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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!

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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.

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283 thoughts on How to Get Over a Break Up

  1. David

    Joe – There’s only one guarantee – death. (although curiously that’s an illusion) So your best bet is to have as much fun with life while it’s happening as you can. Tomorrow will always change. Maybe better. Maybe worse. But if you’re choosing to enjoy as much as you can, you’ll be more satisfied more of the time, whatever happens.

    Flip side, if you spend your life avoiding pain, you’ll just get more of it. What we resist persists. Don’t look for other people to make or keep you happy – you’ll always be disappointed. You’ll find the most happiness in giving. If they choose to stop wanting to receive, look for someone else that wants it. Keep the flow going.

    And if you really want a guarantee, there is another secret one. The one you give yourself ;-)

  2. abby

    my boyfriend for four and a half years broke up with me because of the reasons that wasn’t able to give him enough of my time and attention, and now he admits that he is falling for someone new, its really hard for me, i hope you guys can give me advice on this one,,i really need it badly, it seems like im slowly ding.. please help me,, thanks

  3. Andrew

    This article helped me so much. It was a great aid in starting my healing process. I recommend it to anyone suffering after a break up.

  4. Ricky

    dont know what to say after reading this article. While i was reading this stuff, my eye’s became wet.. Is this so easy to change your focus from the person, U truely loved more than ur life, towards some other thing???is this so easy?? I say NO.. Telk me..will u be satisfied by only watching food.. When u and ur tummy both know that u are extremely hungry.. U will get mad by not getting food… The degree of madness depends upon the degree of ur hunger… Same as the degree of not able to focus on other things depends upon the degree of you loved that person… It is very easy to focus on other things only if u do not love that person or u were only usinp that person for ur sexual needs.. And this specialliety of defocussing or changing the partner truely lies within the females.. Thankyou and god bless all..

  5. matilda

    I just broke up with someone i was with for two months (not long)…he lied to me and told me he loved me…that he saw a future with me…then just stopped talking to me…I learned to forgive him…and know that I was way too good for him…pretty much he talked me into loving him, when really i dont think I ever really did. He felt for a small period to be apart of me…but then I felt the pieces…when the person is right you shouldnt feel pieces it should be a whole…anyways…im in pain because i’m confused…lonely…but not because of the loss of what could have been, because he wasnt it…and i know that because he is no longer here!!

  6. sweedu

    Its very tough to forget someone and more than that its tough to forget urself for making a wrong choice and getting u where u standing today…
    but life teaches everything…
    today its one day to my breakup and i almost thought of ending life…
    but then i felt did that person really worth my life… I have many people to love me… a gr8 family.. caring friend… am i suppose to abandon all their love and dreams for that one person… with end of one life many are hurt…
    for that one person who hurted me without thinking about me… does it really worth hurting all those who loves me unconditionally… losing my dad at a very young age when i met him i got overdependent on him… but he never deserved it… he never deserved the trust that i had in him.. that no matter what happens he ll be there… he was not… evne when i needed him the most… i hated him… but i have forgiven him… i was wrong at some places so was he but he blamed me… the last i spoke to him i wished things cud get back to same… i had shared best moments of life with him… but do i need to force him to be with me… i have let things to destiny… i ll always wait for him… but then i wont force him… if he is in my destiny he ll come back… no matter what misconceptions he has… if he really loves me he has to find the strength to come back to me… else he was never mine…
    so even after my break up i love my guy more than life… but still i wont beg him again to become my life… i am letting him go… maybe even forever…:)

  7. machi

    good moring every one
    it is good article, it gives practical staffs
    i want add somethings:
    en general we became very attached to a person because we think that if we break up with this person we will not find another person which is good for us as our ex.
    blieve it or not or ex are just good ou may be bad than many person in the vicinity !!!
    the ideal image about our ex is just conception we have created !!!
    CAPITILISE your experienec with ur ex, FORGET and MOVE ON…. thats all

  8. Myra

    This article supports the feelings I’ve been having and the advice my friends have given me.

    I have been seeing a man my age for about 4 months. I realize that we love each other yet no relationship will ever materialize. I call it star-crossed. When we are together, we are the world, we are very passionate and feel so close together. We like each other very much and bonded as humans.

    But I have slowly realized, a bit painfully, that nothing else will happen. We don’t really communicate when we are apart, about 1-2 weeks usually, when we are together, it feels as if no time has passed.

    Yet on our time apart, I feel like I need more attention, which would then create a real relationship, but that is not going to happen, I don’t think. So I have decided to walk away, slowly, remain friends perhaps, and learn my lessons. I believe I met him for a reason, which is to realize that I AM attractive and fun (he is a very attractive man and kind as well).

    Though I have been single for a year after a 5 year relationship, I have worked all along to love myself and improve myself. Everyday I do something to love myself, I try to eat healthy, exercise, buy myself flowers and plants, talk to friends and make new ones, appreciate life for the beauty of it.

    Yes, it’s still not easy, I’ve been crying for the past few days when I finally realized for myself that I need to end this quasi-relationship. I have been in denial all along, yet I knew it wouldn’t really last.
    So be it.

  9. http://the100daysbreakup.blogspot.com/
    I started this blog to chronicle the first 100 days of my breakup. I have no idea what to expect and how it will go. But I am sure there will be ups, downs, regrets, doubts and moments where I am down right mad. I have broken up, gone back, been disappointed and know there are millions of people who have done the same. Follow me through this process, add your thoughts, experiences and advice! One thing I do know is that it is time to move on for the 100th time ONCE AND FOR ALL!

  10. sherryann

    How Cant I Get over to the Person Whom I offered my Life with Almost 5 years and yet he ruined my dreams……………..
    Thanks at least it helped me lot

  11. tweetie

    Its been 4 months since the break up. And can i just say, im feeling great! =) i still think about it, but no longer emotionally attached. I dont get teary anymore and im pretty happy with my life right now.. In fact i cant even imagine why i used to cry over the break up in the first place! It seems so trivial and insignificant in my life now. It’s amazing what time and a little bit of self love can do to help heal pains.

    I’d just like to thank you once more for writing this blog. I have always had this article on the back of my mind.. especially when im going through a rough day. Thanks so much helping me open my eyes =)

    xx

  12. Mel

    thank you for the hope that your words inspire in me. i have just been confronted with the reality of a one-sided love. i am in excruciating pain but your post provides me with a much-needed glimmer of hope, a timely reminder of the strong and loving person that lies within me. thanks again.

    mel

  13. Nas

    I cheated on my ex of 7years she left me,i know i hurt her and i cant get over my mistake and guilt,what do i do?im depressed ive started drinking and doing drugs.i love her to bits and cant let go, someone pls help me before i do something stupid

  14. vi

    I have been searching for some relief after a recent breakup. I read a few books, read many, many, many articles online, talked to family and friends, but still felt bad. Your article has really helped me see things from a totally different angle.

    Two things that really stood out for me are: The Origins of Love and Pain and also your point on how one should Trust that everything in the Universe happens for a reason and that this is the best possible thing to happen to me right now.

    Looking back, I think that I did not get much from things I read before this article, because I had not truly accepted that the relationship was over. I still feel some hurt, but a least I’m starting to see some light.

    Thank you.

  15. w.

    thank you so much for posting this. do you have advice or recommended resources for coping when a partner has cheated on you? your post was very helpful but i don’t know where to go for support on this aspect of my breakup.

    • @w.

      I recommend “The power of now” by Eckhart Tolle, you can find a link on the right-hand sidebar.
      It doesn’t deal with the issue directly, but will help you understand the source of your pain. I highly recommend it.

  16. Lucky

    How to get over a break up is a GREAT post. I just got out of a relationship about a month ago and it has not been easy, but I’m definitely going to put your advice into practice.

    Thank you so much.

  17. logic

    broke up with my living-in boyfriend of 3yrs, reason was his parents didn’t want me to marry him.
    i have had a hard time for the last three months and over the last two weeks, things have been better.
    i have completely cut off all contact with him, even he has not bothered to contact me.
    there is still this tiny little hope that he will come back to me-which i know is bad and is not making me move on,
    your article was very helpful.
    i just need to love him unconditionally and i think thats important.

  18. lorraine

    Hi, some really good comments on here, Iwas left two weeks before xmas after 10 years together, being advised he still loved me but was “not happy” I begged himto work it through, but he did not want this, I cann not believe someone who I gave my life to lied to me and gave no indication he was going to do this, justlike cheatin? going through so many emotions I don’t know if I am coming or going?

  19. Virginia

    Unfortunately, I’ve been in an affair for 9 years with a married man. He and his wife have been separated for 3 years, and they have a 6-year old. He continues to spend time with her and the child, and says that it’s for the sake of the child. I’m ready to end the affair, because 9 years is just too long; without a commitment. I am holding on out of fear; history broken, being along, not finding a monogomous-commited relationship, etc. But, I know that this is wrong and will never bring either of us any real peace & contentment. I appreciate your suggestions on loving self first and ways in which I can learn to be alone and feel the pain. . .

    Is there anyone out there who is experiencing a similar situation, and if so, can share your feelings?

    • Garnett

      Dear Virginia, I am, or was, involved in a somewhat similar situation. I met and fell in love with a man who had been involved, not married, but involved with a woman for 20 years. He professed his love for me, convinced me to leave my unhappy marriage for him and to move in with him. I did and things were great for seven months, however, he NEVER mentioned marriage again!!! I got my divorce! worked for him, lived with him but I became angry and felt used. Unbeknownst to me, he tried to start a relationship during this time with another employee. He told me later, he was unhappy with me because I had a bad temper!! I was, I know, so frustrated that he was not doing what he had promised me@ getting married. I eventually was forced to move out. I did but four days later he called saying he made a mistake. I still loved him but I was so hurt and angry. & I said I wanted an engagement ring before I would come back! After a couple of months I got one. However, it only lasted two months.,we argued and I returned it. I bought my house back which he had encouraged me to sell after my divorce. I moved in but he and I still regularly saw each other and we still “in love” I thought. Unbeknownst to me, he had started seeing the woman he had been with for twenty years again. Apparently, he had done this before and she just waits & he comes back. We continued to see each other for a whole other year. Finally, he said he couldn’t see me because he was so busy right then with his business but he would call me soon. He then began to openly see this woman and it has contined for the past 2 & 1/2 years.first, he told me she was just helping him get his business organized, but he had resumed his relationship the same as before. He goes’ over to her noise every night and has dinner,,stays till 11:00’or so, goes home, supposedly doesn’t see me. Of course, he texts me dailey, says he has never loved her but she is so nice to him and a big help to him. Before, he swore he was never n love with her, she was just like a sister, they had no physical relationship. Now, however, he still says that but now he says she is so giving and wants to help him and he needs to get his life in order and she is helping hm. Still comes here every couple of weeks, on the side, still swears he is NOT in love with her and is never going to marry her! They have been together 25 years now! Her grown children dispise him because of how he has treated her over the years.. He is not invited to dinners on holidays with her family but she cooks another dinner for him the next day. I have pleaded with him to stop seeing her, told him I still love him and told him we need to be together. I said I would help,him get his life organized but he says he can’t right now and that Ellen is helping hm. He says he is not going to be with her forever but right now he needs her!!! This man is almost 70. He has been married once for two years but that was 30 years ago. He has been with this person, never married her, but been with her ever since.. they do not live together, he still swears they don’t even hold hands and that he is not “in love” with her but that he loves her givingness and her kindness. She thinks he doesn’t see me, however Ihave called her four times over the last two and a half years telling her he still sees me, calls or texts me daily. No telling what he tells her but she continues on in the relationship. Last night he came down because I was so angry and I told him we needed to talk. She was gone for two weeks so of. Ourse he was with me three times,taking me to dinners and staying the night. When she returned he went right back to seeing her nightly. I called and left a message that she needed to keep him away from me! I said he was calling me, that he was seeing me and so forth! Of course, he called me and was upset that I called her.,however, she still continues on with him. So, last night we talked and he said I should go on with my life because he had to get his life organized and I was too chaotic for him now. She doesn’t want to marry, I guess, she has plenty of money, has a nice life. I, on the other hand, am financially strapped, expected him to pay for things when we lived together. He wants a person to be there for him, to not need him for anything and I guess to put no pressure on him as in regards to marriage or living together. After 25 years together, they are back together as before!! I refused to believe he would never stop seeing her because he always told me he never loved her! she was just a!very nice person!!! Well, he obviously does love her on some level because he sees no one else, me on the side, but she has taken him back time and again,,after his flings with other people all these years. He still says he did love he,,that he never gave any other woman an engagement ring, but I ran him off with my bad temper and my demands. I truly don’t think,,in the four years we have known each other, I do to think he ever stopped seeing her or calling her. I am sure he never will. He will probably never get married to her but this relationship suits them both! I was a fool to ever get Involved.,he told me in the beginning that he was single and that he just was ” friends” with this woman for all those Yeats and that she cooked for him at night but they were not in love!!!!! Don’t be fooled like I was. After 9 years,your boyfriend is not going to marry you and he is still involved with his ex-wife. For whatever reasons, she provides him with something he needs. I had wasted four years of my life and I am 65 years old. I know I will never find another man to love or to marry but you are much younger I think. Give up this relationship NOW and try to start over fresh. Being alone is not that bad, you will eventually realize that you are a wonderful woman and just because HE didn’t work out doesn’t mean you are not worthy or that you aren’t a special person with lots,to offer.

  20. Gratitude

    Thank you Tina :)

    Your Personal Story: The Gift of “Love Lost” resonated deeply as I experienced very similar growth and came to very similar insights you expressed. It is beautiful to read your story and suggestions as they reinforce my own experience.

    I especially liked what you have said: “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….”

    and …. “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.”

    I also enjoyed reading all of your suggestions, especially this one’s about Loving one’s Ex-Partner from Tom Stine:
    “I let myself love her. Even when it felt like my heart was going to break…“LET YOUR HEART BREAK WIDE OPEN. … You gotta love them and open your broken heart, WIDE OPEN!!!! … 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.”

    I would also like to suggest something that helped me a lot. That is writing down quotes that were inspiring and healing, and print them out, and have them available to read, by my bed, or near where I meditate. Here are some of my favorite quotes I printed out:

    “Love is a state of Being. Your Love is not outside; it is deep withing you. You can never lose it, and it cannot leave you. It is not dependent on some other body, some external form. In the stillness of your presence, you can feel your own formless and timeless reality as the unmanifested life that animates your physical form. You can then feel the same life deep within every other human and every other creature. You look beyond the veil of form and separation. This is the realization of oneness. This is love” – Eckhart Tolle The Power of Now.

    Also, from a very beautiful article called “Inner Marriage by Ani Tuzman: “The source of love and happiness in not another person, nor can love and joy be taken away by another. Love’s abode is every heart.

    ….It is because of our inner love that we can love another. This love is not given to us by anyone, nor can it be taken away. It is always in our heart. What we gain and lose is our awareness and connection to this love – we never lose the love itself. It can’t be diminished or harmed. It is a power greater than any other…the love we are seeking is inside us. The more we experience the wellspring of love within us, the more we can recognize and delight in it everywhere. We are our own beloved and begin to love others and the world as our own Self.”

    Through both sublime and painful experience, love leads us to itself, brings us closer to the truth of loving….Kahlil Gibran wrote:

    “For even as love crowns you so shall he crucify you. Even as he is for your growth, so is he for your pruning. Even as he ascends to your height and caresses your tenderest branches that quiver in the sun, so shall he descend to your roots and shake them clinging in the earth.”

    Love changes us, giving and taking away, at times stripping us of everything so we learn to find it inside, to know our inner strength” – Inner Marriage – Ani Tuzman

    And from another source: “I believe that at a profound spiritual level, we are meant to have our hearts broken wide open, so that we can love more, so that we can know compassion, and experience unconditional love. Compassion is where our heart pain is meant to lead us.”

    One other thing I would like to add to your meditation list is Transcendental Meditation, known as TM. It has helped me tremendously, and it was during a meditation right after our breakup, that I first had a breakthrough of experiencing such peace and self-sufficient Bliss of mySelf. The following is part of an email that I sent my ex, right after I experienced this breakthrough in meditation:

    “I have been experiencing a breakthrough that I need to share with you.

    It is a realization that the Love I have for you is so great, so real, so profound, so close, so intimate to my very Being, the pulse of my breath and heart, that I cannot put a condition upon it, I cannot refuse it, I cannot lose it.

    It is Unconditional Love for you that is Invincible. Whatever happens between us, it doesn’t matter, I will always Love you Unconditionally.

    This had come to me first as a glimpse, but now it has become solid, Invincible.”

    Thank you for sharing :)

  21. Thanx for all the inspiration from everyone on this. I was ingaged and a month before the wedding my x bobby flipped out and dumped me, i have been so hurt and struggeling.. i still am not over it.. i cry every nite till my pilllow is soaked.. i hate everything i used to love.. i dont like to go out.. i hate myself.. i blame myself…iv never in my life felt this much hurt..its so painful and its been monthes.. we broke up in june.. he hurt me so bad…i have no self-esteem anymore.. i feel worse then i have ever felt..

  22. It seems like i have to go through HELL to get past this…theres no way of getting around it.. i have to face the pain and i dont want to…im not sure how..

  23. lindsay

    This is honestly the only thing that eased the anxiety and extreme heartache I have been feeling since a difficult breakup a week ago. Printed this out to reread when I feel overwhelmed. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

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