Finally found the man I thought I would marry, but the breakup came out of nowhere and I’m struggling to cope. What are the ways you’ve dealt with heartbreak in the past?

    • Tyfud@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      This is the only real answer here.

      Every other answer is in some way just making your perception of time accelerate.

      But the only way to process emotional loss, of a close loved one; is with time. That’s just the way our brains are wired. We couldn’t survive as a species if we didn’t get numb to pain and trauma in the past.

    • Roldyclark@literature.cafe
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      3 months ago

      Time with no contact. Any contact with the person and you are reopening the wound. Unfollow, block, they don’t exist.

    • Pilferjinx@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Yes, time. But what do you do while the memories fade and replaced with? Friends, family, work, hobbies. I picked up a guitar after a devastating break-up that ate a lot of that time needed.

      • Jocker@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        Yeah, the trick is to get really engaged into something that you don’t have time to think about it.

  • radicalautonomy@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Do cool shit, and be awesome. Living well is the best way to get over the life you you wanted but will never be. The one constant in your entire life is you, so the relationship you have with yourself is the most important relationship you’ll ever have.

    So take a solo road trip. See that movie in the theater that you heard was great. Treat yourself to a nice dinner at that fusion place you were wanting to check out. Read and learn about the world. Take a class in that language you wanted to learn. Bake yourself fancy treats. Take on a new hobby. Make art.

    To be the kind of person others will find awesome, you have to first become that person; in so doing, the pain of losing that ideal life you are mourning will slowly fade. It will never vanish completely, but over time the pain will become minimal, like rediscovering a tiny paper cut on your finger that you’d forgotten about.

  • weker01@feddit.de
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    3 months ago

    Treating it like being sick (like a cold) helps me. That way I justify taking it slow. It’s something that will pass and it’s totally normal to feel really bad. It will probably be better soon but I need a lot of rest/self-care.

  • XTL@sopuli.xyz
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    3 months ago

    Both my own “method” and a suggestion if I can cut it down to essentials:

    Watch yourself closely. Don’t fall into more traps. There’s a lot of load already and you’re not at your best. So don’t make it worse. No drugs, alcohol, bad relationships, risks, incel or other insanity etc. Keep a careful and steady life and focus on healing and getting back on your feet as they say. Deal with things as they come. Work on yourself. Do things you care about. Avoid stress and especially anger and hate as much as possible.

    When you’re feeling stronger again, you might know if and what you want to get into.

  • I'm back on my BS 🤪@lemmy.autism.place
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    3 months ago

    Ugh, heartache is literally painful. I’m sorry you are going through that.

    For me, getting iver someone has been a multi-pronged approach.

    1. Accept that I’m going to feel grief for a while…at least a few months. That’s okay and normal. Don’t fight it, don’t get mad at it. Just notice it and ride it out. Your brain has to severe the neural networks that were dedicated to him, while rebuilding new ones. This is a process that takes a while.

    2. Start connecting with friends that are healthy. They can be a nice source of validation, connection, and support.

    3. Work on a new project to have a focus. This can help in those moments where I’m sitting around ruminating with nothing to do or no desire to do anything. Even if I’m ruminating while doing the project, at least I’ll something to show for it when it’s over.

    4. Start a new hobby to define myself apart from the relationship. I’m going to be a new person.

    5. When ready, start throwing out all of their stuff. I even get rid of gifts. If it reminds me of then when I look at it, it’s gone.

    Things will get easier as you stop thinking about them slowly over the next dew weeks to months. Eventually, they become someone that you used to know with no real meaning other than the lessons you learned from that experience.

  • Not gonna sugarcoat it – this will suck for a long time. For me it was friends, hookups and time that helped.

    Friends let me forget for the time we hung out but also listened and just hugged me when I cried.

    Hookups (and I realise this sounds vapid as shit) made me feel like I am still wanted and attractive.

    Time made the thought of them sting less.

    This will smost likely stick with you, but it’s going to be okay. It’s not going to hurt this badly forever. You will think of it less and less frequently. But you will have that scar. And that’s okay, I think.

    • PlasticExistence@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Having sex with a new partner allows your brain to decouple from someone else. The new neural connections you form with the new partner are literally therapeutic.

      I have found it to be the single best way to start moving on from an ended relationship.

  • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Time is unfortunately the best medicine. Just take it one day at a time. Don’t stay in contact with them. Reach out to your friends and try to fill your time spending time with them.

    Main thing is to keep yourself distracted. The ruminating will come, but right now you need to heal. I wasn’t able to clearly reflect on my ex and our relationship for easily over a year or so later.

  • Eggyhead@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I overcame one of my hardest by doing more for myself, by myself, than I would have with her around. I gave up a lot to be with her, and after the break up, I decided to embrace the circumstances and strive for success despite her. I did it to prove that my life would have ended up worse with her than it turned out to be without her.

  • danhab99@programming.dev
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    3 months ago

    Tryna deal with it right now, going back to the bar where I met my ex

    Will update in like 2 hrs

    Edit: litterally forgot. Didn’t see him, it was lame anyways

  • theredknight@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    There’s a set of questions an author named Byron Katie wrote about for managing limiting beliefs. First you have to isolate the belief that’s causing you pain. Then you ask the following:

    1 - Is this belief true?

    2 - Can I absolutely know this belief is true?

    If you are still saying yes to these you’re not ready for 3 and 4.

    3 - How do you feel when you believe this? Be sure to go into this really well. I find the more you put into this step the better the results at the last question. So where in your body does the feeling live? What temperature is it? How intense is it out of 10? Is it sharp or dull? Is it dry or wet? Does it change is it constant? Maybe even what color is it? You want to really witness and give credence to this feeling here.

    And finally

    4 - Who would you be or what would you be doing if you didn’t have this belief?

    I can guess what answers you’d give here but you know so I don’t want to muddy that for you.

    Edit: formatting

  • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    The healthiest way I’ve ever dealt with heartbreak and grief is by putting physical energy into something. Building stone walkway, planting a garden, working out, etc.

    Being able to focus on something else will help you from becoming physically and emotionally overwhelmed. Peace, understanding and equilibrium will come with time, the immediate aftermath is the time to move and do something so you don’t get consumed by your feelings.

    It’s always okay to cry. People I never thought would understand have supported me.