Home→Forums→Relationships→Struggling with Letting Go of the Hurt
- This topic has 6 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 6 years, 11 months ago by Anonymous.
-
AuthorPosts
-
December 26, 2017 at 8:02 am #183667LillyParticipant
I haven’t ever used a forum before to seek insight into an experience I am having. I often read Tiny Buddha articles and have found great comfort in them. I thought it would be good to give the forum a try.
I recently experienced a painful and difficult break up with someone I loved and cared for deeply. Our relationship ended quietly, there was no yelling or harsh words exchanged. I have accepted the end of the relationship and knowing it for what it was, I would not want to renew it. However, I am struggling with the realizations that occurred after the relationship ended.
My ex partner had lied to me a number of times in the relationship and towards the end of the relationship, completely withdrew. When problems would arise and I tried to talk to them, my partner would often ignore me or imply that the problem wasn’t worth working out. In the relationship, it didn’t occur to me that the reason they were so withdrawn could be because they had found someone else and decided the relationship wasn’t worth working on to fix. When we broke up, my ex partner quickly engaged in a relationship with someone new and the new person was someone they met when we were still together. I remember an incident where they had called when we were together and my ex partner was very uncomfortable, making up an excuse for who they were and quickly changed the subject. I didn’t question them or push the topic at the time. I found about them out by accident, the new person’s social media profile popped up in mine as they started becoming friends with people I was friends with and their profile picture was my ex and them together. Seeing it was like experiencing the initial heartbreak all over again. When we broke up, I told my ex I couldn’t be friends and that I wished them the best, I tried to leave things on as positive a note as we could. I had removed my ex from all of my social media platforms and stopped all communication after the break up, save for a last goodbye and a conversation to get my stuff back from them. The day I found out about his new partner, I realized they had blocked me from social media (I had just removed them as a friend and in a moment of weakness, I tried to take a peek at their profile). This act also hurt a lot and seemed very aggressive, considering we had no contact and I have made no attempts to contact them after I got my stuff back (I know it is silly for something like this to bother me but unfortunately it did). Throughout the relationship, I had tolerated a lot of things that I shouldn’t have in terms of how they treated me and instead of getting angry at my ex, I tried to be patient and understanding. When things ended, I didn’t try to reconnect or maintain a presence in their life. Ultimately, I have a lot of hurt feelings and a lot of self criticisms for ever trusting my ex partner in the first place.
There were many red flags during the relationship that indicated they weren’t being honest with me and their actions indicated that I was not a priority for them. My struggle with letting go of the hurt is that I hate that I fell for their lies and I feel hurt that I wasn’t worth fighting for for them. I also felt weak for wanting to work it out and try to have the relationship we did when we first got together instead of following my instincts and leaving. To add insult to injury, not only was I not worth fighting for, I was easy to replace. And to add to the cycle of emotions, it bothers me that any of this bothers me. It upsets me that any of this holds any meaning for me because I know it doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter what my ex does and it no longer impacts my life. My life is going really well without them. I have a good job and am moving towards a new promising career, I have a family who love me and I love and adore right back and I am achieving my goals for things that I have put off for a long time. I have so many positive things on the go, I don’t want them to be overshadowed by something that doesn’t matter. I guess I am having a difficult time getting over the betrayal and the hurt that still lingers. I am struggling with how to completely let this all go without letting the hurt I feel consume me. I have too many wonderful things in my life to let all of this still bother me.
Thank you for reading and I appreciate any words anyone has to offer.
December 26, 2017 at 8:48 am #183695AnonymousGuestDear Lilly:
I hope that posting here will turn out to be a positive experience for you.
You wrote: “Our relationship ended quietly, there was no yelling or harsh words…I tried to leave things on as positive a note as we could… Throughout the relationship, I had tolerated a lot of things that I shouldn’t have… and instead of getting angry at my ex, I tried to be patient and understanding”.
The fact that your relationship ended quietly, no harsh words or yelling, is a very important thing to you, I figure, because you mentioned it early in your post, in the beginning. And it makes me think that you tolerated a lot so to keep the quiet, the no harsh words, no yelling… that you tried to keep your own anger out of the relationship.
If I am correct in my observation, can you elaborate on it?
anita
December 26, 2017 at 1:08 pm #183747LillyParticipantHi Anita,
Thank you for your thoughtful response!
I think overall that is a fair assessment. I tend to not like being angry and am a more laid back person by nature, I don’t often get angry and when I do get angry, I try to be careful how I express it as to not hurt anyone else or have regrets about it later.
I didn’t necessarily keep my anger out of the relationship but I was selective about what angry feelings I shared and how I shared them, especially towards the end when the relationship was the most fragile. If I could deal with my feelings on my own, I often chose to do that instead of trying to have a conversation about it because I didn’t want to create issues or a conflict if there didn’t need to be one. My ex was difficult to talk to about uncomfortable topics. When things started to go poorly, we would have talks about it that weren’t really talks. My ex would never say what the issue was for them and usually just said they didn’t know what to do about it. They looked to me to say what was wrong and to ultimately fix it. Which I tried to do, I tried really hard to make the relationship work where both of us could be happy. I realized too late that no matter what I did, I couldn’t fix a relationship my ex didn’t want and had already moved on from.
When I did share when I was upset about something or something had made me angry, my ex didn’t want to talk about it, often ignoring me and dismissing my feelings. When I did confront their behaviour, they would just say that I know that they don’t do well with talking about things that aren’t going well and made no attempt to discuss why I was upset. The indifference hurt more than the thing that had upset me in the first place.
When reflecting back on it, I recognize the role I played in the downfall of the relationship. I didn’t communicate fully when I was unhappy out of fear of being treated with indifference. I know my communication in relationships is an area I need to improve in order to have fulfilling relationships in the future.
December 27, 2017 at 5:40 am #183831AnonymousGuestDear Lilly:
You are welcome. I read your recent post and re-read your original post.
Reads to me that you are an emotionally intelligent, sound, mature person. How refreshing it is for me to read a person being “careful how I express (anger) as to not hurt anyone else or have regrets about it later”, and being “selective about what angry feelings I shared and how I shared them… If I could deal with my feelings on my own, I often choose to do that “. What a wonderful partner you would make to an … emotionally intelligent, sound and mature person.
I don’t think that you should have “communicate(d) fully when I was unhappy out of fear of being treated with indifference” because in reality, your ex partner did treat you with indifference, you shared that. So it doesn’t make sense to keep communicating to a person who already expressed indifference (“often ignoring me and dismissing my feelings”).
I think that you should have ended the relationship when you learned that your ex partner was dishonest with you. And I agree that you should not have trusted a dishonest person.
You expressed concern for others’ well being, not wanting to hurt others with aggressive expressions of anger. Best for you to choose a person who will also be concerned of others’ well being, not hurting others with lies, with dishonesty, with indifference and dismissal. Learn who the person is before getting emotionally/ physically involved, before you place your trust in the person. Ask questions, listen carefully, observe their behavior in different setting, how they handle their anger, etc.
A side note, regarding being blocked from their social media, could be nothing personal to you, just the jealousy of a current partner for an ex partner.
I hope you heal from the hurt. I think that it will take two things for you to heal from your hurt feelings regarding this relationship: learn from it, what to do differently next and allow time to pass so that your emotional attachment to your ex partner weakens, until it is a thing of the past.
Post again anytime, here or in a new thread. I will be glad to read from you again.
anita
December 27, 2017 at 8:28 pm #183993LillyParticipantHello anita,
I am touched by your kind words, I appreciate you taking the time to reflect and offer thoughtful insights. I am always a work in progress and constantly learning from my experiences.
You have offered perspectives I have not yet considered, thank you for that. I agree that I should have ended things when the trust was broken the first time and not opened the door for future opportunities. I let my strong desire for the relationship to work despite the issues cloud my better judgment. I will work on not losing trust in my own instincts and intuition. My gut said leave and that’s what I should have done.
While this experience is painful, I did learn a lot about what qualities and personality traits I would want in a future partner. I will also know what warning signs to look for and ultimately if someone treats me with indifference and disrespect, I will let it go instead of investing the effort and energy to hold on. Trust is vital to any relationship and I will be careful who I trust in the future.
Time will help me heal and the lessons I learned will allow me to move forward.
Thank you again for your thoughtful responses, you have offered insights and advice that have been very helpful. I appreciate it and I am looking forward to participating in the forums more.
December 28, 2017 at 4:53 am #184039AnonymousGuestDear Lilly:
You are very welcome and I appreciate your kindness and grace!
Learning is key, I like your resolution and commitment to learning. You wrote: “if someone treats me with indifference and disrespect, I will let it go instead of investing the effort and energy to hold on. Trust is vital to any relationship and I will be careful who I trust in the future.”-
I see trust, in an intimate relationship, as the ground one stands on. With trust misplaced, the ground is taken from underneath and it is very unsettling, very distressing. So, yes, be careful, check the foundation of the relationship, the trustworthiness of a potential partner, over time, in different contexts, so to make sure you are stepping on solid ground.
Looking forward to your posting, anytime you need or want to post.
anita
December 28, 2017 at 4:54 am #184041AnonymousGuest* didn’t get submitted correctly…
-
AuthorPosts