Think Simple Now — a moment of clarity

What should I do with my life? Click here.

How to Get Over a Break Up

Falling passionately in love with someone is one of the most exhilarating feelings, as if you had wings and you are flying high in the sky, feeling the wind romantically blowing through your hair. And usually, when love ends, it feels as if you’ve been dropped like a rock in mid-air. You scramble to grab a hold of something … anything, as you witness your body falling at great speeds, and then shattering on the earth below.

Whether we’re talking about breakups, or facing the reality of a one-sided romance, it is painful. So much so that it disrupts our normal flow of experiences, causing us to not function normally.

With so much emotion invested and our identities tied in with these experiences, it’s no wonder that this is the number one topic requested by readers. Over the past year, I have regularly received email from readers sharing their own takes on painful breakups; tales of guilt, of fear, of regret, and of resentment. Although the stories were different, the underlying message was universal and one in the same, “I am in so much pain from not being with this person – what can I do?

Sometimes, the pain of lost love is so intense that it can shake our beliefs about romance and relationships. When these emotional bruises are not understood and have not healed properly, they become invisible baggage that drag with us into the next relationship. This article focuses on the healing process from “love lost”.

Personal Story: The Gift of “Love Lost”

I categorize myself as a very passionate and emotional person. I cry easily at movies and at the sight of passers-by with physical disabilities. When I love, I give it my all, and when it ends, the pain of feeling abandoned can become overwhelmingly and cripplingly intense.

In fact, my journey into personal growth began when I was confronted by a painful breakup five years ago. Out of despair, I had picked up a copy of the Seven Habits of Highly Effective People – the only personal development book I had heard of, at the time. Although I would recommend a different book now for similar circumstances, at the time, this book introduced me to new concepts that helped me make sense of my emotions, and I was hungry for more.

Over the next few years, it was through dealing with recurring relationship issues that I experienced several rewarding revelations and was able to trigger several major growth spurts in my own self-improvement. While these emotionally-infused episodes of “love lost” might have seemed unbearably painful at the time of happening, they were also the catalyst for personal growth, and played a critical role in my becoming a more wholesome and complete person.

The Origins of Love and Pain

Before diving into the practical how-to of healing, let’s first look at what love is, where it comes from, and why we experience so much pain when it ends.

breakup1.jpg
Photo: melissa

I believe that love is a universal energy infused in all forms of life. It is something that lies within the core of every one of us. When we are in a state of conscious awareness, the intense feeling of love and connectedness is clear and undeniable. When we are in this state of clarity and inner peace, our thoughts and actions are based in love and truth.

Within the depths of our souls, we are all connected by this unifying and essential energy of life – love. We occasionally experience glimpses of this deep connection through various and accidental happenstances, such as:

  • A gratifying and intimate conversation with another person. Sharing and expressing your thoughts honestly and openly.
  • Creative expressions such as playing music, writing, drawing, dancing, cooking, designing or even computer programming.
  • Meditation, prayers or communing with your chosen religious group.
  • Communing with nature during a hike, a walk or while sitting by the bed of a river flowing beautifully in front of you.
  • During sexual orgasm (The Dalai Lama has written about this.)

When we fall in love with another person, we are essentially experiencing the love that was within us all along. The person is merely acting like a mirror reflecting our soul back at us. Technically, we can’t “fall” in love, because we are already made of love. The other person, much like a musical instrument, is the catalyst allowing us to recognize the beauty that’s already within us.

Because of our lack of understanding that love resides within us, and that we actually have the power to invoke it on our own, we credit it to the other person for giving love to us. This feeling is so strong and extraordinary, that we become addictive and possessive. We want to capture it and keep it fixed, so that we can – at last – keep this heightened feeling forever.

The desire and dependency to keep this form fixed, becomes a source of self identification that artificially justifies who we are as physical beings. We become attached to the fixed idea of how our relationship should go and our ego quickly becomes the main investor in this fund of a relationship.

The truth is that, everyone and everything is in a constant flow of change. The changes in us and in our external circumstances are inevitable and undeniable. When we change, the dynamics of our relationships change – not just romantic ones, but also friendships, family ties, and our relationships with co-workers.

Over time, some relationships strengthen and some grow apart. When people grow apart, it doesn’t mean that either one of them was a bad person, but rather that they’ve learned all that they needed to from the other person, and that it’s time to move on.

When it’s time to move on, we hold onto this invisible box that contains an idealized and fixated form of how things should be. We unconsciously and instinctively fall into the false believe that we must stop the love when we are no longer romantically involved.

Because we attribute love as being ‘to’ this other person external to us, pain happens when we forcefully try to kill the love, which is actually within us.

Let’s repeat: Pain happens when we forcefully kill the love that’s within us.

When we forcefully try to kill the love within us, it physically feels as if someone has stabbed a knife into our heart, and a sharp pain surfaces in our chest area. In reality, we are that someone doing the stabbing, because we are trying to sever our innate connection to love and our Soul is now bleeding. Our Soul is crying for help, asking us to stop the stabbing, to stop the pain.

A Love Affair & Emotional Freedom

When it comes to love,
you need not fall but rather surrender,
surrender to the idea that you must love yourself
before you can love another.
You must absolutely trust yourself
before you can absolutely trust another
and most importantly you must accept your flaws
before you can accept the flaws of another.

~ Philosophy: Falling in Love
My preferred suggestion to healing from love lost is the same as the one for finding love: to love yourself, first.

In previous relationships, we probably depended on our partners to make us happy, to make us feel special, to make us whole and complete. Our self-worth may have been wrapped up in how much attention our partner gave us. This is a ‘lose-lose’ formula that works against our personal happiness, because it relies heavily on external circumstances beyond our control and is not sustainable in the long term.

Truth is, nothing external to us can give us the security we need. Only we can give that to ourselves, by loving and accepting ourselves completely.

By learning to love and appreciate ourselves, not only do we free ourselves from the chains that keep us in pain when a relationship ends, it also makes us more attractive to the outside world. Even when you don’t explicitly speak about it, something in the grace of your movement will spread that message to others, like a summer breeze softly blowing the scent of a flower to neighboring plants.

7 Tips Getting Over a Break Up

breakup3.jpg
Photo: Nathiya Prathnadi

1. Letting Go

What would you do if your house was burnt to the ground, and everything you owned was destroyed? I’m sure you’d be frustrated and angry at first, but at the same time, no amount of anger will undo what has been done. It is what it is. Your best bet is to begin moving on, and working towards creating a new home.

Similarly, when a relationship ends, you’ll want to practice letting go and allowing the healing process to begin quickly.

If you were on the receiving end of a breakup, do not dwell on whether the person will come back or not, if they broke up with you at one point, chances are, something is wrong with the fit of your partnership, and you’ll be better appreciated elsewhere, with someone else. Even if you and the ex get back together, it is unlikely to last (from my experience).

Trust that everything in the Universe happens for a reason, and it benefits everyone involved in the long run, even if the benefits are not yet clear. Trust that this is the best possible thing to happen to you right now, and the reasons will become clear in the future.

2. Release Tension and Bundled Up Energy

We all have the need to be understood and heard. Whether we’re on the receiving end or the initiating end of a breakup, we often carry with us the tension and any unexpressed emotions. We can release this extra energy by:

  • Talking about it with a friend.
  • Voicing our opinions honestly and openly with our ex-partner, which have been bottled up in the past.
  • Punching a pillow and crying freely for 10 minutes
  • Screaming out aloud and imagining unwanted energy being released with your voice (seriously, I’ve done a meditation that incorporated this, and I instantly felt better).
  • Writing in a journal (more on this later).
  • Exercise and body movement.
  • Meditating.

3. Love Yourself

The practice of loving yourself is the most important aspect on the road to personal happiness and emotional stability. I’ve personally had my most valuable personal growth spurts during the period when I vigorously worked on this aspect of my life.

I did everything from cooking myself fancy dinners, to spending every Sunday on my own doing the things that I loved, to taking myself to Symphonies, to taking overseas trips on my own. Each one had its own challenges and confronted my beliefs about loneliness. Through overcoming the fear of loneliness, I experienced deep joy all by myself. It was so gratifying, refreshing and empowering.

Here are some ideas to cultivate the art of loving yourself:

  • Take yourself on romantic dates as if you were on a date with another person. Put on nice clothes, maybe buy yourself flowers, treat yourself to something delicious, and take long walks under the stars. Whatever your idea of a romantic date is.
  • Look at yourself in the mirror. Look yourself in the eyes. Smile slightly with your eyes. Practice giving gratitude to what you see. You don’t need words. Just send out the intent of giving an abundance of love to the eyes that you see, and feel the feelings of love within you. As you are looking into your eyes, look for something you admire about your eyes – maybe the color, the shape, the depth, the exoticness, or even the length of your eye lashes. This will be a little weird and uncomfortable at first, but just trust me, and continue with it. Do this for a few minutes every day.
  • Sit or stand in front of a mirror, or sit somewhere comfortable (mix it up, and do both on different days), put both hands on your chest and say to yourself, “I love you, <insert your name>”. Repeat a few times, slowly. Continue with qualities you like about yourself, or things you are good at. Be generous and list many, even if they sound silly. Example, “I love that you always know how to make your salads so colorful and appetizing.”, “I love that you have the discipline to go to the gym regularly, and you really take care of your body.”, “I love that you are so neat, and can keep your desk so organized.”
  • Practice doing things on your own to challenge your fear of being alone. For example, if you have a fear of eating alone in a restaurant, go out to a restaurant on your own. Your mission is to find the joy within that experience.

4. Love Your Ex-Partner

Allow the love within you to flow. Try practicing forgiveness and open up your heart.

Over the past few months, my friend Tom Stine and I have been chatting about the topic of overcoming breakups. Tom had been married for 13 years and went through a divorce that took him 2 years to emotionally recover from. When asked about how he got over his ex-wife, he had a few snippets of wisdom to convey:

  • “I let myself love her. Even when it felt like my heart was going to break. Adyashanti says something amazing – when people say, ‘My heart feels like it is going to break.’ He says, ‘Let it break. If you let it really break – really, really break, it will transform you.'”
  • “LET YOUR HEART BREAK WIDE OPEN. Let go of every possible belief or thought that says your ex is anything other than the most incredible, amazing, wonderful person in the Universe. You gotta love them and open your broken heart, WIDE OPEN!!!! That’s how to get over a break-up, really get over it. Anything short of that is not gonna do it.”
  • “The key for me was getting utterly clear: we are apart, and the Universe never makes mistakes. We are over. And I can still love her. That was HUGE. I can love her with all my heart and soul and we never have to be together. And when I realized that, I felt amazing. And still do. The freedom was great. I could finally own-up to how much I wanted out of our relationship. All the hurt and anger disappeared. I was free.”

The underlying message of love in Tom’s words is pretty clear and powerful.

breakup4.jpg
Photo: Nathiya Prathnadi

5. Give it Time

It takes time to heal. Be patient. Give it more time. I promise the storm will end, and the sun will peak through the clouds.

6. Journal Your Experience

Spend some quality time in a comfortable chair, at your desk or at a café, and write your thoughts and feelings on paper. No, not typing on a laptop, writing on paper with a pen. Follow your heart and flow freely, but if you’re stuck, here are some writing exercises you can do:

  • Drill into the why – Start with a question or statement, and continue to drill into why you feel that way until you have a truthful and satisfying reason. The exercise isn’t to issue blame or blow off steam at someone else. It’s meant to gain clarity and understanding into how you feel, so you can alleviate unnecessary pain. For example, you might start with the statement, “I am in a lot of pain, ouch!”, and your why might be “because she left me”. Now ask yourself, “why does that hurt so much?”, and one possible why might be, “because I feel abandoned”. The following why to “why does feeling abandoned hurt so much?”, “because it makes me feel alone”, etc. More than likely, the real reason has something to do with our own insecurities or fears.
  • Finding the Lessons – What did you learn from the relationship? What did you learn from the other person? How is your life better because of it? How will your future relationships be better because of it?

7. Read Something Inspirational

Books that deal with our emotions and ego are incredible tools at a time of healing. They help to enlighten our understanding of ourselves and our experiences.

Here are some recommended books:

Parting Words: Healing from Breakup

Every relationship will end someday, whether by break-up or by the death of one partner. Relationships have cycles. They are born, they live, and they die. Just like every part of life. It is merely a part of life.”
Tom Stine

Socially, we view the end of a relationship with a negative connotation and give it the label of a ‘failure’. Just because a relationship has ended does not mean that the relationship was a failure. Both parties likely gained something substantial in either learning about themselves or for the benefit of future partnerships.

Capture the beauty of time shared together, and note the valuable life lessons learned. Be thankful for having experienced love, and know that you are a better person because of it.

No challenge is ever presented to us, if we are un-able to handle it.

For those currently in relationships, cherish and honor your partner for who they are as form and formless Beings. Accept the reality that life is full of change, and dance with the changes and challenges as they come. And when they come, view each one as an opportunity for personal growth – when you do that, nothing is lost.

All is well, and so be it.

** What are your experiences with dealing with breakups? Any words of wisdom for others going through it? Share your thoughts and stories with us in the comment section. See you there!

Before you go: please share this story on Facebook, RT on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter. Subscribe to receive email updates. Thank you for your support!
Connect with TSN Facebook Twitter Google+ Pinterest Instagram RSS
About the author

Tina Su is a mom, a wife, a lover of Apple products and a CHO (Chief Happiness Officer) for our motivational community: Think Simple Now. She is obsessed with encouraging and empowering people to lead conscious and happy lives. Subscribe to new inspiring stories each week. You can also subscribe to Tina on Facebook.

Love this article? Sign up for weekly updates!

Think Simple Now delivers weekly self-reflective, inspiring stories from real people. Join our empowering community by entering your email address below.

283 thoughts on How to Get Over a Break Up

  1. Steve L

    Tina,

    Thank you so much for the insights. I seriously thank God every time I read this blog. Have you considered writing a book?

  2. This type of love is so natural. We repell the natural and want to make things so complicated.

  3. It’s so true–that bit about loving yourself first. Only you can complete you.

  4. Hi Tina
    Tom mentioned your article so I came to take a look. Wow- you really got it. Love is. When my marriage broke up, I learned I couldn’t not continue to love her. What I did is ‘generalized’ it a bit, making it less about the person and more about what she’d been for me.

    Great advice but self love I had a lot more trouble with. What I found worked for me was gratitude. Reminding myself a few times a day to be grateful for something else. This cultured a better ‘tone’ and space into which periods of forgiveness arose. I was able to let go of holdings in all the relationships in my life. Under that I came to a place where I could forgive myself. Then I could see that there was nothing to forgive.

    After peeling some layers to the ‘onion’, a deeper value of the heart was revealed. I was able to clear the ‘crust’ on that as well. That’s when what I call Big L Love begins to dawn. The real, unconditional, unlimited love. The love that infuses and handles everything.

    Thank you for helping people down the true journey to love.

  5. This is an excellent article. I’m going to put a link to it on my new Alice Springs Friends site.

    Robin

  6. Jackie

    Now you can do what we all do; watch pr0n :D

  7. Thor

    Lame. Fucking lame touchy-feely, new-age bullshit. Breakups are devastating, and the only thing that will make you feel better is time.

  8. Hey thanks. I think I got something from that. Once I thought that someone had broken my heart. They hadn’t – I had broken it myself. But when I looked deeper, I found that my heart was much bigger and stronger that I thought it was. Now I’m just sad.
    Thanks, there were some interesting things in your article that I can relate to.
    Chris

  9. Will

    For me, the thing that finally helped me let go was understanding the origins of the emotion, on a psychological and chemical level. I centered on the question, “Why do you love [x]?” For many, this question is difficult to answer. But it became a question I could answer: one loves another only because of the derived benefits (company, feeling special, favors, etc).

    I felt used. I hurt from knowing that I really wasn’t a special person to my ex-lover, but only useful to her for a duration. However, it was a triumph. I knew I would never be able to love someone again. I would never feel the pain of heartbreak again.

    And so I moved on to find ways to make myself happy. I achieved more than I ever could deriving happiness from a significant other. My future never looked more promising, and it’s a future without love.

  10. Aloha Tina,

    Thank you Tina for your insightful and compassionate article on the art of letting go. I have been practicing many of the things you suggest in your article with my wife of 7 years who has informed me that she wants to move on from our marriage.

    My mantra with her is:

    “I will love you with all my heart no matter what you choose to do”

    I have been applying those words to myself as I look in the mirror as well. I have been spraying myself with rose water before I go to sleep, and applying fragrant oils to my feet…I have been falling asleep embracing my head and heart, and my last waking words are “I love you Richard”.

    I have also been taking myself out on dates to places that feed and nourish my artistic and creative soul. Katie’s 1000 Names for Joy is my everyday companion as well as the Illuminated Rumi. A friend of mine gifted me with a very sweet book that I never heard of before entitled The Rest Of Your Life- Finding Repose in the Beloved. It is all about connecting with the Beloved One (that we all are).

    In closing I’d like to share that one thing that has been incredibly healing for me is working weekly with a breath therapist. It is so easy to forget to breathe deeply when one confronts loss or pain. I find that when I buffer the pain by shallow breath I lose my connection to my heart, my vital essential energy, my feelings and my spirit.

    Thank you so very much for the great gift of your article! I am bookmarking it now so I can re read it to remind myself I am on the right track. Your remedy when practiced works miracles and I am loving mySelf and my precious departing wife with my whole heart and soul and wishing her happiness and blessings as she steps out onto her new life path.

    with a warm wave of aloha to you~~~

    Richard Marks, MA

  11. Ken

    The timing of this is perfect for me. My own insecurities are at the root of many of my relationship issues. I don’t expect an answer to this, but maybe it will be cathartic to ask: If, after 35 years of looking, the person who has recently left your life is the only one you’ve ever met that encapsulated traits you’ve desired greatly, never before seen, and had given up hope in finding, what do you do? Personal consolation has its limits and the resulting sorrow seems limitless in its affect and span.

  12. Wow…I really disagree with this article and after reading it in its entirety, plus reading every comment before mine, I’m apparently the only one who feels this way. You make love sound like such a selfish thing, something that is never shared, only kept inside yourself. Contrary to your article, love IS given, and when love is also returned, the combined loves create a new entity, an entity that is more than the sum of it’s parts. The way you write about it, as long as I love myself, I can interchange who I’m with at any given time and still be the same. But you can’t be the same. Every couple has their own unique bond. Like snowflakes, each is different, yet all are beautiful. To replace a partner and expect that snowflake to be the same is ludicrous. These unique bonds are what make breakups so hard. After a breakup, that bond vanishes and the energy you put into creating and maintaining that bond has left you feeling empty. There are a multitude of factors in the amount of time it takes to replenish that energy, but when you are full again, you will again be able to convert that energy into love and give it to another.

  13. KLK

    Great call on the Power of Now – it transformed my life. Get the audiobook and listen to the first 3-4 chapters on repeat, it’s all you need.

  14. Surly McSorly

    I really enjoyed this read. I think it could of helped me once or twice. Reading it made me look back at a hard break up and compare what I did to what you suggest. I found that I did a lot of those things… eventually and the hard way.

    I agree that relationships are a circle. But can you step outside that circle?

    In my life and experience I’ve decided that that flight – oh so high – in the sky is not worth the fall down. I’ve worked very hard staying out of that circle and I have been happily alone for two years. Recently, a hint of a relationship started and I felt sick. Even lost sleep when I realized it was a true possibility.

    Tina – Do you think you can completely remove yourself from that circle?
    (And I do love myself. That’s why I’m happy.)

  15. What an amazing article! Congrats on writing such a classic post.

  16. Farzad

    Hey Tina,

    although I am in the peaceful and good state already, I bookmarked this article so I can send it to my friends in the future should they need it (and I know the time will come). Thanks!

    I’d like to add something: There is a brilliant movie that had a surprisingly soothing effect on me right after my last and at that time really painful) breakup.

    It’s called “Me and You and Everyone We Know”
    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0415978/
    everyone should watch it.

  17. Jhn Woods

    Just get over it, there are plenty of fish in the sea!

    RT

  18. Tom Delorean

    You can love yourself all you want, but if you’re a loser, other people will still see you that way. Life is unfair. Some people just have really bad DNA or permanently messed-up personalities. That is reality.

    Attempting to frame your emotional life with cliches and self-help psychobabble is a form of self-deception. Human sexual relationships are fundamentally driven by genetically-imprinted mating impulses. Over millenia the concept of ‘love’ has become loaded with expectation through human civilization’s incessant compulsion to make existence seem more consequential and our behavior less ‘savage’.

    I admire your effort and genuinity, but in the kindest possible way I suggest that you re-examine your fundamental beliefs and assumptions on this topic before dishing out more advice for others.

  19. thanks so much this is 100 percent true and exactly what i needed right now!

  20. Very insightful. Very true. Lost love is like a death. We must be good to ourselves, because at the end of the day, we are our own best friends.

  21. Serj

    if any of you find true love, give me a call. cause I still haven’t found it

  22. Austin Hook

    The ideas presented here about dealing with lost love are quite good. I have a challenge: what advice can you tell someone before experiencing a first major romance to help their resilience later if necessary, without taking away from the beauty of the original experience.

    It’s so hard to conceive what you might have to deal with before those feelings first arise most any advice would hardly make sense.

    Most of us tell our kids the facts of life fairly early these days, but few of us are able to convey, without being disbelieved, the true facts of romance. And it is probably the facts of romance that are more important.

    I presume that the approach, and the age, might have to be a bit different for boys and girls.

  23. seth d.

    I’ve loved the same woman for 42yrs. We have never been married. Nor have we slept together. We are married to others. I will never get over her and she is the only woman I have ever really loved. I even ran into her a few months ago and know the love is still there. But life does go on and things can always be worse. God has a plan and one day it will be clear to all of us. Sometimes when I an down in the dumps over her, I am reminded of a quote on Star Trek by Spock. It goes”sometimes having isnt necessarily quite as pleasing as wanting”

Page 2 of 11123456...Last
Your thoughts?

Leave a Comment

We’d love to hear them! Please share.

Think Simple Now, a moment of clarity © 2007-2022 ThinkSimpleNow.com Privacy Disclaimer
Back to top