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Seven Steps To Heal A Broken
HeartIt happens to most of
us at least once during our lives: What was so wonderful at
the start of the relationship, that amazing feeling of
being in love, suddenly comes to an end. Our loved one
leaves us, one way or another, and we are left with the
pieces, feeling broken hearted. Humans bond deeply to one
another and when these deep attachments are broken we
suffer. We feel bereft, betrayed, depressed, hopeless,
furious, deeply saddened, anxious for the future and in
pain. Although the following steps are not a miracle cure,
letting them guide you may help you to recover quicker from
a broken heart. If you need more help then this article can
offer seek us out at Sex and Relationships (see resource
box) for more advice on sex, sexuality and
relationships.
Step 1: Acknowledge that it's over. However
things ended between you and your lover, you need to
acknowledge that for now at least, things are over between you.
You may not want to give up hope yet and hold on to the thought
that your lover will return one day, but you need to accept
that for now, right now, you will need to be facing life
without him or her, day by day. Acceptance of loss is one of
the first steps to grieving, any grieving. Allow your feelings
to be whatever they are - loss, rage, hurt, sadness, or
nothingness - but keep your thinking clear. He or she has gone
and you need to live your life, one day at a time, without
them. If you still have hopes that you can win them back this
still applies to you. Accept how things are for now and get
back on your feet. Being a clingy emotional mess won't bring
your lover back.
Step 2: Acknowledge your emotions. A broken
heart is painful. We often experience a whole range of
unpleasant emotions from grief, betrayal, hurt, disappointment,
anger, disbelief, guilt, yearning, anxiety, jealousy, rage,
sadness, hopelessness and despair. Some people go numb and
listless rather than very emotional and feel deadened and
lifeless. Whatever you are feeling, let yourself feel it. See
whether you can name what you are feeling at different points
in time and explain to yourself why you are feeling that way.
Psychologists call this skill 'mentalising' and it's about
creating meaning out of the storm inside. Ultimately that will
help you process the feelings and move on. You could also write
down your thoughts and feelings in a journal or find some other
means of expressing what is going on for you. Talk to people
how you are doing, such as your friends and amily, and if there
isn't anybody in your life with whom you can do this you could
find a self-help group on the internet to engage with. Be
patient with yourself and give yourself time. Look after
yourself to the best of your ability by eating well, exercising
and being around other people. If you feel loads of emotion,
make sure you release the emotional energy by crying, sobbing,
shouting and movement (even just going on a long walk can help
here). If you tend to feel nothing, make some time and space to
grieve and don't feel scared about the feelings. In the end
they are just feelings, just electrochemical energy in your
brain.
Step 3: Reflect on who you are now. Losing a
loved one doesn't just mean the most important person in your
life is gone, but also that you are not the same person
yourself anymore. Losing a loved one affects our dreams, our
identity and our hopes for the future. We become the person who
has been left behind, or who had to leave, who was betrayed,
abandoned or who felt he or she couldn't stay. The impact of
the ending deeply affects our self-image, our identity, how we
see others and what we think is possible in life for us. Make
sure you are honest and clear in your thinking. Yes, this
relationship has ended, but that doesn't mean all relationships
will end or that you will never find someone else. That's
catastrophising. Listen to your friends, even if you don't
believe yet what they are saying, e.g. that you are an
attractive person and that your lover has made a big mistake.
In the end you need to make sure you can integrate what has
happened into your self-image. Keep your options open for the
future by keeping your own image of yourself as a good,
attractive and worthwhile person, other people as mostly
trustworthy and good to be with, and the world as an exciting
and fairly predictable place in which stuff on occasion can go
wrong. This puts you in a position where you see yourself,
other people and the world as generally OK, rather than one or
more of them as intrinsically bad. You might also find that as
you adjust your self-image and your expectations for the
future, losing the dream of what you thought you had with your
lover is just as painful, if not moreso, than losing him or
her.
And while you reflect, forgive yourself. Some time we don't let
go of relationships, because we keep thinking it was our fault
that it ended. If we had only done more, or talked more, or not
done this thing or that thing, then maybe we'd still be
together with the loved one and all would be bliss. No. Guilt
is a horrible emotion which keeps people locked into negative
thinking. In the end what you did is what you did. Are there
any lessons you need to learn from what has happened? Would you
really choose to do things differently next time? Would that be
possible or sensible? Most people take too much responsibility
for what has happened even if it was pretty much out of their
control, or really their lover's responsibility. If you find
you still have regrets then change so that next time round you
will be better equipped to deal with your relationship. Guilt
and regret with no action are useless and pretty
self-indulgent. If you are struggling with being in a different
place then get some help through friends, books or
psychotherapy. In the end do let it go, forgive yourself.
Whatever you did wrong you can do better next time round. We
all make mistakes and slowly grow through learning from
them.
Step 4: Live your life, day by day. If you are
struggling to keep going then the old Alcoholics Anonymous
tactic is best: deal with life a day at a time. Don't get lost
in the bigger picture or get scared by all the long and
possibly lonely days ahead. Just deal with this one day, today,
to your best abilities. In the end we can only live each day in
the here and now. It often helps people to really focus their
attention on what is around them right now and what their task
is right now. If you are doing the washing, then just
concentrate on doing the washing. Be conscious of who and what
is there with you, the colours, the textures, the sounds.
Staying with your sensations will slow down your internal
process. It will ground you and anchor you in the now. It will
help you survive bad times because there is proof every single
minute that you are surviving: just stamp your feet and feel
the ground beneath you if you don't believe me. This is also a
good technique to slow life down and be present with yourself
and your feelings. There is a good chance that as you truly
attend to what is around you right here, right now you
reconnect again with the miracle that is being alive, no matter
how painful it may feel at any given point.
Step 5: Remember back to your life before your
lover. It might seem like a mystery to you how you managed
without your lover before you met them, but it's obvious that
you did. You did live your own life without even knowing he or
she existed at some point. You did what you did, had dreams and
hopes, plans for the future, possibly friends, family, a job
and many more things in your life that had nothing to do with
your lover. It is important that you find who you are again on
your own without your lover so you feel OK about being separate
from him or her and being a person in your own right. Going
back to your older self, your dreams, hopes and desires, can
help you separate psychologically.
Step 6: Work at having a good life. Building
up a good life takes effort. The end of a relationship might
also mean the end of going to specific places you enjoyed
visiting together and letting go of friends or activities you
shared. Although this can be a very painful process in itself,
you can still rebuild your life to a richer level than it was
before. Of course a new life won't just appear out of nowhere:
you will have to put effort and time into creating it. You may
also need to take risks and put yourself into new situations to
make new friends. It's important that you move out of your old
habits and comfort zone. If you were to move to a new city or a
new country you'd also have to put in effort to create a place
for yourself. You'd have to become familiar with a new
neighbourhood, you'd have to find new friends and invest in new
activities. Losing your lover might also create a window of
opportunity for you: you could finally start that course or
activity you always wanted to do but never had time for, or
take that holiday, or visit with friends that your lover wasn't
keen on. This is your time again, you are single and you don't
need to live with compromises any more.
Step 7: Have some hope. One of the persisting
human myths is the idea that there is only one single person
who is right for us and who we need to be with for the rest of
our lives. This idea first originated in Greek philosophy and
is about 3000 years old. Humanity has moved on a bit since then
and we have much more opportunities to meet new partners and
fall in love again than people had in ancient Greece. Imagine
all the amazing lovers you might have missed out on if your
relationship had continued until the end of your life! Most
people meet many others at different times in their lives with
whom they could potentially be very happy. Of course each
relationship is unique, but while you could be happy with
person A, living in city X, having one type of life, you could
also be very happy with person B, living in city Y, having a
very different life doing different things. Even though your
life won't be the same with a different person it's very likely
that you can be very happy in a different way with somebody
else. Who knows, maybe another amazing and lovely person is
just around the next corner!
Anna Phillips
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broken links to: info@endlessrelationships.com
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