|
You’ve
been dumped.
Short of throwing yourself off the nearest bridge, you resort to
hiding in your bed for days, comforted only by the fact that at
least you have a year’s supply of Moonpies by your bedside and
your answering machine is on the alert in the hopeful case that your
once loved one might call and beg to have you back.
Only, that call never comes and that box of Moonpies? It’s a
constant reminder that the emptier it gets, the more bloated you
are. But, you don’t care. You wish the earth would open you up and
swallow you whole. Sound familiar?
Cases like this happens everyday.
Falling in love has its risks and you’ve just experienced it first
hand. You want your life back but don’t know the first thing about
how to get out of that black cloud that hovers over you, or even
finding the energy to do it.
What do you do?
Acknowledge the fact that you have to go through three different
stages during a break-up. Once you realize this, you can chart your
progress and see that it’s only a short trip to recovery.
STAGE ONE – The Hurting Stage
Symptoms: This is the hurting stage. It’s where you are now.
It’s your heart’s way of telling you that you have just
experienced the worse kind of hurt there is. You cry, you’re
depressed and you have no idea how you are going to live without
him/her. You leave messages on his answering machine and text him to
the point where you are becoming psycho. You drive by his house in
the wee early morning to see if his vehicle is still at his house or
he is – gulp – off with another woman. You drive by where he
works and contemplate going in and crying your eyeballs out to let
him know this has hurt you beyond repair. You either eat tremendous
amounts of comfort food or you don’t eat at all and your health
suffers. You cry on your co-worker’s shoulders and hope they can
help you get out of this mess. You are, essentially, gone and a
hopeless mess.
How to cope: Now more than ever would be a good time to hang out
with friends and watch a few comedies, even though you just aren’t
up to it. Rekindle family relationships. Talk to older family
members about how they met their husbands/wives and how they coped
with troubled relationships. Gain insight from them. Try to remember
things that brought you happiness. Was it a bike ride through the
countryside? A trip to the beach even in the cold of winter just to
watch the waves lap against the shore? How about that closet that is
in desperate need of rearranging/cleaning/sorting? Now is the time
to focus on you.
You have to acknowledge that this is the normal process of grieving
a relationship that has died. Nothing can really help at this point
because as with the death of a loved one, this is the same feeling.
It’s a natural process. Give it time and remember that soon you
will enter the second stage.
THE SECOND STAGE – The Getting Even Stage
Symptoms: Remarkably, when your heart begins to heal, your hurt
turns to anger. What nerve he/she had to dump me! You vow you’re
going to make his/her life a living hell as long as you are alive.
You start dating. Only, these are rebounds. Rebound relationships
most times happen in this second stage. Some last, but most do not
for the simple reason that you will do anything in your power to
inflict pain on the one who did it to you.
How to cope: Once you get to this stage, you’re halfway there.
Even though anger is not a healthy feeling to have, it is a normal
reaction after you’ve gotten over the feeling of hurt. However,
instead of going postal and risk the chance you may do something
you’ll regret later, take his/her picture and throw darts at it.
Burn love letters. Finalize the break-up by getting rid of
everything you have of his/hers. But keep in mind that years from
now, you’ll wish you did have some kind of remembrance of the
relationship because it’s all part of your life history. Whatever
you do keep, look at it as a symbol of how well you did cope and can
look at the relationship as a learning experience.
STAGE THREE – The Not Giving a Damn Stage
Symptoms: You wake up one morning and ask yourself what you saw in
this person in the first place. Nothing he/she does now bothers you.
In fact, you are happy he/she has left because you are ready now to
form new relationships, new loves.
How to Cope: You are there. When you hit this last stage, you have
finally come to the point where you can go on from here and form new
relationships. Relationships that aren’t rebound. When you finally
get to this last stage, you will become the person you once were –
full of happiness, hope and a quest for life.
Once you realize the three stages of a break-up, it helps you to
understand the process that is involved. Just as it took time to
fall in love, you don’t just fall out of it overnight.
It helps to remember that there will always be a tomorrow and that
there is always that second chance to find that special person who
is meant to share his/her life with you. Life is full of second,
third and even more chances. So, pick up your heart, go through the
process to heal and chalk it all up to experience. You’ll be glad
you did. In the words of an unknown author, “Never forget what is
worth remembering or remember what is best forgotten.”
© Dorothy Thompson
About Dorothy Thompson
Author and soul mate expert Dorothy Thompson is one of the
nation’s leading authorities on soul mates. Her book
"Romancing the Soul" and ebook "How to Find and Keep
Your Soul Mate" are one of the most comprehensive guides to
explaining what soul mates are really all about. Dorothy’s
relationship columns have appeared in publications in the U.S. and
abroad and has been quoted in such books as “Mean Girls Grown Up:
Adult Women Who Are Still Queen Bees, Middle Bees, and
Afraid-to-Bees” by Cheryl Dellasega. She is a popular radio media
guest, appearing on such shows as Lifetime Radio, Single Talk (World
Talk Radio), Around2It, and Cuzin Eddie Show with Penny Sansevieri
and 850 KOA-AM (Clear Channel Radio with listeners in 38 states,
Canada and Mexico) and other media outlets.
To receive a FREE special report on “Ten Tips in Identifying Your
Soul Mate,” or to learn more about Dorothy's columns or books,
visit her personal website at www.dorothythompson.net
or her soul mate advice website at www.soulmateadvice.homestead.com
. You can also visit her blog at www.soulmateadvice.blogspot.com
|