How To Maneuver Through Your Breakup
How To Maneuver Through Your Breakup
How To Maneuver Through Your Breakup
By Martah Bodyfelt
But like all of these emotions we are dealing with, there are mindful
strategies that you can use to help you start feeling better, even when you
think you cannot be consoled. Let’s take a look!
Being alone does not mean being lonely.
When we are by ourselves after divorce or a breakup, we make a false
correlation in our minds. We think that being alone is negative and bad for
us. We can’t stand the silence, we feel weird sleeping in a bed alone, and
we are uneasy saying “I” instead of “we.‘’
But why is being alone a bad thing?
It’s not.
Being by yourself means you can now breathe and look out for yourself for
a change. You are now given the opportunity to heal and start over on your
terms—things that would be impossible to do if you were still with someone
who wasn’t giving you the love and respect you deserve.
And what we seem to forget is that even when we are with someone in an
unhealthy relationship, we can still be lonely. Do you remember all the
times when you felt the sadness and silence when you were living in the
same house with someone who was no longer healthy for you?
As counterintuitive as it sounds, being in a house with a partner in a
marriage that is no longer healthy and still feeling alone is much more
damaging than being by yourself in a house and having the space to heal
on your own terms.
See the difference?