act just tears me apart when it's geared towards me, and it really hurts.
Most of the time, I'll try to initiate communication about something that is bothering me, like normal communication between couples, and then next thing I know, she gets overwhelmed, shuts down, and storms out in a panic - often times telling me we are better off breaking up in the process, as she's leaving. It's not all the time. Just when she seems to be particularly stressed, I suppose. But I never really know when the right and wrong times are to approach her and she doesn't know how to communicate it. She just does the leaving so suddenly (fight or flight, I get that) and it hurts so bad. I don't understand this side of her. The problem is that this just stabs me through the heart, and I feel abandoned and left, and I then lash out at her and react in ways I'm not comfortable with. I could almost deal with the sudden leaving if she would just take the breaking up off the table and just storm out. Then I would at least know she's coming back and could calm myself down. But at this point, I'm so conditioned to know that if she storms out, there's usually a break up coupled with it. Then she calms down and regrets it later.
The pattern usually resembles this, exactly: I try to communicate my feelings with her about something; she gets overwhelmed and panics; She cuts me off and storms out, telling me we are better off breaking up; I panic and try everything to get her to calm down and just talk to me and not do this; She inevitably leaves anyway, and I feel devistated and abandoned, and then react by messaging her and telling her that she really crushed me and how could she do that to me when I was just expressing my feelings, etc; she feels I'm attacking her; we don't speak for a week until we've both licked our wounds and have had time to realize the other didn't intend to hurt the other.
But the storming out, whether intentional or not, is KILLING me. And it's pretty much ruined our relationship. And it's reinforced so many different times not to ever express my feelings. That if I do, this exact cycle will happen. But how can two people ever be healthy together if they can't openly talk about their feelings?
She says normally she can work through the panic in her head, but sometimes she just can't, and it over takes her and she just reacts. It's hard for her because it's been so ingrained into her head through therapy to just leave when she feels panicked. But that's not conducive to a healthy relationship when you're just trying to communicate. And this is an emotional trigger for me. It makes me respond in a way I hate and am completely uncomfortable with when I am the person this fight or flight is directed towards. This response of hers towards me has deeply hurt me on many occasions. I don't know how to handle it. Any suggestions? Can it ever stop? And at this point, has there already been too much damage?