My 2 year relationship just came to a sudden and messy end a few weeks ago, leaving me to "move on".
Cue friends and family with well-meaning, but ultimately useless, advice, opinions and suggestions.
I took very little of it on board, because I felt none of it applied to me. I KNEW what should work for me, so I tried to stick to that. Plus, none of them were in, or had even BEEN in, a situation like I was in, thus meaning they only had an outsider's view on things. As much as I appreciate the benefit of a well-rounded perspective - inside and out - I still think the ones inside know best.
So c'mon... How do YOU deal with breakups or rejections?
Dan x
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I go out and bike....i go as far away as i can....i make it as hard as i can.....and i listent to loud music as i do it. When i come home at the end of the day i forget it and just go back to trying to be the way i was before it all went bad. But everyone does things diff... but i have had a lot of practice forgetting things that are bad......
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Its the toughest thing i have ever gone through. I started my journey 2 months ago by seeing 3 different counselors. i wanted to work on all my issues and recreate a new life. Started exercising and walking for stress relief. Started going to the gym. Lost 25 lbs in 8 weeks. I do feel like a new person ready for the most awesome person. I've been on one date so far. Really liked the person but not sure how he feels since he hasn't really said much. Think I put to much of my heart out for sure. Still the process is not easy especially the 1st 6 weeks for me. Worst of my life but my friends and family were my support.
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There is always a reason for a break up and I think that how you react to it all depends on what the cause of the break up was. I agree with Marshlander to some extent. Time does not exactly heal but it does help you to cope. I would not say that breaking up is like grieving, not for me. Breaking up has advantages: you lose the problems of the old relationship, you can start anew, you have your freedom – this is not just negative. I can’t see any advantages when a friend dies. I feel sad about losing a BF but he can become a friend, possibly, and you might even get back together: I have had both of these experiences. Dead friends and dead boyfriends don’t come back, there is no good reason to die: that is what grieving is about. If you want to indulge feeling miserable for a while, why not. But don’t call it grieving and don’t fool yourself that grieving does you any good. In this instance I don’t buy into all that psycho-therapeutic crap. I think it is more helpful to look reality in the face and weigh up your options. Friends can help you do this. In the end you do this anyway.
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The short answer is you don't. Well, not by trying, anyway. You only know you're over it when you don't enough not to think about it and that can take a long long time. Best thing to do is distract yourself with something else, shiny or otherwise.
Not that i ever follow my own advice, i always take every last detail to heart and just store it up. As a result i'm beitterly cynical and very easily hurt.
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