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Letting Go and Starting Over When It’s Hard

“Letting go isn’t the end of the world; it’s the beginning of a new life.” ~Unknown

This June marked 12 years since I got divorced and moved 1,000 miles away from my hometown. It’s an anniversary that I usually remember, but not one that I tend to dwell on—until this year.

This year, the memories of the demise of my first marriage were hovering at the forefront of my mind.

Maybe it’s because I saw a friend who is roughly the same age I was, going through similar hard decisions. Maybe it’s because my spouse and I were struggling to make a hard decision about an external relationship that isn’t going well.

Whatever the reason, it caused me to reflect on what I’ve learned in the last decade or so.

My ex-husband and I met in high school, when we were seventeen, and had been dating for seven years when we got engaged.

I think on some level we knew, even then, that we shouldn’t get married, that things weren’t that great, but people were starting to ask, and everyone (including us) assumed that we would get married. So we did what we were “supposed” to do.

Things were okay for a little while, and outwardly we seemed happy. Inside, however, things were crumbling. We kept trying to put the pieces back together, but every time we tried to hold tighter, things dissolved into another argument, each cutting more deeply than the last.

By the end we barely spoke, each retreating to separate rooms for the evening. Eventually, I got up the nerve to call it quits. He agreed, and for the most part, the split was amicable.

Honestly, I think my decision to move away was harder for him to accept than the divorce. Maybe because it made things seem more final.

So here I am, twelve years later, older and hopefully wiser, looking back at that time in my life and thinking…

Was leaving painful? 

Absolutely.

It was horribly hard to leave what I had known for the previous ten years: a spouse, a home, a friendship. How do you walk away from the one who was your closest connection for that long?

Was creating a new life scary?

Terrifying.

I moved 1,000 miles from almost everyone and everything I had ever known. Starting over is hard, really hard—especially when you feel like you failed at holding together something as important as a marriage.

Would I do it again?

You bet.

Staying in that relationship was killing us both, because we were growing and changing, but not in the same way—not on the same path. My life now is so vastly different from what I thought it was supposed to be back then. I could never in a million years have planned for my life to be the way it is today.

So what have I learned?

I need room to grow.

In that relationship, I didn’t have space and freedom to explore myself—my thoughts, feelings, and beliefs—and it was stifling. When I had a new idea, I usually received harsh criticism and derision.

Understanding ourselves, and what we stand for, is vitally important to our happiness, and we need room to figure those things out.

Relationships need to be elastic. When we stretch past the boundaries of what we know in the relationship, those boundaries either expand to hold the new ideas or they crack and fall apart.

I was stretching, and the relationship was trying to restrict me. Eventually it couldn’t take the strain.

I had to let go.

Letting go of that relationship meant letting go of people’s expectations about what my life should be (including my own). It was so hard, and it felt like everything I knew was falling apart—like the world was crumbling around me.

But there is so much possibility without those expectations. Starting over gave me an opportunity to craft a new life for myself in ways I had never imagined.

Yes, it was hard. Yes, it was scary. I hope I never have to start from scratch again, but now I know that I have a choice.

We all have choices. We can choose our direction, every single day.

Letting go sometimes means letting it all go.

We talked about remaining friends (and I know some of my friends have made that work), but honestly, we couldn’t remain friends and still move on. I left it all behind and started fresh.

When you rebuild a house that has been damaged by a fire or other disaster, you don’t just start building on top of what is there. If you do, it will quickly fall apart again. First, you have to remove the debris and get back down to the most solid foundation.

The solid foundation in my life is me. Always. I had to let go so that I could find myself.

These lessons are relevant for any relationship.

Whether it’s a romance, a friendship, or even family relationship, sometimes you have to take a hard look and make a hard choice. Even if the choice is to stick it out and not let go.

When you take the time to really know yourself—know your values, know your beliefs, know what is important to you—you can make the right choice, even when it’s hard.

Photo by sheeron

Avatar of Tina Robbins

About Tina Robbins

Tina Robbins is a transformational energy coach who helps you cut through the fog of overwhelm & scatter to map out a path to confidence & strength. She offers 1:1 and group coaching coaching, as well as online programs. You can find her at www.openroadscoaching.com, on Facebook or on Twitter.

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  • Karina

    This post really hits me. I was in a relationship with someone for 3 years and I knew we weren’t supposed to be together but love blinded me. We were complete opposites but yet we both risked being together for so long, even planning marriage after college. It’s been 6 months since he dumped me and even though I know what a horrible person he is I can’t help but still think about him. It’s been so hard for me to move on but your post gives me hope. Thank you,

  • robert

    Dc, I came across your comment and felt compelled to respond. I am in the midst of going through the discovery phase ( of my wife’s infidelities). We have been married for 16 years, and have three beautiful children together. Over the last month, she admitted to three affairs in the last two years. One of those lasting 10 months. This is one of the hardest decisions I’ve ever faced, having three kids between us makes it even extra difficult. I guess the moving on part is the hardest thing to grasp. I know your post is three months old, but if you can share with me anything that has helped you, please do…

  • Tiny Warrior

    As the adult former child of two married parents who fought constantly, I want to remind you kids are more resilient than you may think and can weather the storm of a separation or divorce. When you are a child in that situation, the worst thing you can hear a parent say is, “We’re staying together for you.”

    My mother would say this through broken teeth and blood from my father’s punches. My father would say this drunk and miserable with himself. I for one prayed steadily they would divorce, and they never did. I grew up envying the kids whose parents divorced because they didn’t get woken up by crashes, screams and gunshots every Saturday night. Maybe mommy or daddy was gone except every other weekend, but by golly those children slept in a quiet, peaceful home.

    My siblings and I now view romantic relationships with extreme suspicion. The baby, my sister, is happily married. She was born after the most vicious marital warfare period between my parents. Elder brother and I grew up seeing it ALL.

    Neither of us is married. He is 50. I am 44. I will never marry because of what I saw.

    If a marriage doesn’t work, stop using the children as your excuse. Staying together and forcing them to watch your misery is a form of child abuse.

    THINK ABOUT THAT TONIGHT.

  • Cams

    When you rebuild a house that has been damaged by a fire or other disaster, you don’t just start building on top of what is there. If you do, it will quickly fall apart again. First, you have to remove the debris and get back down to the most solid foundation.

    The solid foundation in my life is me. Always. I had to let go so that I could find myself.
    This is beautiful! I have been on here all day reading articles to help me deal with a recent break up and this is the one quote that hit me the hardest. It has helped me so much. Thank you :)

  • kapi

    i really needed to read this. many thanks from the bottom of my heart. i know and believe that i will get there.xxx

  • Anonymous

    My situation was different and I just picked up and am rebuilding. My marriage lasted about 14 years after 6 months of dating. We divorced started in 2002 and ended in 2005. We got back together after 2 years in 2005, shacking up until his very unexpected death last February. The youngest of our 3 children is graduating in a month, and I was offered a job 14000 miles away. Grandma is house sitting with her until she grads. I have moved to a location I know nothing about, no relatives (closest is 2 hours away for a new position that is so so. But I so badly needed to move., Memories, good and bad, were all over. Plus afte rmy youngest grads, moving was my plan. I just got a jump on the dates with the unexpected job offer.
    Now 5 months afte rmy move, I am finding my, quit smoking, eating right, trying to run a little bit and starting to find the “Happy”. We all deal differently and same in some ways, but it’s best we deal.
    Great post!!