| Breaking
Up Is Hard To Do
by: Paul and Layne Cutright
Breaking
Up, Separation, and Divorce Can Be Devastating But
May Also Provide the Opportunity for Self-Examination and
a New Beginning.
There
is nothing easy about ending a love relationship. Breaking
up is seldom the ideal resolution to problems within relationships,
but all too often is the outcome, despite our best efforts
to prevent it. Over the past two or three decades, about
half of all marriages have ended in divorce, and the statistics
for cohabitation (or living together) are higher than this.
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Unfortunately, many of your friends were those who knew
you as a couple and they may have to choose between you.
Those who try to stay neutral may find it difficult. Some
may feel that your breakup somehow threatens their own relationships,
and some friends may now find it difficult to relate to
you as a single person. Not only that, but you may find
it difficult to trust others during a breakup. Getting out,
feeling free, trusting wisely, and opening up to others
becomes a major goal of healthy adjustment.
Grieving
It is
normal, and indeed necessary, to experience a period of
grieving over the end of the relationship. |
| The
person who was once your best friend and your companion
for life, the one who knew you better than anyone else,
has now in some ways become your enemy.
You
cannot believe that this has happened. How could that love
have been destroyed? The breakup of a relationship is one
of lifes most emotionally painful experiences. The
depth of pain depends on many factors how sensitive
you are to the meaning of your life experiences, how much
you have idealized the relationship, and how much you depended
on your partner to make your life worthwhile.
A broken
relationship shatters much that we have known and dreamed
about. Our relationships, especially intimate relationships,
help us define who we are. Our values, our views of the
world, and how we define our most intimate feelings are
all embodied within our love relationships. When our relationship
comes to an end, our lives enter a chaotic period for which
we may be unprepared. We suddenly find ourselves dealing
with a host of emotions and thoughts grieving, despair,
anger, revenge and retaliation, hoping for a miracle, negotiating,
feeling out of control, hoping for happiness again and not
knowing how to get there, fear, and loneliness and
little of it seems to make sense. (And where is your partner
when you need him or her the most?)
Most
of us have never acquired the tools to deal with a loss
of this magnitude. When we entered the relationship, we
put our energies into building a life with our partner.
We put little effort into learning to be alone again. A
breakup forces us to jump into an overwhelming, and often
dreaded, world of new experiences.
It is
comforting to learn that this time of craziness will come
to a close. The sun will shine again. The pain of a breakup,
if it is approached constructively, can propel people to
confront personal issues and to discover who they are at
this stage of life. Many people look back on the time following
their breakup as the best time in their lives. It may be
painful, but it is also a time when a person can feel fully
alive and impelled to look within to determine their strengths,
abilities, and challenges.
The
ending of a love relationship follows a predictable set
of experiences. It is helpful to recognize the feelings
associated with each stage of a breakup and to know that
these feelings are normal and expected. If you have difficulty
in handling the negative feelings that accompany the phases
of the process, it will probably be a challenge to cope
effectively as you move toward the completion of the breakup.
If you accept your painful feelings and explore why things
are difficult, you become better able, as a more integrated
person, to see your way to a happier resolution.
Lets
look at a few of the predictable stages commonly experienced
by those in the process of a breakup.
Denial
Denying
the truth of the breakup actually helps us to postpone the
pain, so denial certainly has a place in the process, at
least initially. A problem occurs when we experience so
much denial that we are unable to come to terms with the
reality of the task before us. There comes a day when this
is not happening to me is no longer an effective way
of coping. Ending the denial stage involves a major shift
in our thinking about ourselves, what our partner means
to us, and where we must go from here.
Fear
Most
people experiencing a breakup are forced to come to terms
with a number of fears. What will people say? Whom can I
trust to talk to? How can I handle my partners anger
toward me? How do I deal with my own anger? Am I a complete
failure? How can I be a single parent? What about money?
Can I do the banking and buy groceries and pay bills and
fix the car? Can I handle my loneliness? Am I completely
unlovable? Will I ever love anyone else again? Do I have
the energy for this much change? When we are dominated by
our fears and feel unable to do anything about them, we
increase the likelihood that these will be the very areas
where we experience trouble. The best way to handle fear
is to confront it head on, with awareness, planning, and
support and this takes courage.
Loneliness
The
loneliness a person experiences at the time of a breakup
may feel overwhelming. The finality of ending the relationship,
uncertainty about the future, as well as the knowledge that
your partner will no longer be there to comfort you or to
spend time with you, all contribute to an empty feeling
that seems as if it will not go away. While you were in
the relationship, you defined yourself as being partnered
and you felt that you always had someone there to share
your experiences. And now you dont. The clue to dealing
with this is to change loneliness to aloneness. Loneliness
suggests a longing to be with another person. Aloneness
can be a time to see who you are you have the opportunity
to explore your independence and challenge yourself to do
things on your own. It can be a valuable time of self-exploration
and self-enhancement. Aloneness might not last long, or
at least not long enough, so it can be seen as a valuable
opportunity.
Friendship
The
breakup is a true test of just who your real friends are.
It is important to draw on the emotional support of friends
during this time. |
You
may feel depressed for some time and experience changes in
your energy levels, as well as your sleeping and appetite
patterns. You may dwell on negative thoughts for a period
of time and find it difficult to find pleasure in everyday
events.If your negative thinking turns into self-destructive
thoughts, you should find a professional therapist who can
help you. As unpleasant as this period of grieving may feel,
comfort yourself with the knowledge that this is most likely
a temporary phase and it is how you are saying goodbye so
that you can move on to a healthier and happier future.
Anger
People
ending their relationships usually say that they never knew
they could have so much anger. The rage seems overwhelming
at times. Think about it you have just lost one of
the most important things in your life and your partner
may seem like your enemy. You have a lot to be angry about.
Use this opportunity to look within explore your
anger and find out how it helps and hurts you. One rule:
don't engage in any behavior you will feel sorry about later
on! Because it may be difficult to contain your anger at
this time, your partner is not the appropriate target for
your anger. Instead, process your anger by talking about
it with a trusted friend or therapist. Anger is helpful
in the sense that it helps us end the loyalty and trust
we used to feel for our partner, and this allows us to move
on.
Think
of the ending of your relationship as a journey, which you
take one step at a time. Some of these steps are challenging.
Not only do we have to confront all of the stages listed
above, but we must also deal with making the final break
emotionally, understand what really went wrong, learn to
feel comfortable with ourselves again, see ourselves as
single people, make new friends, forge new purposes and
goals, and learn again about trust and love. As painful
as this journey may seem at first, it can lead to a life
which is better and it can be much better.
Dumpers
and Dumpees
A breakup
seems easiest for couples who decide mutually to end the
relationship. In most cases, however, as suggested by Bruce
Fisher and Robert Alberti, in their book, Rebuilding: When
Your Relationship Ends, a breakup involves a dumper, the
party who takes the initiative to end the relationship,
and a dumpee, the one who wants the relationship to continue.
Sometimes, when one analyzes the nature of the relationship,
it may be difficult to decide just who is the dumper and
the dumpee. In general, however, the dumper is the one who
says it is all over, and the dumpee is the one in shock
who begs the other not to leave. Dumpees often say they
were taken completely by surprise by their partners
announcement.
The
breakup experience is often very different for each of the
two parties. The dumper usually began preparing for the
end well before the final announcement, and the actual parting
often comes as a relief for the dumper. The primary emotion
experienced by the dumper is guilt. The dumpee, on the other
hand, is usually hit by surprise and with a great deal of
pain. The turmoil of the breakup itself is usually much
more intense for the dumpee, but it is this pain that can
motivate more personal growth. The main task of the dumpee
is to work through feelings of rejection. Both parties usually
experience a great deal of pain as their relationship comes
to an end, although the pain of guilt is different from
the pain of rejection. For a healthy adjustment it is important
to recognize which role has been assumed, dumper or dumpee,
and to work on the issues appropriate to that role.
How
Long Do I Wait Until I Get Into Another Relationship?
Expect
that it will take at least a year before things begin to
feel at all normal again. For most of us, depending on the
length and the nature of our previous relationship, it will
take two or three years. This may seem like an eternity,
but in reality this is a wonderful and precious opportunity
to find out who you are as an unattached individual. A word
of warning is in order don't expect to involve yourself
with someone else immediately! You are on the rebound. To
attach yourself prematurely in a love relationship is unfair
to you and to the other person. You must deal with important
personal issues when your previous love relationship comes
to an end. Living through the transition and exploring these
issues can be painful and falling in love again may
seem like the perfect way to end the pain. But if you attach
yourself again too quickly, before you have a chance to
explore the issues which led to your breakup and to start
to feel comfortable again as a single and independent individual,
the other person becomes a replacement object, and that
is not what a healthy relationship is about. You will probably
carry into this replacement relationship the same issues
that helped to lead to the demise of your former relationship
and similar events may very well happen again.
Your
real goal is to discover who you are and to explore what
happened. When you are at the point of being able to have
a happy and fulfilled life as a single person, then you
can choose when, or even if, you should involve yourself
in another love relationship. When you know that you have
that choice, you may be ready.
About
The Author
Paul and Layne Cutright are relationship coaches and teachers
who have been offering secrets and strategies for successful
relationships at home and in business since 1976. They are
authors of the best selling book, Youre Never Upset
for the Reason You Think Secrets and Strategies for
Resolving Any Upset Quickly and Easily. www.PaulandLayne.com
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